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/ click header image to take you directly to the group or click here h1.GROUP GUIDELINES: TAG YOUR IMAGE! PLEASE TAG YOUR IMAGE with Psychedelic_Arts or Psychedelic ” / THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT, or your images may be removed. / If you are submitting a piece of art into this group, then by logic, it should have ‘PSYCHEDELIC’ in the tags Submit up to TWO (2) images per section (art/clothing) per person, per day. Make an effort to comment on at least one image in the group pool by others, each time you post. Do not submit images that are similar, one after another, we like variety :) If you are not sure whether your image is Psychedelic or not, just ask me. / Bubblemail me with the link of your image. / WHY WAS MY IMAGE REMOVED?: images that are not considered ‘psychedelic’ will be removed. Please read the groups description to see if your images have the qualities of Psychedelic Arts before submitting, if you are not sure.. please excuse me if i dont write to each one thats removed with the explanations.. You are welcome to write to me to enquire, if you would like to know why it wasnt ‘psychedelic’ enuf.. :) about this group/what to post: / Fantastic, metaphysical and surrealistic subject matter, kaleidoscopic, fractal or paisley patterns, bright and/or highly contrasting colours, extreme depth of detail or stylisation of detail. Morphing of objects and/or themes and sometimes collage, inclusion of phosphenes and other entopic motifs, repetition of motifs. Please visit Wikipedia’s definition of Psychedelic Arts to understand/learn more / http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychedelic_art definition of psychedelic arts: (from Wikipedia) / Psychedelic art is art inspired by the psychedelic experience induced by drugs such as LSD, Mescaline, and Psilocybin. The word “psychedelic” (coined by British psychologist Humphrey Osmond) means “mind manifesting”. By that definition all artistic efforts to depict the inner world of the psyche may be considered “psychedelic”. However, in common parlance “Psychedelic Art” refers above all to the art movement of the 1960s counterculture. Psychedelic visual arts were a counterpart to psychedelic rock music. Concert posters, album covers, lightshows, murals, comic books, underground newspapers and more reflected not only the kaleidoscopically swirling patterns of LSD hallucinations, but also revolutionary political, social and spiritual sentiments inspired by insights derived from these psychedelic states of consciousness. PSYCHEDELIC INSPIRATIONS / The Art of Jeff Hopp / “I believe that true art is foremostly a form of communication. For me to be interested in a piece, it must tell me something. An artist can communicate many things…. ideas, emotions, events, beliefs, etc. As for my art, I am interested in illustrating events and experiences that I have witnessed on my spiritual journeys. It is a method of capturing moments that cannot be documented in any other way. / They are places that can’t be photographed, and I feel that is important to share them with others.” LINKS & RESOURCES PSYCHEDELIC ARTIST : JEFF HOPP RESOURCES : Psychedelic Arts @Squidoo PHOTOBLOG/IMAGES : Psychedelic Wallpapers & Posters
Amazing Ayahuasca vine in the jungle of Peru.
The interpretation of one of my Ayahuasca visions (Ayahuasca is a DMT containing brew served in the amazon among the native inhabitants)
these are for sale and are all original
look at it from all 4 angles
Ayahuasca inspired native american oil painting, Art of this kind is for sale ask if interested,
One of The first Visionary Paintings I did following my first encounters with Ayahuasca. An Amazing experience… If you look at the image closely you will see a deity like image… and the rulers of the subterraneal, The land and Sky Painted entirely in Photoshop CS2 ( I thinks this was earlyy on in 07 – end of March or so…)
Shamanic, Healing, Visionary Art
Shamanic, Healing, Visionary Art
Shamanic, Visionary, Healing Art
Although a dozen copas of Mate de Coca got me through severe headache and malaise, the Peruvian altitude had nearly sucked the life out o…
Although a dozen copas of Mate de Coca got me through severe headache and malaise, the Peruvian altitude had nearly sucked the life out of me and I decided the Amazonian steam might better suite my constitution. I’d read of William Burrough’s Ayahuasca and thought maybe I’d snoop around the last jungle outpost of Iquitos for a guide to take me into the Amazon interior to meet a”qualified” Shaman to prepare me a glass or two. To my eyes, the Amazon women were consistently a sight to behold! The green eyes! The almond skin! The hot, wet air and distant primal calls from the far side of the Amazon river… beckoned me into her darkness. It didn’t take long to find an old chap who’d serviced a National Geographic expedition or two. He showed me old issues of National Geographic magazine clearly showing he’d been trusted by the big boys and after an afternoon of fee haggling I had a departure time. After a 3hr motorboat ride (one hour killed trying to get the stubborn outboard motor to cooperate) to “base camp”, another 4hr trudge through knee-deep jungle mud, another several hours moving through the sweet waters of the Colorado river to the Black River… we finally landed in a small hut strewn village. The next morning, my Shamanic host asked where the “guide” had disappeared to. My heart sank…. I had nothing but the clothes on my back, and nothing else. The Shaman sensed my panic and assured me the “guide” would turn up sooner or later, and he took me out into the jungle to show me various plants he used to cure. The Ayahuasca “trip” was the most difficult experience I’d ever had… swirling psychosis and violent expulsion. That evidently is part of the price to “see” with the Shaman. To me, falling out of a bamboo hut into the mud, and trying to get my pants off fast enough to “purge” from ALL orifices was not my idea of a swell time. But I went with it. The following morning, the Shaman insisted I “cleanse” in the Black river and that I prepare for the evening’s second dose… Still no guide… while “cleansing” I felt tiny nibbles about my legs that bordered on uncomfortable. I later found out that the Black River is teaming with Piranha, but that I needn’t be concerned unless I was bleeding. An Indian man, woman, and baby had arrived at the Shaman’s hut. The baby was ashen with a tinge of green about the skin… I’m no doctor, but that baby didn’t look like it was going to make it through the night, and a qualification of “living” seemed questionable at all. The Shaman brushed the baby with various fauna and blew smoke into his ears, nose, and mouth… I thought, “I’m no expert, but that cigarette smoke is certainly not going to do that tyke a bit of good… but, maybe it’ll bring on his inevitable demise a bit quicker and end the suffering.” When the Shaman had finished his “treatment” he instructed the young mother to bring’em back in a couple days time and that he made need a follow-up treatment. He also gave her a small bottle of fluid from the middle reddish bottle you seen in the photo. He later told me it was for “female problems”. Two days later, still no guide, but the family returned with the healthiest looking baby I’ve ever seen. Pink! Laughing! And full of life! Later that afternoon, my “guide” returned, had given away all my food surplus and water… and looked hung over. Apparently, he’d meant to only spend the night in a nearby village with his sweaty, but got distracted by some chums with a liter or two of hard liquor. I wasn’t pleased, but I was thrilled to have spent quality time with a real medicine man. And, decided to wait until we’d completed the return journey to Iquitos before laying into him… as the idea of finding my way back alone didn’t appeal to me. ;-) Photo of the Shaman here “Shaman’s Brew” ~ Amazon Jungle on Peruvian side © Skip Hunt Check out my Carbonmade Gallery
Loaded! Wear your Ayahuasca Trip to town….. why not????
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