Difference between revisions of "Eventually They Discovered That J.F.K. Was, in Fact, a Firearm"
From MansonWiki, the Marilyn Manson encyclopedia
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==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
− | *This painting is not the only piece of work that Manson has referenced or used John Kennedy as an inspiration and focus point. Other instances include themes and songs from [[Holy Wood]] such as [["President Dead"]], [[ | + | *This painting is not the only piece of work that Manson has referenced or used John Kennedy as an inspiration and focus point. Other instances include themes and songs from [[Holy Wood]] such as [["President Dead"]], [[Mechanical Animals]]' songs [[Post-human]] (referencing Jackie O.) and [[Coma White]] (with Manson portraying an eerily similar character that is shot in the back of an open convertible in the music video). |
[[Category: Marilyn Manson Paintings]] | [[Category: Marilyn Manson Paintings]] | ||
[[Category: Paintings exhibited in The Celebritarian Corporation Gallery of Fine Art exhibition]] | [[Category: Paintings exhibited in The Celebritarian Corporation Gallery of Fine Art exhibition]] | ||
[[Category: Paintings exhibited in the Space 39 Modern & Contemporary Gallery Exhibition]] | [[Category: Paintings exhibited in the Space 39 Modern & Contemporary Gallery Exhibition]] |
Revision as of 01:25, 26 May 2010
Eventually They Discovered That J.F.K. Was, in Fact, a Firearm is a painting by Marilyn Manson. It depicts a portrait of the 35th President of the United States, John F. Kennedy, with the body of a rifle.
Properties
- 30" × 22"
- Watercolor
Trivia
- This painting is not the only piece of work that Manson has referenced or used John Kennedy as an inspiration and focus point. Other instances include themes and songs from Holy Wood such as "President Dead", Mechanical Animals' songs Post-human (referencing Jackie O.) and Coma White (with Manson portraying an eerily similar character that is shot in the back of an open convertible in the music video).