In The Loss of Divinity, we bear witness to a sacred severance. The winged figure at the top — a divine being, radiant yet sorrowful — is not Adam himself, but the embodiment of divinity departing. This is the moment Adam becomes fully human: flawed, aware, and alone. With arms raised as if in one last attempt to cling to what was once within him, divinity slips away, wreathed in flame — not out of anger, but inevitability.
Beneath, Adam’s muscular form appears powerful, yet it is contorted by anguish and regret. His wings, though massive, are weighed down, symbols of potential now corrupted. The screaming heads to either side of the divine figure represent the torment of the soul and the voices of consequence — internal and eternal.
This piece also draws a quiet but undeniable parallel to Lucifer, the Morningstar — another who once stood in the light but chose knowledge, pride, and disobedience, and in doing so, fell from grace. Where Lucifer rebelled, Adam was deceived. But the punishment is the same: separation. Regret. Isolation. The Loss of Divinity is not just about Adam — it is about the universal moment we all experience when we realize we’ve lost part of ourselves through a single choice.
Why You Should Own the Entire Collection – The Sins of Divinity:
This collection is not just art — it’s a visual theology of the human condition. Each piece in The Sins of Divinity explores the tension between spirit and flesh, faith and failure, creation and consequence.
To own this collection is to own a mirror — a layered spiritual journey that transcends religion and speaks to anyone who has ever felt the weight of their own decisions. Together, the works form a narrative arc: from divine connection (The Fall of the Morningstar), to the fall (The Loss of Divinity).
Every stroke, every detail, is a cry from the soul — your soul. That’s what makes The Sins of Divinity worth collecting in full: it’s not about the characters; it’s about you.
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