Skullptures
Since 2012, Skullptures has redefined the visual language of mortality — a mirror held to a world in collapse.
A raw fusion of culture, fashion, rebellion, and high art, each Skullpture twists the most primal symbol — the human skull — into a glittering relic of the age we live in: branded, crowned, bought, sold, and ultimately surrendered to time. Born from static print and now evolving into illuminated forms, Skullptures stands as a living archive of a dying empire.
The Icons:
Soup for Brains
Soup for Brains detonated the Skullptures series into cult status.
Merging Warhol’s glossy worship of consumerism with the inevitable rot beneath, it presented the postmodern dream — cracked, hollow, unforgettable. It sold out immediately.
Today, Soup for Brains is more than a work of art.
It is a fossil of capitalism itself — a relic of the mass-produced dream, decaying in full view, precious precisely because will never be made again.
Long Lived the Queen
Regal. Enduring. Immortal.
Long Lived the Queen distills the majesty of sovereignty into a single haunting vision: silver hair preserved in eternal stillness; a crown heavy with the weight of centuries; and beneath it all, a quiet, final truth — that even the longest reigns are borrowed time.
No satire. No anger.
Only a meditation on legacy, memory, and the splendour of impermanence.
From its first unveiling, the edition sparked profound reflection and demand.
The Collections:
2012/13 — Genesis
When the mirror cracked.
The first Skullptures tore the mask from modernity.
2015 — Fragmented Empire
Glory fades. Gold rusts. Power forgets itself.
2017/18 — Disrupted Identity
The death of narrative. Skulls as fractured selves — no past, no centre, no certainty.
2022 — Sovereign Collapse
The end of nations. The crown fades into myth. The bones remain.
2026 — ROATH (Forthcoming)
From ruin, rebirth: moss, butterflies, the silent survival of beauty.
Skullptures is not a collection.
It is an artefact of history — seen through the glass bones of mortality.
Swipe left for the original Genesis – ‘Soup for Brains’ »