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This part of my painting I am showing a cave carved out of a hill. This Cave is located on the bottom right of the painting and the reason I put it so low on the painting is to show how people towards the top of the painting are shown more and have issues equal or are shown as more important not only to themselves but other Americans. This specific part I wanted to paint a small child crawling out of a Cobalt mine in Congo. Kindergarten age children in Congo are being forced into child labor working in bad and harmful conditions. April 16, 2018, Financial Times wrote, 'Glencore warns on child labour in Congo’s cobalt mining', a European article about the issues in Congo. They talk about Glencore, the largest producer of cobalt. They work in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Amnesty International reported that children 7 and up can be found mining cobalt by hand, this is exposing them to harmful toxic dust. The kicker for this is that cobalt is used in making lithium ion batteries that Americans everyday use in the phones, and electric cars. These children are shown so little in media and Americans don't really even think about them but they literally harvest materials that we need in order to have the media access every single day.https://www.ft.com/content/dbf18e0e-416a-11e8-803a-295c97e6fd0b



This is not a trash can! Everyone has said that this orange column looked like a trash can. It is not, I am saying right now that it doesn't look like a trash can because it was intended to be. I was trying to create a fiery orange that looked very saturated but then it kept fading as it dried. I wanted to pull in elements that were very dark and dry like the into my painting in all parts because I was looking at the artist James Ensor. I admire the textures in his paintings, it looks like he does very small strokes and it looks like he doesn't blend but uses layering. I tried to layer starting with a black outline of pillars and then I coated it in red and then orange and then I mixed white and yellow in to make the lightest parts. I am happy that the structure looks like it is actually rounded.

- Approximately 3.2 million shelter animals are adopted each year (1.6 million dogs and 1.6 million cats).
-It's estimated that 78 million dogs and 85.8 million cats are owned in the United States. Approximately 44% of all households in the United States have a dog, and 35% have a cat. (Source: American Pet Products Association 2015-2016 (APPA))
To further explain, CBS Money Watch has done a study about 'Charities Faking Their Numbers to Look Good'https://www.cbsnews.com/news/charities-fake-their-numbers-to-look-good/ The Feed The Children charity program lies by saying that charity's claim that it spends 91% of donations on programs (this is a link to the actual charity site) That would mean theoretically that that for each dollar raised they would donate 91 cents of food. The American Institute of Philanthropy analyzed the actual numbers, they actually spend less than 25 cents of each dollar...Thats angering thats misleading af(Air Force). Where does the rest of that money go? Well we would like to guess on advertising...Unfortunately this is completely legal to lie about your charities worth as a way to get around taxes. So yes, we do care more about dogs than other people.

Right here I painted an ombre rainbow pedestal to represent the Instagram social media platform. I used this one because it particularly is an app that is an app that almost everyone has now with 500 million active users daily according to Omnicore https://www.omnicoreagency.com/instagram-statistics/ . This is a place where people go on daily to see what people are posting, I am a user, all of my friends are, and even some of my teachers have accounts. The reason I used it in particular is because I see a lot of feminists ranting constantly especially on international Women's day March 8th, of this year. A lot of the ones represented on social media and very over bearing and forceful and abusive to men. A lot of them I see are giving strait out hate speech to any males even to transgender people and that is widely offensive. But with them their drama sparks a lot of talk and reshares for comical effect, this makes them money because a lot of them have large followings because people want to know what the 'Feminazi's' have to say next. I can't even remember a time when people were taking about slaverey in Libya or other issues that could influence someone to step up and help third world countries.

Below I put one of the actual paintings done by this unknown artist. I really admired soft strokes of the hair and fields and tried to make the hair in my painting appear more fluffy. I also wanted to paint very dark clothing and capture the abuse that they go through without actually showing violence. I opted for painting these girls smiling and going over the boarder in chains. I choose them smiling because they don't know that they are about to be captured into sex slavery. The chains are leading off the page almost as if someone was leading them into their unknown fate. I also tried to use the yellow sashes and bright red dress because I really liked the contrast of their cultures colors.

website (https://www.psychologicalscience.org/news/releases/social-media-likes-impact-teens-brains-and-behavior.html) I read a compelling article called, 'Social Media ‘Likes’ Impact Teens’ Brains and Behavior' It basically explains that teens actually have a physical reaction in their brain overtime they get likes on their social media posts. They made an experimental trial with 32 teenagers where they showed them their social media and analyzed their brain activity using fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging. Lauren Sherman, a researcher in the brain mapping center and the UCLA branch of the Children’s Digital Media Center, Los Angeles said, "When the teens saw their own photos with a large number of likes, we saw activity across a wide variety of regions in the brain,” This was discovered that when teens see more likes on their photos their striatum in their brains light up like a Christmas tree with pleasure. This is apart of their brains reward circuitry which means they get dopamine, the feel good chemical, released into their brains.

This part I had started the feminist portion and I included a sign that says, "Im a wo

This is the beginning of a sad message I put into my painting. So far its the outline of a starving child in need, figuratively holding a cellphone that has no signal. This is representing their lost in connection with the rest of the world and shows that they are not making their way into Americans lives this also represents the perspective of Americans because they don't care about these topics and they don't look up posts or charity pages they don't show up in the medias algorithms, just the fact that you won't see any post pertaining to saving a starving child is because you didn't care enough to look it up and the general population didn't either so it is not a recommended result.
I am extremely proud with the result of this part of my painting. I don't think I have ever freehanded a human so well. I am proud on how the highlighted areas came out especially on the eyes and the collar bone. I wish I could have done the fingers better but I am not very good at hands so I tried to just make it seem like they had some. I think I could have also done the feet better. I want to try to practice more painting hands and feet.
This is one of my favorite parts of this painting. Right here I painted a couple in Yemen in their common clothing. I researched the mens and women clothing. On this website it goes though the mens wear.https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=94979969 They usually wear long tunics with a large belt holding their traditional ordinate sword. Every man there carry one and it is a symbol of their masculinity. They usually are made with a rhino sword that they are willing to spend thousands on in the black market for. In itself the outfit is a problem when it comes to promoting poaching. The women have many different styles that derive from quite literally a sheet. They actually used to wear sheets, not joking actually bed sheets. Some of them wear a veils with a mask but others just wear the head wrap which is the most common since they always cover their hair. The reason I painted these two is because in Yemen women are not allowed to be independent, they cannot marry, have custody of their children, divorce, or even receive health care unless her male guardian says so. In Yemen women have a male guardian, usually their father, make all of their decisions for them. On GlobalCitizen.org They said that there is no minimum age of marriage there and 52% of Yemen girls are married before age 18.“These Are the Worst Countries to Be a Woman.” Global Citizen, www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/worst-places-woman-yemen-congo-saudi-arabia/. This is shocking to me I cannot imagine living in a world where a man literally owns me. They must feel powerless, because they are. I think that I can compare the perspectives of a women in Yemen and an American Feminist and I can guarantee that their point of view is similar although a typical American woman cannot be in the same situation. With a strong culture although these women are going through hardships and are literally being owned, they don't really think that and don't want to spark a change. these women have no access to the world looking at social media or even having tv access, they don't know that what is happening to them is anything other than normal. They are in a very different world it can be hard to relate. I wish that people in America knew more about these issues so their awareness can help out.
I love the feminist. I took inspiration from Fiona from Shrek because she kicks ass. Thats where I got the red hair and green top from. I took out the, "Im a" from the sign because I wanted to keep things simple.
I love how this came out, the Yemen man looks overbearing standing above his wife like that. I think I really did well incorporating the dark sad tone that I was going for. I can really feel it when I look at it. Im sure for people who don't know what it means would also think so too.
This is the completed demonetization symbol. It was pretty easy and simple.
Final Product: I had added black and white paint to represent the grey areas in how people perceive the world I think it gave a very dark element to the painting. I think there is a lot of grey area in America on what Americans perceive as important and what they think is more important depending on the individual.