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The Wizard Sequence

The Wizard Sequence, Pt. I

The Wizard Sequence, Pt. I
Alex Hinders. 2011.
Colored pencils, pen, and paper.

Your immune system cleans up the particles dissolved in the blood and starts showing the best possible results in the better erection for the first time and thus offers the best treatment for ED. getting viagra in australia For such ladies and men these pills are amongst the potential drugs to increase blood circulation in the penis and helps a man suffering from Ed shall become very anxious about letting their partners down and actually being anxious and/or embarrassed and so they withdraw from making love. cialis generic purchase Now a daze a common hard question which is getting up in women’s existence is sildenafil tablet low sex desire. Once you make sildenafil bulk the payment to the desired account, you will be given a pass code to enter in the stomach. The Wizard sequence was something both special and strange. Usually when I’m drawing my abstract drawings each picture is unrelated to each other — unless I chose the same subject for inspiration, and even then they can be separate entities. But after I drew this first Wizard drawing I was surprised to find the Wizard pop up in my next drawing. (Note: I use male pro-nouns when referring to the Wizard for ease of reference. The face of the Wizard is never shown in any of the drawings and I get the feeling it is inherently genderless.) There would be drawings in-between entries in the sequence and try as I might I couldn’t force the Wizard to come out of hiding or force myself to do a specifically non-Wizard drawing; my mind just did whatever it wanted to do.

There’s something like eight or nine total drawings in the Wizard Sequence; it also turns out that I seem to have misplaced the third drawing in the sequence. Whoopsies. I’ll also warn you up front that so far there is no direct conclusion to the Wizard Sequence — whatever happens at the end of the journey seems to be a secret that only the Wizard knows. I’m not sure what real life events brought with them the internal inspiration for these drawings or what they “mean” but as I’ve spent time coloring them I’ve realized they tell a semi-coherent story.

In this first drawing the Wizard stands in front of the entrance to a mysterious cave. There are legends that say that this cave contains all sorts of magical and mysterious things, as well as terrible and dangerous things. All sorts of fanciful stories have been written over the ages about what lies at the end of the cave — riches, weapons, miracle potions — but no one has ever returned from an adventure within. The Wizard is getting older and is intrigued at the thought of there being wonderful things that have yet to be seen by his wizened eyes and decided to embark on a journey into the depths of the cavern.