| 29 May 2004 | Johanna Holmlund | Loading...Thank you SO much for your comment XD Always glad when people like my tour, it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy, don't you know! Good stuff here, too! | |
| 11 Jun 2004 | Anatol Rudolph | Loading...Very nice gallery you have up here, i can just repeat whats already been said: your style is uniquely great. all of your art has a way of nearly sucking one into the picture, inviting one to dream of countless variations of how things could be. Many artists just dont understand that less is more, especially when it comes to colored pictures. well anyway, schools a nice place to draw, isnt it? i like to draw in politics and english ^^ but i fear ive begun babbling again, so i bid you farewell and wish you a very pleasant day. | |
| 13 Jun 2004 | Maren 'Stargazer' Gebhardt | Loading...I like your art very much, your images are all very expressive and refreshingly "non-uniform" in your choice of subjects to draw. | |
| 25 Jun 2004 | Oliver Jöhnk | Loading...Great gallery! I like especially your 'Hematite' and this 'Hope' picture is very good, too. That doesn't mean your other works are bad but only that I like these two best of your work. Until now of course. Keep it up! | |
| 1 Aug 2004 | Alex | Loading...(I don't know what I'm doing) YOU ROCK! WHOO! | |
| 1 Aug 2004 | Emily | Loading...HI!!!!! The gallery looks great, as usual, but you need to put more stuff in! The lack of new material is making me twitch.... i hope to talk to you soon! Emily | |
| 2 Oct 2004 | Pavia Rose burroughs | Loading...23 minutes before i found your page- i was wearing my Frank lounging on the lips pin and looking at RHPS stuff. swear. After reading that you enjoy RHPS, i could barely stand the antici...............pation, of seeing your gallery. lovely work btw. Elizabeth Beier replies: "I HAVE THAT PIN! My friend gave it to me as a gift, and is now permanently attached to my leather jacket..." | |
| 8 Dec 2004 | Minnhagen | Loading...Hi there, I’ve enjoyed looking through your gallery. I especially like the interpretation of lonliness, that’s a feeling we all know too well. Also, I was delighted to read your interesting essay in my guestbook, and I’ll take up the thread of discussion here I do think it’s better to be “unrealistic” and happy, rather than stubbornly realistic when it comes to religious matters. My view on things is that religiousness has been hardwired into humans by darwinian nature. No secularized hunter/gatherer people has ever been encountered – if, indeed, any people at all, except some modern westerners. The complex human mind needs a magical/mythological framework in order to process the vast and often paradoxical information generated during a lifetime (such as birth, death, etc), otherwise it wouldn’t function properly. Even though this paradigm is utterly scientific in itself, it encourages us to embrace religion. The paradox is awkward, I admit. The truth is that the truth is not important. A human in a state of Nature gains nothing from knowing ultimate causes on a subatomic level, but gains a lot from using magical cause-and-effect reasoning that complies with the limitations of the brain. Personally I do what I can to satisfy my religious needs, even when I know it’s not for real. I don’t exactly worship fantasy, but the magic of a fairytale is a momentary relief. PS. I hope you don’t mind the ramblings of a madman... Elizabeth Beier replies: "Hey, it's been a while since I first read this comment! I think I posted something on your page after that... anyway, yes, people tend to need answers. Some people look down on people who turn to religion as people who "don't think for themselves", but if you ask those people "why are we here? What happens after they die?", they don't know either... they don't really think about it. (Not that there's anything wrong with not having a clue... I don't have a clue, but I don't criticize other people's ways of finding comfort or answers.)" | |
| 11 Jan 2005 | Tiina Ylikorpi | Loading...Hellooo ;D *rolls on you* | |
| 8 May 2005 | Sami | Loading...It's been over a year since I've seen your work, and I must say, I didn't know it was possible for you to get even better, but you have. My favorite is definitely "Holding Hands." The reaper looks kinda like Marilyn Manson, but of course that wasn't intentional or anything  Your unique style has become even more pronounced, a mix of Goth and fantasy elements, almost like black magic. I'm sooooo proud of you! Drop me an email sometime, 'kay? | |