Today I marvel once again at how Pearl Poet blends the synthesis of the Neomodernism movement and 19th century romanticism together in his new release The Lost Future. Blending the introspective depth of the former with the evocative naturalism of the latter. Though the true nature of the UFO with its firework-driven propulsion remains shrouded in speculation, the sight of a blazing airship plummeting into a helpless crowd serves as a searing allegory-a damning indictment of capitalism’s insatiable hunger, where spectacle and catastrophe intertwine in a macabre dance of destruction.
Today I marvel once again at how Pearl Poet blends the synthesis of the Neomodernism movement and 19th century romanticism together in his new release The Lost Future. Blending the introspective depth of the former with the evocative naturalism of the latter. Though the true nature of the UFO with its firework-driven propulsion remains shrouded in speculation, the sight of a blazing airship plummeting into a helpless crowd serves as a searing allegory-a damning indictment of capitalism’s insatiable hunger, where spectacle and catastrophe intertwine in a macabre dance of destruction.