Nazca Lines
A kiss of ayahuasca over the lines of the Nazca. Delightful desserts high above the desert. ☁️
If you fly over the desert on the southern coast of Perú, you’ll find ingenious line drawings gracing the surface of Pachamama, stretching hundreds of feet across the arid landscape.
The Nazca people created these images consisting of animal relatives like the hummingbird, spider, monkey and an astronaut-esque man—nearly 2,000 years ago. The etchings may have served as a massive astronomical calendar or offered tribute to the Great Spirit, though their actual purpose still eludes any modern perspective. While many suspect alien interference, the methods the Nazca used probably aren’t extra-terrestrial as they were incredibly creative and dedicated to telling their stories in innovative ways.
This art is based on La Femme Damnée (The Damned Woman) by Nicolas Francois Octave Tassaert, from 1859.
Special edition print on 65lb cardstock paper.
Packaged in protective plastic sleeve and backboard or rolled up in a tube if larger.
A kiss of ayahuasca over the lines of the Nazca. Delightful desserts high above the desert. ☁️
If you fly over the desert on the southern coast of Perú, you’ll find ingenious line drawings gracing the surface of Pachamama, stretching hundreds of feet across the arid landscape.
The Nazca people created these images consisting of animal relatives like the hummingbird, spider, monkey and an astronaut-esque man—nearly 2,000 years ago. The etchings may have served as a massive astronomical calendar or offered tribute to the Great Spirit, though their actual purpose still eludes any modern perspective. While many suspect alien interference, the methods the Nazca used probably aren’t extra-terrestrial as they were incredibly creative and dedicated to telling their stories in innovative ways.
This art is based on La Femme Damnée (The Damned Woman) by Nicolas Francois Octave Tassaert, from 1859.
Special edition print on 65lb cardstock paper.
Packaged in protective plastic sleeve and backboard or rolled up in a tube if larger.
A kiss of ayahuasca over the lines of the Nazca. Delightful desserts high above the desert. ☁️
If you fly over the desert on the southern coast of Perú, you’ll find ingenious line drawings gracing the surface of Pachamama, stretching hundreds of feet across the arid landscape.
The Nazca people created these images consisting of animal relatives like the hummingbird, spider, monkey and an astronaut-esque man—nearly 2,000 years ago. The etchings may have served as a massive astronomical calendar or offered tribute to the Great Spirit, though their actual purpose still eludes any modern perspective. While many suspect alien interference, the methods the Nazca used probably aren’t extra-terrestrial as they were incredibly creative and dedicated to telling their stories in innovative ways.
This art is based on La Femme Damnée (The Damned Woman) by Nicolas Francois Octave Tassaert, from 1859.
Special edition print on 65lb cardstock paper.
Packaged in protective plastic sleeve and backboard or rolled up in a tube if larger.