Love Truth Shorts
Description: This powerful and highly cynical design perfectly encapsulates the feeling of disillusionment with modern society and relationships. It’s a profound and sarcastic statement about the perceived decline of genuine values—where deep concepts like loyalty and love are reduced to superficial trends, and lying has become the accepted norm.
Description: Declare your faith with this “Jesus The Way The Truth The Life” design inspired by John 14:6, reminding us that Jesus Christ is the only way to salvation. Featuring a bold cross made of nails and powerful typography, this artwork symbolizes faith, sacrifice, and eternal truth. Perfect for believers, Christians, and followers of Christ, this religious and faith-based design is ideal for church services, Bible study, worship, or everyday wear. A meaningful Christian gift for men and women, it encourages everyone to walk in faith, hope, and love through Jesus. Wear it proudly as a testimony of your Christian belief, declaring that Jesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life — the Savior of the world.
Description: This Sarcastic Offended Emotional Truth Statement design features the bold declaration: 'Offended Doesn't Make You Right; It Just Means You're Emotional'. This unique statement, ideal for those seeking a blunt statement with cynical humor, perfectly captures a philosophy where logic rules over fleeting feelings. The distressed vintage typography gives this provocative quote a worn, authentic feel, appealing to those with a no nonsense and honest perspective. Embrace this sarcastic offended emotional truth statement that provides a direct message, challenging emotional validation and resonating with an anti woke mindset. Showcase your belief in fact over emotion and learn to think rationally with this striking graphic.
Description: This phrase appears in Part-I, Chapter-VII of George Orwell’s novel 1984. In fact, Orwell has taken this passage from Glen Miller’s nursery rhyme “The Chestnut Tree.” He uses this song as, “Under the spreading chestnut tree/I sold you and you sold me…” (Part-I, Chapter-VII). Orwell refers to a place, the Chestnut Tree Café, where rebels or lovers meet. Ironically, the Party does not permit its members to have feelings like love for one another, wanting them to only love Big Brother.
Description: This vision for WE the PEOPLE was designed during one of the many times when the government was simply NOT doing it's job, circa 2013. I envisioned WE THE PEOPLE taking over and placing the BEST people in charge of Everything, doing whatever it takes for a harmonious country with ALL Freedoms intact, forever. :) www.ARTofDiNo.com
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This haunting illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” fuses surreal anatomy with civic critique. A grotesque brain split open reveals embedded eyes and root-like tendrils, evoking themes of psychological trauma, medical control, and societal numbness. Chaotic handwritten notes and architectural sketches suggest a dystopian medical journal. The bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy” becomes a satirical cry against authoritarian manipulation, echoing America’s turbulent mental health history and the erasure of dissent in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This haunting illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” fuses surreal anatomy with civic critique. A grotesque brain split open reveals embedded eyes and root-like tendrils, evoking themes of psychological trauma, medical control, and societal numbness. Chaotic handwritten notes and architectural sketches suggest a dystopian medical journal. The bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy” becomes a satirical cry against authoritarian manipulation, echoing America’s turbulent mental health history and the erasure of dissent in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This high-contrast illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” features a bald, wide-eyed man grinning manically beneath the bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy.” Rendered in graphic novel style, the exaggerated expression evokes themes of psychological manipulation, medical erasure, and civic numbness. In today’s America—where mental health, surveillance, and emotional suppression collide—this image becomes a darkly humorous protest against engineered obedience and the legacy of institutional control. A visual scream in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This haunting illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” fuses surreal anatomy with civic critique. A grotesque brain split open reveals embedded eyes and root-like tendrils, evoking themes of psychological trauma, medical control, and societal numbness. Chaotic handwritten notes and architectural sketches suggest a dystopian medical journal. The bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy” becomes a satirical cry against authoritarian manipulation, echoing America’s turbulent mental health history and the erasure of dissent in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy A stark, provocative protest artwork confronts modern America’s fractured mental landscape with the phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy.” Rendered in raw black-and-white with distressed textures and a screaming, faceless figure, the image evokes historical trauma, medical ethics, and social control. Red thread-like lines slice across the eyes, symbolizing silenced voices, censorship, and psychological harm. “Live Love Lobotomy” functions as dark satire—critiquing authoritarianism, misinformation, mass compliance, and the pressure to surrender critical thought in chaotic times. This image captures cultural anxiety, dissent, and the cost of forced conformity.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This haunting illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” fuses surreal anatomy with civic critique. A grotesque brain split open reveals embedded eyes and root-like tendrils, evoking themes of psychological trauma, medical control, and societal numbness. Chaotic handwritten notes and architectural sketches suggest a dystopian medical journal. The bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy” becomes a satirical cry against authoritarian manipulation, echoing America’s turbulent mental health history and the erasure of dissent in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy A stark, provocative protest artwork confronts modern America’s fractured mental landscape with the phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy.” Rendered in raw black-and-white with distressed textures and a screaming, faceless figure, the image evokes historical trauma, medical ethics, and social control. Red thread-like lines slice across the eyes, symbolizing silenced voices, censorship, and psychological harm. “Live Love Lobotomy” functions as dark satire—critiquing authoritarianism, misinformation, mass compliance, and the pressure to surrender critical thought in chaotic times. This image captures cultural anxiety, dissent, and the cost of forced conformity.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy This haunting illustration titled “Live Love Lobotomy” fuses surreal anatomy with civic critique. A grotesque brain split open reveals embedded eyes and root-like tendrils, evoking themes of psychological trauma, medical control, and societal numbness. Chaotic handwritten notes and architectural sketches suggest a dystopian medical journal. The bold phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy” becomes a satirical cry against authoritarian manipulation, echoing America’s turbulent mental health history and the erasure of dissent in chaotic times.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy A stark, provocative protest artwork confronts modern America’s fractured mental landscape with the phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy.” Rendered in raw black-and-white with distressed textures and a screaming, faceless figure, the image evokes historical trauma, medical ethics, and social control. Red thread-like lines slice across the eyes, symbolizing silenced voices, censorship, and psychological harm. “Live Love Lobotomy” functions as dark satire—critiquing authoritarianism, misinformation, mass compliance, and the pressure to surrender critical thought in chaotic times. This image captures cultural anxiety, dissent, and the cost of forced conformity.
Description: Lobotomy: Live Love Lobotomy A stark, provocative protest artwork confronts modern America’s fractured mental landscape with the phrase “Ask Me About My Lobotomy.” Rendered in raw black-and-white with distressed textures and a screaming, faceless figure, the image evokes historical trauma, medical ethics, and social control. Red thread-like lines slice across the eyes, symbolizing silenced voices, censorship, and psychological harm. “Live Love Lobotomy” functions as dark satire—critiquing authoritarianism, misinformation, mass compliance, and the pressure to surrender critical thought in chaotic times. This image captures cultural anxiety, dissent, and the cost of forced conformity.