MR SAVETHEBRAIN

FIND YOUR HAPPY PLACE
Post-Digital Fine Art on Museum-quality canvas
Original edition 8 ex + 2 AP
100 x 160 cm | 39 x 63 in
THE SCRIPT
In Find Your Happy Place, Mr Savethebrain transforms the iconic Coca-Cola slogan into a visionary, ironic, and deeply human garden. At first glance, the work appears as an explosion of color and vitality, evoking the pop imagery of mass communication and its promise of instant happiness.
At the center of the composition rises a majestic pumpkin, painted as a tribute to Yayoi Kusama. It becomes a powerful metaphor for social media: attractive and omnipresent, yet capable of encouraging aggression through anonymity and physical distance, which prevent real emotional accountability. Surrounding it, oversized flowers inspired by Andy Warhol amplify the drama of media lynching: each petal symbolizes collective online commentary, a visual chorus of scrutiny and condemnation that envelops and overwhelms, transforming the scene into an allegory of public pressure and exposed digital vulnerability.
An enigmatic couple, a hooded and masked man inspired by Banksy, accompanied by a white dog on a leash, walks silently through the garden. Their measured, suspended pace does not indicate a precise direction, but crosses a mental space: a ritual gesture that evokes observing without intervening, moving along the margins of the visual and moral noise dominating the scene. They advance as discreet accomplices, lucid witnesses to a world that offers itself to the gaze but eludes control, embodying critical distance and intimate resistance. Their walk becomes a metaphor for an inner journey, a stretched moment in which irony and awareness intertwine, inviting the viewer to pause, reflect, and decide where to stand.
Even the dog’s poop, echoing KAWS’ iconographic universe and deliberately oversized, becomes a repulsive metaphor for the toxicity of online comments. Along the couple’s silent path, it transforms into an emotional trace of the digital world: a tangible residue of symbolic violence and circulating negativity. Far from being a mere ironic detail, it materializes the disgust many feel in the face of degrading content, stimulating reflection and responsibility.
Two green and yellow flowers, turned away from the viewer, emerge as silent protagonists of the work, vibrating with emotional tension. Shy and introverted, they become incredulous witnesses to the spectacle of their own lives, embodying women who expose themselves on social media and endure sexist insults and harsh judgment. They silently withstand digital shaming and public pressure, balancing visibility and vulnerability. Their lateral, discreet placement intensifies the sense of introspection and suffering, underlining the urgency of collective responsibility in building a digital culture grounded in respect and awareness.
Find Your Happy Place, a fragment of contemporary lucidity disguised as a pop dream, unfolds as a refined and powerful denunciation of media sexism. It opens a window onto the human need for authenticity, mutual respect, and collective accountability, transforming into a silent act of rebellion in support of women who face daily online humiliation. With energy, sensitivity, and intelligence, the work stimulates dialogue about urgent social behaviors, confronting the dynamics of power, judgment, and vulnerability within social media, revealing how fragile and precious individual dignity truly is.
ARCHIVAL CONTEXT
In Find Your Happy Place is an integral component of the LOVE IS EVERYTHING Art Collection — a curated system of Post-Digital Fine Art masterpieces originating from Venice, Italy. Each work serves as a sovereign node within this conceptual architecture.
This original edition (8 ex + 2 AP) is hand-signed and numbered by the Master MR SAVETHEBRAIN in Venice. The masterpiece is realized through a high-precision Fine Art Giclée process, utilizing archival pigments on 410g/m² Museum-quality canvas, guaranteed for 200+. This sovereign asset is protected by the RHV (Relative High Value) protocol and is managed exclusively by the SOCIAL SILENCE OFFICE — CONTEMPORARY ART ARCHIVE (SSO) in Venice, Italy.
Absolute exclusion of third-party intermediaries.
ACCESS PROTOCOL:
Archival Status: Registered and available for qualified inquiry.
Governance: Final allocation is regulated exclusively by the Social Silence Office (SSO).
Procedure: Access is granted strictly via formal, private request.
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