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Souls Grown Deep, Vol. 1 by William Arnett
Souls Grown Deep, Vol. 1 by William Arnett










Souls Grown Deep, Vol. 1 by William Arnett

Robertson additionally produced calendars chronicling memories of his marriage with short notations scribbled in each date's block. Some drawings reference precise and painful moments in his life, particularly his wife's unfaithfulness to him. These interests were manifest in images of aliens, spaceships, fire breathing monsters, snakes, architectural drawings of houses and temples, futuristic cities, superheroes, and portraits of Adell often identified with Jezebel and other Amazon-like "harlots.” His colorful drawings are often covered in rambling texts, sometimes in speech balloons, about "adulterous whores" and unfaithful spouses. He was also preoccupied with numerology and biblical prophecies of the apocalypse. He studied the Bible which he consistently referenced alongside images and texts from pornographic magazines, comic strips, and works of science fiction. Robertson typically worked on poster board, paper, or wood using magic markers, tempera paint, colored pencils, ballpoint pens and glitter. The house and yard were, unfortunately, destroyed by a hurricane in 1993. Many drawings inside his home were also of Robertson’s ex-wife, and the interior included a number of shrines dedicated to her. The house’s interior was decorated with drawings pinned to every available surface. These signs included warnings that "whores" and "bastards" should stay away and contained misogynistic messages denouncing "bad" women, often addressed to his ex-wife. The experience clearly devastated Robertson whose explicative-filled rants became a hallmark of his work.Īimed at his community, his ex-wife Adell and would-be trespassers, Robertson’s property was completely dominated by confrontational signs that mingled biblical quotations with the “Prophet’s” threats and visions. The marriage lasted roughly twenty years, but Adell eventually left Royal and moved to Texas. In 1955, Robertson married Adell Brent, and they had eleven children. Robertson left school after completing the eighth grade to work as an apprentice to a sign painter, a skill he would exploit to dazzling effect later in life. With the exception of a short stint in California, he lived in Louisiana his entire life, mostly in Baldwin.

Souls Grown Deep, Vol. 1 by William Arnett

Helena Parish, Louisiana died 1997, Baldwin, Louisiana.












Souls Grown Deep, Vol. 1 by William Arnett