02/02/2024 / By Ava Grace
A bizarre and disturbing work of “art” prominently displayed at the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) recent summit in Davos, Switzerland has gone viral.
The mural dubbed the Walthamstow Tapestry was made in 2009 by Grayson Perry, a cross-dressing contemporary artist. Depicted in the style of cave paintings and hieroglyphs, it chronicles the life journey of a man from birth until death – replete with personified corporations he encountered along the way. The tapestry begins with the birth of a baby along a river of blood that eventually flows into the waiting mouth of the Devil, ending in the death of an old man.
“I’ve always been interested in the pilgrimage, in the journey and the idea of the journey through life,” Perry said in 2012 while at the Victoria Miro Gallery in London, when asked about the tapestry.
“And then I thought about: Is this the kind of shopping trip of life? The kind of glossy, sort of meaningless trek from one department store to another that is modern Western consumerism.”
According to a write-up about the tapestry, it’s design “brings to mind its most famous medieval precursor – the Bayeaux Tapestry.” The work is also replete with mentions of brand names including Coca-Cola, the Sotheby’s auction house, Red Bull energy drink, Aldi supermarket and the BBC.
The tapestry’s existence was divulged by journalist Larry Alex Taunton, who went undercover at the WEF summit in Davos. According to him, the said artwork was featured at the summit’s dining hall. “These bleak and death-themed works of art are just the kind these elites love to surround themselves with,” InfoWars commented.
Following Taunton’s expose, the tapestry gained a lot of attention on social media. Several users put in their two cents on the satanic art piece.
“Why would they put [that] up as a decoration?” asked user @ErikaLLJ on X. “You’d think it would make some attendees get a clue. So oddly blatant.”
User @NotTinaKotex remarked: “How much did all these [corporations] pay for that product placement?” Their comments came as a response to a post by user @JebraFaushay, who challenged “all culture and art critics” to analyze the tapestry.
Two users took up the challenge. @mS52680571 stated that the tapestry centered on three things – corporations, abortion and population control. Meanwhile, @orwellshandmaid commented: “The message is clear. In fact, explicitly clear – it’s satanic.”
User @IngaBingaBoo had a more humorous take on the piece, writing: “It looks like Satan went on a bad acid trip and broke out the paint.” But @grilli_deborah pointed out that the tapestry reminded her of the murals at Denver International Airport (DIA). The murals at the DIA appear to envision various globalist goals, foremost of them is the depopulation of humanity under the guise of “protecting nature.”
“The murals … tell a terrifying story of future events about to happen, as if it was some sort of prophecy,” the Vigilant Citizen noted. “There are specific social and political references and other occult details that basically turn those paintings into a New World Order Manifesto.”
Head over to Satanism.news to read more stories like this.
Watch this clip about a Satanic witch doctor appearing at the WEF 2024 summit in Davos.
This video is from the Thrivetime Show channel on Brighteon.com.
Top Archbishop: WEF plotting ‘global coup’ to enforce ‘Great Reset’.
Marine LePen’s Impassioned plea in the dark shadow of the WEF.
Globalist WEF claims MISINFO and DISINFO are the greatest threats to humanity.
Why 2024 will be “the year of chaos.”
WEF globalist Yuval Harari hints that Trump will get elected, but then what?
Sources include:
Tagged Under:
art piece, arts and culture, conspiracy, Davos, demonic, evil, Globalism, globalist elites, Grayson Perry, Larry Alex Taunton, Satanic, Social media, Twisted, viral, Walthamstow Tapestry, World Economic Form
This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author
COPYRIGHT © 2018 GLOBALISM.NEWS
All content posted on this site is protected under Free Speech. Globalism.news is not responsible for content written by contributing authors. The information on this site is provided for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice of any kind. Globalism.news assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. All trademarks, registered trademarks and service marks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.