El misterio
resuelto gracias al Profesor Carcass:

28-year-old art student Kittiwat Unarrom has now taken that idea to heart with his range of human body parts made of bread.
“People thought I was mad when they saw the works,” Kittiwat told the AP press agency. But there’s a serious, if incomprehensible, meaning to his loaves of death:
“Everyone’s life is rushed nowadays, even when it comes to eating,” he says. “When we eat, we don’t think about our health or safety.”
Included in Kittiwat’s range of moribund confectionary are edible, anatomically accurate human heads, arms and feet. He also has a sideline in chicken and pig parts. He has a growing army of customers and an exhibition of his cadaverous croissants is planned for Bangkok’s Silpakorn University this year. It’s his final dissertation, and he hopes it will secure him a Master of Arts degree.
“When people see the bread, they don’t want to eat it,” Kittiwat concludes sagely. “But when they taste it, it’s just normal bread. The lesson is ‘don’t judge by appearances.’”
articulo en Bizarre Magazine: Bizarre Magazine
via Reek Of Putrefaction
pero como demonios supe que era pan? hmm.
Tags: 3 Comments
3 responses so far ↓
Pues no es que me guste juzgar las apariencias… pero tampoco quiero que me confundan con un canibal… ademas el gusto (casi) siempre empieza con la vista… el que diga que no… es CIEGO
jm eso si es pan de muerto!!! llévenlo a Janitzio !!!
mmm me recuerda a esas paletas en forma de dedo pulgar que vendian en mi infancia y que de verlas me daba el peor asco, pero las comia…..