These are really common in Mexico markets. I have several which illustrate 9-11 and speak of the Virgin's rescue on that day.
Sadly they are sold as folk art when really they are printed on ink-jet computer printers, glued to tin sheets and shellacked over to give the appearance of age or original folk art. I think they often sell for about 50 pesos ($5 USD) each but I could see people (myself included) easily paying more for such a pop-art print.
Is anyone else impressed by the guy's sign - I mean it's pretty big and expensive looking, in color and in one of the other linked photos it looks like it is on some sort of poll attached to his back. When I was working as a journalist down south I saw all sorts of religious protesters and none of them had stuff like this. Impressive.
It's scary, but certainly photoshopped. The artifacts are a dead give away, but the other thing is that this shark would be over 20 feet long. That's not an unheard of size for a great white - but this shark isn't a great white, it's in tropical waters and looks too dark. My taxonomy is rusty... but it could a lemon or bull blown up in reference to the kayak?
This is probably one of those economic indicators that should alarm the right people.
Sadly they are sold as folk art when really they are printed on ink-jet computer printers, glued to tin sheets and shellacked over to give the appearance of age or original folk art. I think they often sell for about 50 pesos ($5 USD) each but I could see people (myself included) easily paying more for such a pop-art print.
"Guy spends a lot of time and money obsessing over Hollywood franchise which has recently been rendered dead and meaningless by unwarranted prequels."