{"name": "The Triumph of Pepe", "description": "Painted around 1562, The Triumph of Death is one of Pieter Bruegel the Elder\u2019s most haunting masterpieces, a panoramic vision of apocalypse where an army of skeletons invades the earth, extinguishing all traces of human life.\nAcross a desolate landscape, the painter stages a theatre of chaos: cities burn in the distance, carts of corpses roll toward the horizon, and death spares no one, kings, lovers, peasants, soldiers, all collapse under the same fate.\nThrough an overwhelming choreography of decay, Bruegel transforms death from a mere event into a universal condition, a mirror of collective fragility and moral downfall.\n\nPephistory revisits Bruegel\u2019s vision through the prism of our digital age, turning the medieval apocalypse into a post-internet danse macabre.\nThe skeletal army becomes a swarm of undead Pepes, some crowned, others grotesque, wandering through a landscape littered with broken screens and burned symbols of modern excess.\nDeath no longer triumphs through plague, but through information overload, irony, and repetition.\n\nIn this reinterpretation, Pepe the Frog becomes both the victim and the ruler of a world consumed by its own absurdity.\nHe stands as the Memento Meme, a figure that mocks oblivion while endlessly resurrecting itself across the digital void.\nThe work pays homage to Bruegel\u2019s moral vision while translating it into the language of the present \u2014\na world where the end is not silence, but noise; not darkness, but an eternal stream of images laughing before the abyss.", "image": "ipfs://QmXUFaPGeU4GRGZHVSCwpwoY9BRMrD8SgJtNDErYFws7Df/media", "image_sha256": "41e03b1ef666c16876bbb49b0a51dc833006a22f488c967f00df57b21e4a1f79", "attributes": [], "tags": [], "media": {"uri": "ipfs://QmXUFaPGeU4GRGZHVSCwpwoY9BRMrD8SgJtNDErYFws7Df/media", "dimensions": "1536x1024", "size": "3101088", "mimeType": "image/png"}}