![]() His father gave him a mouse skeleton which, “instead of it being creepy, dark and weird”, kickstarted his passion, and in time he began articulating animal skeletons. He developed his obsession at age 13, while growing up in Thailand. Five articulated skeletons hang above the skulls opposite them are more than a hundred spines, graded like a paint sampler from dark to light, the different angles of their sacrums a reminder of the unique postures of the people they once belonged to.įerry, 22, sells human bones. Each has a baby-blue label looped through its cheekbone with an accession number and the word “JonsBones”, the name of Ferry’s company. ![]() It will soon be inspected, photographed and logged into a database before joining the 80 skulls lined up neatly in a glass cabinet. Ferry says the skull is of probable Indian origin, pointing to the betel-nut staining its molars. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |