Just to put it on record: the theme of bestiality amuses me
in artistic terms, as a proposal that gives free rein to the imagination as a form of creative expression. I believe that people, in general, should view the work of Teddy and Juaninto Brown as an
artistic and cultural expression, rather than falling into this neurotic urge to manipulate or control fictional characters as if they were not creations of an artist’s mind.
For me, bestiality works especially as an
aesthetic experiment in 3D production, precisely because it breaks away from the dominant visual and narrative standards. If someone thinks that
“my character” should not have sex with a dog or a horse, that’s fine no one is obligated to like it. The problem begins when this rejection turns into an attempt to
ban, censor, or limit the artist’s creative expression, which shows a complete lack of respect for the artist’s work. Personally, I prefer fantasies involving bunnies. Even so, my favorite author does not present them as queens of explicit sex, but rather as
action characters. Anyone who doesn’t fall in love with a cute bunny like that is dead inside, has given up on imagination, and traded any spark of fantasy for a moldy book of good manners.
