Pastel Xenon

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Pastel Xenon
Born 2001
Nationality American
Location Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Known for Illusionary aesthetics
Pacific vanishing-core
Multimedia world-building
Associated persona Marlow

Pastel Xenon (stylized PASTELXENON) is an American illusionary, aspirational multimedia creator and cultural enthusiast known for his fascination with 1970s–1990s aesthetics, the South Pacific, the liminal, and the forgotten. Raised in an empty childhood, their experiences fine-tuned them toward an emotional, aesthetic, and abstract filter through which they engage with the world. As a result, he is a self-described “stuff nobody cares about enthusiast”.

His work often features a green cat fursona named Marlow, used as a stand-in for introspection, comfort, and narrative exploration. Pastel is developing the aesthetic concept known as Pacific vanishing-core, emphasizing remote islands, night oceans, abandoned infrastructure, and late-20th-century cultural residue. Attention to period detail, obsolete technology, and atmospheric restraint are recurring traits of his projects.

Background

Born in 2001, Pastel Xenon’s creative interests emerged from prolonged engagement with archived media, environmental nostalgia, and self-directed aesthetic research.

Interests

See Interests on PASTELXENON.NEOCITIES.ORG

External links

Retrieved from "https://pastelxenon.neocities.org/about.html"