Solis Anale is imagined as a rather loose interpretation/adaptation of Georges Bataille’s Anus Solaire


The Solar Anus is a short, incandescent burst of surrealist writing by French author Georges Bataille—penned in 1927 and published alongside André Masson’s drawings in 1931. Through fragmented aphorisms, it orbits themes of decay, death, natural disaster, vegetation, excrement, impotence, and ennui, all laced with a feverish eroticism. Between the scatological and the sublime, Bataille stages a strange and ecstatic tension: the clash of base, bodily desire with celestial forces far beyond human grasp. The sun—burning, indifferent, generative and annihilating—becomes a paradoxical symbol of both creation and destruction, both godlike and grotesque. In this solar dialectic, the anus mirrors the sun: a dark aperture around which life and death perpetually circulate, absurd and sacred.


What emerges is not a neat allegory but a cosmic joke, a blasphemous hymn to the unresolved pull between the earthbound and the divine, between ecstatic dissolution and transcendental aspiration.