Johnny Depp has envisioned the Bunnyman as a “benevolent” figure in his new art collection.
The 60-year-old actor and artist believes the humanoid shape is a “shared night-time vision between father and son”, according to Castle Fine Art, which will host his work at their partner gallery in Miami, in the US, from Tuesday.
In a YouTube video promoting the work, Depp said he has had recurring dreams of the Bunnyman, which “means a lot” to him, and he “feels very close to”.
“So some character that Jack had scribbled, beautiful scribbles into that shape, that image, reminded me of a kind of recurrent dream that I had as a child, probably around Jack’s age, five, six.
“When I would walk to the door of the basement in our house in Kentucky, and when I opened the door after standing at the landing at the top of the stairs, right in front of me, was this figure with no face, he had features, like a mannequin almost, and you could see like, just various little grains of sand, they’re all moving in this guy’s body.
“He just stood there, he never made a move toward me so he didn’t scare me.
“You couldn’t quite tell what was the deal was with the guy, but you definitely felt that at the very least there was something benevolent about it, he was a benevolent creature (it was) like he was there to warn me in my dream about going into the basement.”
Previously Depp, who has two children, actress Lily-Rose Depp and John “Jack” Christopher Depp III, with French model, singer and actress Vanessa Paradis, used the Bunnyman as a sign of the authenticity of his work.
The urban legend of a man wearing a bunny costume has featured in popular culture and appeared in the slasher film Bunnyman and science fiction film Donnie Darko.
Depp’s The Bunnyman Genesis series sees a silhouetted figure stand before four different and parallel realms in the collection of mixed media prints.
Castle Fine Art managing director Ian Weatherby-Blythe said: “Castle Contemporary prides itself on the quality and innovation in the art we sell.
“We started working with Johnny Depp in 2022, and The Bunnyman offers a new artistic direction for his collectors. We can’t wait to debut these works at Art Miami.”
The artworks are available at Castle Contemporary at Art Miami.
Last year Depp was awarded 10.3 million dollars (£8 million) in damages following a high-profile defamation case in the US against his ex-wife, the actress Amber Heard.
His lawyers said the Aquaman star, 37, falsely accused him of being an abuser in an article she wrote in the Washington Post in 2018.
A previous UK libel claim against News Group Newspapers (NGN), the owner of The Sun, alleged that he was violent and abusive towards Heard, to whom he was married from 2015 to 2017.
The content of the article was ruled to be “substantially true” by a high court judge.