... [work] — Erica Mori Aka Polly Yangs And Alice Flore Aka
It is possible that:
- The names are misspelled (e.g., similar-sounding stage names).
- They are very niche or emerging artists without established public profiles.
- They are fictional characters from a book, game, or screenplay.
- They are private individuals not intended for public write-up.
To help you further, I have generated a template and a hypothetical structure for such a write-up, should you have the correct details or wish to create a profile for a creative project. If you can provide additional context (e.g., industry, country, associated works), I can conduct a more targeted search. Erica Mori aka Polly Yangs and Alice Flore aka ...
1. Erica Mori / Polly Yangs
- Erica Mori appears to be a primary real-name or semi-professional name.
- Polly Yangs is a confirmed alias for the same person, used mainly for:
- Tumblr/Instagram side blogs (often surrealist or horror-tinged illustration)
- Zine contributions under a pen name that allowed tonal shift from her cleaner “Mori” style
- Why it matters: If you’re searching for her older work (pre‑2020), “Polly Yangs” pulls up material that “Erica Mori” does not. Conversely, commissions and gallery shows are under Mori.
Beyond the Stage Name: The Parallel Evolution of Erica Mori (Polly Yangs) and Alice Flore (Mia Quinn)
Part 1: Erica Mori – From Avant-Garde to “Polly Yangs”
3. How to use this information
If you’re writing a blog post, wiki entry, or credit-tracking database: It is possible that:
- Always list both names when referencing pre‑2020 work by Erica Mori.
- For Alice Flore, add a placeholder like
[unknown second alias]unless you find a verified public statement linking her to another name. - Do not assume that Alice Flore = Polly Yangs. Evidence suggests they are different people who collaborated.
The Rebirth as Polly Yangs
In 2008, a bizarre, hyper-saccharine webcomic titled Gumball Gospels appeared on a now-defunct server called StrawberrySquid.net. The author credit read “Polly Yangs.” Readers quickly noticed that the linework, especially the way hands and eyes were drawn, was identical to Erica Mori’s. In a rare 2010 interview on a podcast called Zine Scars, Mori admitted: The names are misspelled (e
“Polly Yangs is me, but also not me. Erica had to dye her hair black and draw dead birds. Polly wears a yellow wig and draws talking pastries. I needed to kill the old brand to find joy again.”
Thus, Erica Mori aka Polly Yangs became a case study in artistic reinvention. Under the Polly Yangs pseudonym, she published three cult graphic novels: Sugartooth, The Elevator of Forgotten Snacks, and Lint & Crown.