King Thibodeaux is the name given to the artist from NGC N4400. He first came to our planet in the Cretaceous Period. Little is known about his journey here, but scientists speculate that he was converted into waves of ionic energy (super plasma) and shot into space at the speed of light. The lightspeed super plasma "cooled" or slowed down to a speed compatable with our solar system once it neared Neptune. King Thibodeaux came in contact with many of the celestial bodies before finally impacting Earth's atmosphere. King Thibodeaux's particles mixed with the earthly gases and he adapted to the air. The sudden mixture of super plasma and other worldly radiation with oxygen created a series of atomic releases in the atmosphere. These "plasma bursts" scorched the planet in a matter of hours, killing millions of living beings and wiping out many species. King Thibodeaux learned art from the monkeys of the jungles in what is now South America. He traveled the planet in search of a way to leave the planet with his new found knowledge. In 14034 B.C.E. King Thibodeaux showed himself to the primitive apes. He wanted to learn the primal arts again, this time to master them. He found that the monkeys had become taller and ugly, nothing like their ancestors. The confused King Thibodeaux left the new monkeys in search of his old friends. Thousands of years later he found his old friend, whom he named Xetiez Hexiuz. Xetiez had grown old and fragile. The old monkey asked King Thibodeaux to carry him to the top of the tallest mountain in the world. It was there, at the top of Everest, that Xetiez Hexiuz tought the King the way to enlightenment and art. After the old monkey showed King Thibodeaux these things, he vanished. People living in the mountains still claim to see the old monkey to this day. King Thibodeaux resides in the Americas. It is estimated that he is over six billion years old, considering that he came from NGC N440 which is lightyears from our sun.