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Italian Ex Votos

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As a fan of symbolism, something about these strongly resonates with me. I’d like to create a non-religious version, reflecting my personal brand of secular yet spiritual-ish beliefs (largely based on quantum physics and Jungian notions).

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As explained here:
An ex-voto is created when an individual’s prayers for a miracle are answered. After praying to a saint for a miraculous healing, an individual would commission a local artist to create a small painting that would be hung in the local church as a public testimony of that individual’s faith and gratitude for a miracle.

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Usually done on canvas or tin, ex-votos generally consist of three basic elements: the illustrative depiction of the event, the narrative, and the depiction of the saint or deity. Variations of this standard form can be seen over time, but the central elements remain the same.

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Ex-votos are not only symbols of faith and devotion, but also serve to document diseases and their treatments including smallpox and tuberculosis. Emphasis is placed on the dramatic aspects of an illness including exaggerated symptoms evoking sympathy for the sufferer and validating the importance of the divine in the sufferer’s recovery.

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Many depictions take place in the home where doctors and family members tend to the sick. Homes are generally modestly decorated and always include religious icons. Settings also include hospitals and operating rooms where doctors and nurses can be seen using surgical instruments and other medical equipment.

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Patients are seen in bed or on an operating room table. They appear calm and serene as their faith and devotion enables them to transcend their pain and suffering.

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See more here.
Source


Filed under: art, vintage Tagged: art, vintage

The Many Illustrated Faces of Poe: A MegaPOEst

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With a quick glance at my archives, I realized that something about the illustrious Edgar Allen Poe lends itself to artistic caricature. I’ve somehow gathered a vast collection of artistic representations, most of which lean toward the grotesque.

Here are just a few (apologies for not being able to include source links…far too ill…).

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Hm. I did not intend to randomly select *13* Poe images. Guess goth happens sometimes.

Why do you think so many people choose to depict warped and wonderful Edgar?

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Desktop Goodies 6/4

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Brains: it’s what’s for dinner.
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And speaking of, who thought a grinning peanut grinding his own brain out onto a platter was…a great idea for a product? I envision a young Hannibal Lecter having a lovely time with this. Don’t get me wrong. I’d like one.
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For the one time every few years that I need to physically remove a staple:
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What actually happens when you have a toothache. Next time you are bothered, understand that it is just the worms, demons and ghosts acting up beneath your enamel.
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Mid-century America presents NARCISSISM: THE DRESS.
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I don’t. But I’ve heard the stories.
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Ohhhhhh…so that’s how you get a man. You glue him down! I’ve been doing it wrong.
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A real book; I kid you not:
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When a man is asked what is perfectly irresistible I highly doubt “wool mantilla” is the first item that comes to mind (click picture to enlarge).
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The quote that made my week (thanks, Casey):
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Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: absurd, advertising, anatomy, anthropomorphic, art, clothing, humor, medicine, photography, products, retro, surreal, thrift horror, vintage Tagged: absurd, advertising, anatomy, Books, clothing, humor, medicine, photography, products, retro, street art, surrealism, thrift horror, vintage

Stephanie Henderson

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I love Stephanie Henderson’s remarkably vibrant take on classic Vanitas still life paintings.

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Vivid rich colors draw the eye in, as oddities in decor make these paintings distinctly modern and mildly surreal.

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See more here.

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: anatomy, art Tagged: anatomy, art

Peter Birkhauser

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I cannot look away from this painting. Though seemingly simple, I find it entrancing. The artist’s story is rather interesting…
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The creative process of the Swiss artist Peter Birkhäuser (1911-1976) took a striking turn when he entered midlife. A successful and influential graphic artist, Birkhäuser entered a deep depression and sought answers in the ideas of C.G. Jung. He entered analysis with Marie-Louise von Franz and developed a friendship with Jung himself.

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As it became more difficult for Birkhäuser to finish his creative assignments, he began to illustrate images from his dreams. Over the course of 35 years, he kept notes on over 3400 of his dreams, and his work increasingly focused on the images emerging from his unconscious. His new work was not well-received by the art community of the time, but, viewed today, his vivid paintings bear striking testament to the disruptive and transformative reality of the individuation process.

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I love how each painting at the source has a mini analysis pop up when you hover over it with the cursor.

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See more here.

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Sandrine Replat

Deviant Moon Tarot

DEADBEET Custom Group Show

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I had to share this pun-tastic idea for a group are show.

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Toy Art Gallery is proud to present Scott Tolleson’s DEADBEET Custom Group Show! The Deadbeet is 6” of soft vinyl veggie mischief, and we’ve invited 50 of the toy scene’s brightest and best toy artists customizers to tame this ragged root.

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If anyone makes it to this, let me know how it is!

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Source (with info and artist roster)

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art, craft, exhibits Tagged: art, craft, exhibits

Maggie Taylor

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Maggie Taylor creates surreal digitally altered photographs; colorful, ethereal, and thought provoking.

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Recently, an amazing friend pointed me toward active imagination (a Jungian exercise to help access the unconscious). These images remind me of the waking dreams my brain conjures using that technique.

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Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art, surreal Tagged: art, surrealism

John Atkinson Grimshaw

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John Atkinson Grimshaw is a classic favorite of mine.

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He achieves a rare blend of eeriness and warmth. His distant perspective bathes dampened cityscapes in moonlight, bringing calm to the bustling streets.

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Victorian industrialized England had its fair share of grime and grit, but viewing it from afar in the glowing haze of Grimshaw’s works renders it utterly beautiful.

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Human figures, if present at all, are mere shadows…tiny wraiths floating through grand space.

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John Atkinson Grimshaw

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Mita Makura (?)

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I have no information on this artist (nor am I even certain I have the right name), but I nonetheless became captivated by these incredibly detailed structures.

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It’s like MC Escher on digital steroids…

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I feel like I need to take a good while to get lost in each one, exploring all of the objects, angles, shadows and surprises.

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A few more here.

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: architecture, art Tagged: architecture, art

Peter Lacy: Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

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Peter Lacy has only a small deviantART gallery, but I discovered his rendition of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse in a search for cute grim reapers (don’t ask).

Death:

Pestilence:

Famine:

War:

Peter Lacy

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art, undead Tagged: art, undead

Julian De Navarez

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Julian De Navarez is one of those artists I found and suddenly realized I had lost a large chunk of time going through his archives of work.

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My brain became immersed in putting together these surrealist vignettes…

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For my favorite Libra, Lulu:
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The images are filled with magic, machinery and meetings of odd creatures in strange places. What’s not to love?

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http://www.juliandenarvaez.com/gallery.html

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Bill Carman

Veri Apriyatno

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I’m an eye person. I’ve always been drawn to them as the most attractive feature on a person.

Rather than focus on eyes as the “window of the soul,” Veri Apriyatno uses the eye as a subject reflecting its surroundings.

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Interesting photorealism concept, no?

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Looking at the observer to observe the observed…

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More at the source.
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Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Erica Williams

Julie Hascoët

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Posted by proxy from Dana’s “stuff to blog” queue while she is on medical hiatus. She reads and appreciates all comments…and apologizes for not being able to respond at the moment.

Dana wished me to post this vanitas from French artiste Julie Hascoët.  Skulls can make the most tranquil settings that much more sublime.

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Julie Hascoët

**Your Proxy Blogger is back periodically. Dana has assistance blogging from home, but will have me post now and then. Thanks for the support, everyone!


Filed under: anatomy, art, death, macabre, science

Benjamin Lacombe: Memories

Denis Forkas Kostromitin

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Denis Forkas Kostromitin creates paintings and charcoal pieces rich in symbolism, blending various esoteric traditions. His biography is quite interesting, so I’m going to place it below.

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Denis Forkas Kostromitin was born in 1977 in the town of Kamyshin on the river Volga, Russia into a military officer’s family. The nature of his father’s profession implied extensive travelling to remote regions of the Soviet empire. Such nomadic existence stood in the way of receiving proper artistic education and Denis had to resort to self-study. What the wastelands lacked in creature comforts they made up for in epiphanies: long nights, extreme cold and isolation ensured numerous sensory deprivation experiences. The young artist’s attempts to capture narcoleptic visions through his draughtsman’s talent defined a pattern for all his future endeavours.

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As the austere Soviet environment had little to offer in terms of esoteric literature Denis eagerly plunged into the world of Greek and Egyptian mythology and mysticism. Upon the iron curtain’s collapse in 1991 the great information deluge delivered translations of works by Levi and Crowley along with anonymous treatises on alchemy and ceremonial magic, which contained precious bits of insight into matters like energy management, will, balance and intent. The purgatory of Russian military service in the mid-nineties had Denis revise his approach to esotericism and brought him to the gates of Western philosophy.

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In the wake of the new century’s economic boom Denis frequently visited China as a qualified interpreter, a journalist and a commercial representative. He was lucky to have met several native painting masters and was eventually granted a chance to study Eastern painting tradition first hand. Almost three years of heavy practice, which included mastering gongbi and xieyi techniques, helped Denis determine his true vocation and inspired him to take on the path of a professional artist. Before leaving China Forkas developed the principles of his Eglantine Breath philosophy. The approach – aimed at balancing the Apollonian and the Dionysian impulses and reviving the ancient spirit of harmony in a work of art – merged ceremonial magic, meditation and technical prowess in a single current.

Denis Forkas Kostromitin

Denis Forkas Kostromitin

Cannot type/talk due to severe illness (all words courtesy of voice software or kind typing helpers)…I read and appreciate all comments…Apologies for not being able to respond.


Filed under: art Tagged: art

Saccstry

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