Fanart
This fanart that I did myself, of Matt Bomer as Donovan from AHS season 5
todays bird
Jules of Nature

⁂

ellievsbear
Sade Olutola

izzy's playlists!
wallacepolsom
Today's Document
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Cosimo Galluzzi
we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever

Product Placement

pixel skylines
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
RMH
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

roma★
One Nice Bug Per Day
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
seen from Israel

seen from United Kingdom

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seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia

seen from France

seen from Suriname
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Italy

seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from South Africa
seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
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@ryan-murphy-analysis-blog
Fanart
This fanart that I did myself, of Matt Bomer as Donovan from AHS season 5
This artwork was done by: Patricio Oliver aka PO
fan art via @ canereker
american horror story + villains
If you look in the face of evil, evil’s going to look right back at you.
American horror story Freak Show
Notes:
*I have had some trouble making sure the posts are in order*
I have learnt from researching aspects of this show and in extension, the film/television industry, that there is so much that goes into it and so many people that sometimes don’t even get the credit they deserve.
The writing, which is the area that I want to go into, is one of many key aspects in creating the art, because each section that goes into making a show/movie is an art piece in itself.
American Horror Story: Hotel Sets
The sets were created by Set Decorator, Ellen Brill.
Casting
Ryan Murphy is well known for using similar cast in his work.
In Order:
Skyler Samuels/Plays Grace in Scream Queens and a small role in AHS season 4, Bonnie Lipton.
Emma Roberts/Played 2 roles in AHS and Plays the main role in Scream Queens.
Lea Michele/Played a main role in Glee and in Scream Queens.
Ariana Grande/Lady Gaga/Both Musicians that have featured in Ryan’s Shows. Ariana was in Scream Queens and Gaga was in AHS season 5.
Scream Queens
This is the most reccent show that Ryan Murphy has created. It has a very similar theme to American Horror Story except with a lot of added humor, since it is a comedy-horror.
American Horror Story: Hotel
Hotel is the most recent season of AHS. With the absence of Jessica Lange, who is naturally the leading lady of every season, Ryan Murphy decided to add Lady Gaga to the cast. Lady Gaga has added a different presence to the show and introduced her artistic influence.
American Horror Story: Freak Show
The fourth season is very different from the others. The first three seasons were very much centred around a building and were very closed in but with this season, as is the nature of a travelling Freak Show, was very out in the open and has a very high contrast of dark themes and very bright colours. This still has some of the humor of Coven but in ways is much darker.
American Horror Story: Coven
The third season added quite a lot of humor to the usual disturbing imagery. It had a younger vibe to it as if it was aimed more at teenagers and the coulours in this season are much brighter than the last.
American Horror Story: Asylum
In the second season, the show takes a much darker turn and explores mental illnes, discrimination and religion.
Beetlejuice
Lydia Deetz was a troubled young woman, misunderstood by many, whose family moved to a haunted house. She was instantly drawn to the creepy home and soon befriended the ghosts that haunted it.
Lydia’s other interests: crazy hats; wearing baggy, mix-matched outfits; planning her own suicide; using her tough exterior to hide an emotional core.
Sounds like our very own Violet, no?
References
“The Yellow Wallpaper”
S01E08 Rubber Man
Episode 8 of AHS was all about the literary references, with Moira filling in as your Feminist Literature 101 professor. She sums up the premise of Charlotte Perkins Gliman's short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” nicely in her talk with Vivien:
Haven’t you read “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilmore? Her husband–a doctor–locks her away in the upstairs bedroom to recuperate from a slight hysterical tendency. Staring at the yellow wallpaper day after day, she begins to hallucinate that there are women trapped in the pattern. Half mad she scrapes off the wallpaper to set the women free. When her husband finally unlocks the door, he finds her circling the room, touching the wallpaper, whispering “I finally got out of here.” Since the beginning of time, men find excuses to lock women away. They make up diseases, like hysteria. Do you know where that word comes from? The Greek word for “uterus.”
In addition, “The Yellow Wallpaper” opens with the narrator and her husband moving in to a new and strange house. She suspects something is wrong with the property, as it was obtained cheaply and left abandoned for some time. It is also of note that the narrator has recently had a child and is locked, alone, in an old nursery to recover. And she really, really hates the wallpaper.
“The Yellow Wallpaper” was written as an exaggerated account of author Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s experiences with depression and “melancholia.” After seeking medical help, Gilman was prescribed a “rest cure” by her physician, renown specialist Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell. She was only allowed two hours of “intellectual life” per day and was instructed to “never touch pen, brush, or pencil again.” Gilman followed the doctor’s directions for months before finding herself at “the borderline of utter mental ruin.” She eventually threw aside Dr. Mitchell’s advice, returned to working, and started to recover. She wrote “The Yellow Wallpaper” as a warning to doctors and patients alike, and in the process created a staple of feminist literature.
To read the short story in full (do it!), click here.
And click here to read Gilman’s “Why I Wrote The Yellow Wallpaper.”
[On a side note: I’m surprised Ben didn’t claim he was screwing the hysteria out of Hayden. He was merely being a good therapist!]
References
Rick Genest (Zombie Boy)
S01E01 Pilot
While Tate imagines himself walking down the hallways of Westerfield High, preparing for his “noble war,” he appears with a detailed skull painted across his face.
This look closely resembles the face and body tattoos of “Zombie Boy” Rick Genest. Genest is a male model best known for having over $7,000 worth of tattoos etched across most of his body, giving him the appearance of a living zombie. After working in a Canadian circus side show act, Genest gained fame walking the runway at Thierry Mugler’s Fall/Winter 2011 show and appearing in Lady Gaga’s Born This Way video.
Genest cites his love of horror movies and “the art of a rotting cadaver” as influences on his choice of ink. But what was the catalyst for his extreme appearance change?
“Before, I hated pretty much everything and everybody. I just wanted to pass out in the gutter and swear at cars as they went by, shit like that. I wasn’t a happy person at all.
That’s why I got the skull tattooed on my face in the first place, I suppose – I wanted to fucking kill everybody.
References
Resident Evil
S1E01 Pilot
A young Adelaide tells the Twins “You are going to die in there,” as they enter the Murder House.
In the Resident Evil film, The Red Queen (appearing as a hologram of a young girl) tells the team “You’re all going to die down here,” as they enter The Hive.
[Note: This is a common warning/phrase in many horror and thriller films. I was just reminded of RE the most.]
References