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Vampire metamorphosis.
Twitter (X) | Instagram | Artstation | Inprint
Crowley🍎
First of all, F Gaiman and everything he's done.
Now that we got this out of the way, here's a portrait of Scottish Crowley of Good Omens on Bentley the horse, painted this a year ago for a charity project "Ineffable Artbook", tried to incorporate the appropriate tartan to pay homage to the wonderful actor.❤️🔥 I usually write a little update here when I post new art, I have to say it's hard to put things into words right now, from the looming betrayal of my country by the new American leadership to the russian attack of Chornobyl's protective dome, I'm struggling to keep the hope up, but that's really all we can do. Hope and help as much as possible. There is still a chance for us if Europe finally wakes up.
The Return of the King (1980)
Tolktober Day 4: Wings
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The Black Angel of the Day is...
Miranda
From Resident Evil series
Dream Idyll (A Valkyrie)
Artist: Edward Robert Hughes (British, 1851–1914)
Date: c. 1902
Medium: Gouache and pastel on stretched paper
Collection: Private Collection
Description
Against an indigo sky, a nubile rider grasps the black wings of a flying steed, her body gleaming in the moonlight, her golden tresses let loose in the wind as she peers down at the stony structures of a city built along a river many miles below. Is this a goddess of antiquity, a fairy, a captured princess? This allusive, seductive, strange, Symbolist scene by Edward Robert Hughes immediately captivated audiences upon its 1902 exhibition at the London's Royal Watercolor Society. As The Builder's exhibition review exclaimed, "among the larger works of the year is one of importance, both in style and execution. It represents a kind of work seldom undertaken in water-colour and seldom seen at… the Society. This is Mr. E. R. Hughes' large and striking picture entitled 'A Dream Idyll'" (The Builder, p. 544).
walter & malak take a break