I sought and longed for something I could not quite name. But in you, I found it.
~10hr painting study of a shot from Guillermo Del Toro's Frankenstein, what a beautiful film 🍁🖤
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I sought and longed for something I could not quite name. But in you, I found it.
~10hr painting study of a shot from Guillermo Del Toro's Frankenstein, what a beautiful film 🍁🖤
So I am not a painter and color/value is actually one of the biggest things I struggle with, but I've been doing 15-minute painting studies of clouds before finally moving onto more solid subjects. I've been watching videos of other artists' processes and listening to their advice, and I gotta say I'm really happy with how much I'm learning.
These are posted in chronological order with about a week and a half between the first apple and the can, which I did just today. The first apple is kind of embarrassing to post but it was an important step to realizing that I just need to worry less and things will work out.
inguinal: trevor/dvo
axilliary: trevor/mason
cephalic: trevor/jamie
head straddle: trevor/tocchet
glued: trevor/tk
dorsal straddle: trevor/barkey
independent: trevor/jack
For @datvcompanionweeks' Lucanis Week Day 7: Free Day!
I do apologize for the catastrophe I caused yesterday lmfao
A study on this particular In The Mood for Love reference.
Bsky version
an intro to the gothic: non-fiction recs
a friend recently asked me for book recs on the history of the gothic novel, so I thought I'd throw together a quick, non-exhaustive list of non-fiction recommendations:
The Gothic by Fred Bottling: roughly 200 pages long, this book is such a great introduction to the gothic and its many iterations since its emergence in the mid-18th century. very accessible, gives you a good overview rather than very specificized or niche depth.
The Contested Castle: Gothic Novels and the Subversion of Domestic Ideology by Kate Ferguson Ellis: Focusing especially on the emergence of the middle-class female reading audience in the 18th century, Ellis traces the direct connection between the growing idealization of the home/domestic sphere and the popularity of the Gothic genre (women, importantly, were the primary consumers of Gothic fiction!)
Colonial and Post Colonial Gothic: The Carribean by Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert: a really fantastic article which highlights the role of imperialism, colonialization, and slavery within the early Gothic genre. I found the full PDF online -- please enjoy!
The Cambridge Companion to Gothic Fiction: another really fantastic collection of essays which outline the history and the progression of the gothic across time (from the 1700's to the present) and space (starting in Great Britain than moving through and across the Atlantic). Like Bottling's text, this book would serve as a great critical introduction for those new to the genre.
Monster Culture (Seven Theses) by Jeffrey Jerome Cohen: this essay isn't strictly about the gothic, but it gives a useful and very popular framework for how to culturally and critically interpret the monster which lends itself very helpfully, i think, with studying Gothic texts. full article available here.
The Madwoman in the Attic: The Woman Writer and the Nineteenth-Century Literary Imagination by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar: again, not strictly about the Gothic but still a worthwhile book to check out. at 700 pages, this is a tome of critical essays. some of it is a bit outdated, i don't personally agree with some of their interpretations (but that, arguably, makes their criticism all the more useful!) -- I don't think you need to read this entire book if you're not inclined, but their interpretations of Frankenstein, Jane Eyre, and Wuthering Heights is worth skimming if you're interested in a feminist analysis of these gothic and gothic-adjacent texts.
if anyone's interested, i can compile a rec list of critical articles or a list of gothic fiction for those who are newly interested in reading the genre!! i hope this is a helpful resource for now -- happy reading and many thanks to @girlfan for the inspo!
sometimes you just gotta wing it in the pursuit of learning