Ernest Hemingway: “Good as Spring Itself”

Photographer Unknown, Good as Spring Itself

“When spring came, even the false spring, there were no problems except where to be happiest. The only thing that could spoil a day was people and if you could keep from making engagements, each day had no limits. People were always the limiters of happiness except for the very few that were as good as spring itself.”

Ernest Hemingway,  A Moveable Feast

Werewolf by Night

Rafael Grampa, Werewolf by Night, Cover Illustration, Marvel

Rafael Grampa is a Brazilian comic book artist and writer. The comics anthology “5″ created by Grampá along with Gabriel Bá, Becky Cloonan, Fábio Moon and Vasilis Lolos won the 2008 Eisner Award for Best Anthology. He is author and artist of the “Mesmo Delivery” comic and “Furry Water”, both published by Dark Horse Comics.

Agostino Arrivabene

Paintings by Agostino Arrivabene

After his initial training at art school where Arrivabene says he learnt next to nothing, Agostino Arrivabene toured throughout Europe and studied the Old Master paintings. He researched how to grind his own pigments: lapis lazuli, indigo, cinnabar and madder, dragon’s blood, orpiment and bistre. Arrivabene also studied the almost-forgotten techniques of painting like mischtechnik, used by such artists as Albrech Dürer and Matthias Grünewald.

In the mischtechnik process, egg tempera is used in combination with oil-based paints to create translucent layers that, when laid over each other, refract light through the painting thus creating a sense of luminosity. Arrivabene’s attention to the minutiae of his craft has resulted in paintings actually embodying a process of alchemical  transformation. The physical matter of painting itself, the lead, the ground pigment, the egg, and the oil, is transmuted through the agency of his craft into extraordinary light-filled visions.

Another notable aspect of Arrivabene’s work is its dense saturation with painting’s history; his work resonates with a lineage of past visionary artists. Within Arrivabene’s work, we see glimpses of Francisco Goya, Leonardo da Vinci, Gustave Moreau, William Blake, Odd Nerdrum, and in some of his pencil drawings, Mervyn Peake. Despite this sense of continuity and connection with past masters, Arrivabene’s work remains fresh, contemporary, and distinctly his own.

Toni Grote

Toni Grote, “Storm Clouds with Lightning”, Oil on Wood Panel, 45.7 x 45.7 cm, Private Collection

Toni Grote is a successful artist from Iowa, who has used Ebay as her global gallery since 2001 for the exhibition and sale of her paintings. Since then, Toni Grote has posted over 1,000 paintings, selling most of them.

She uses acrylic and oil paints to create exquisite landscapes, farm animals, and still lifes. She paints on canvas, textured masonite, and other substrates. Her storm paintings, to me, are her forte.

Thanks to http://artisttonigrote.blogspot.com

Christophe Gans, “Brotherhood of the Wolf”

Brotherhood of the Wolf, Directed by Christophe Gans, Narrated by Jaques Perrin, 2001

Brotherhood of the Wolf (French: Le Pacte des loups) is a 2001 French historical horror-action film directed by Christophe Gans, written by Gans and Stéphane Cabel, starring Samuel Le Bihan, Mark Dacascos, Émilie Dequenne, Monica Bellucci, and Vincent Cassel.

The film is loosely based on a real-life series of killings that took place in France in the 18th century and the famous legend of the Beast of Gévaudan; parts of the film were shot at Château de Roquetaillade. The film has several extended swashbuckling fight scenes, with martial arts performances by the cast mixed in, making it unusual for a historical drama. It was well-received with critics praising its high production values, cinematography, performances and Gans’ atmospheric direction.

An older film with a werewolf horror atmosphere; a good thriller to watch.

Cooling Down

 

Artist Unknown, (Cooling Down), Computer Graphics, Gay Film Gifs

“Full fathom five thy father lies;
Of his bones are coral made;
Those are pearls that were his eyes:
Nothing of him that doth fade,
But doth suffer a sea-change
Into something rich and strange.
Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell: Ding-dong
Hark! now I hear them,—Ding-dong, bell.”

William Shakespeare, The Tempest

 

George Wesley Bellows

George Wesley Bellows, “Man on His Back, Nude”, 1916, San Diego Museum of Art

This is a very rare, rich proof impression printed in a black/ purple ink. The edition consists of only 19 prints. It is one of only two lithographs by George Wesley Bellows in which he depicted male nudes.

An American painter, lithographer and illustrator, George Bellows was born in Columbus, Ohio in 1882. He attended Ohio State University from 1901-1904, but moved to New York before graduating to study at the New York School of Art under Robert Henri.

In 1911, Bellows began contributing pictures to the radical journal “The Masses”, which gave him the opportunity to work with like-minded artists such as Stuart Davis, Boardman Robinson and John Sloan. He produced several anti- war drawings during the time of the First World War and completed a series of paintings and lithographs concerning the war.

Bellows moved to the Chicago Art Institute in 1919 and illustrated novels, including several by H.G. Wells. While in New York in 1925, an attack of appendicitis caused his death.