Showing posts with label mythology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mythology. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2015

The lost undertaker, Canberra


(Image source: here )

Going through an internet loop, I came across an article 'Mysterious undertaker riding a coffin appears on Australian lake' and was thunderstruck when I read that the 'Australian lake' in question was Canberra's very own (man-made!) Lake Burley-Griffin.

Was a literary archetype (Villain? Hero? Friendly reminder that death comes to us all?) here in the country's capital the whole time I've lived here? Did he float in from another state? And that most silly question people ask 'why would he do this, what does he want?' apparently when Mashable tried to contact a person they speculated was 'The Lost Undertaker' as he has come to be known, they received this email, apparently not from the figure they thought might be him.

'Unlike Superman, Robin Hood, Zorro, Spiderman, Batman and Wonderwoman, who all revealed their identity to the detriment of their purpose; The Lost Undertaker wishes to hide his true identity. His purpose is to give hope to the oppressed and put the fear of God into the oppressors, villains and rogues that surround us all.'

I for one kind of love this! This obsession people have with 'knowing' who people are dilutes the magic and perhaps the message (The Stig comes to mind). A solitary figure paddling around in the misty morning is an image many won't be able to remove from their mind, particularly when around the lake.



(Image source: here )


(Image source here )


(Image cource here )


(Image source here )

Some of the people in the linked articles talked to him:
“We asked 'coffin man,' 'Where are you going'? His response was, 'To Queanbeyan cemetery as I have a 3 p.m. grave site to prepare,’

The imagery and mystery he has managed to conjure is bang on, especially if he just wants to (perhaps, merely my own speculation) remind us all that in the end, death comes to us all.


(Image source here )

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Sunday, May 3, 2015

Tell it to the trees


Trees are everywhere, loved and overlooked, they are wonderful entities!

"The forgotten Treehouse bars of bygone summers in Paris"

here is a wonderful article about this wonderful old custom. It is easy to look back on a past you never lived in wistfully, but the pictures are so magical!


And of course Yggdrasil, the great tree that links the nine worlds in Norse mythology, is beautifully depicted in immense tomes of other worlds. The accepted meaning of the word 'Yggdrasil' is 'Odin's horse'.






The English language derived many of its words from Norse ones. Etymology is brilliant if you are bi-lingual, sometime you can form a connection where words originated, and where current loan words are today. (A non-terrifying form of globalisation, if you will!)

Here is a beautiful old language tree:



Wonderful giants, protectors of supernatural realms and our air-quality, trees have quite a responsibility! But do it with such graceful ease....

All pictures courtesy of Pinterest.
 Genuinely I type in "tree" or "kickass shoes" and something always comes up

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Sunday, December 14, 2014

Viktor Vasnetsov: Part One


Sirin and Alkonost


Prince Ivan riding grey wolf


God of Sabaoath


Knight at the crossroads


Last days of Metropolitan Nicholas

Russian painter from the turn of the century, Viktor Vasetsov.

The vibrancy captures the mythology and moments so well.

Which is why this is a part one post!

Pics from Tumblr, Pinterest and Wikiart

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Saturday, December 6, 2014

Art from everywhere


Rovina Cai


Gustav Klimt pre-painting run through


Kevin Sloan



Unknown


Anton Vill, above and below



A Fenrir: not sure who this picture is by


Rune Christensen


Man Ray


William Mortenson


Travis Bedel


Matisse

All from Juxtapoz magazine, Berlin artparasites, Dazed and Confused and Pinterest

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Monday, November 10, 2014

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

indoor consolations on a winters day


Nicolas Poussin


Narcissus John William Waterhouse


Miranda- The Tempest. John William Waterhouse


James Alphege Brewer

All pics from Pinterest

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Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Classical art continued


Narcissus transfixed by Carvaggio


Phaedra 1880 Alexandre Cabanel


Saint George and the dragon circa 1470 by Paolo Uccello

All pics from Wikipedia!

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Thursday, March 27, 2014

Classical art


Pan by Edward Burne Jones


Orpheus by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot


John William Waterhouse Sleeping Beauty

Classical art, how I love thee! the literature, mythology and history that springs to mind makes me feel magical just by glimpsing at your beautiful productions by numerous talents over the decades. You make me want to run to the hills and never return!

But there are bills to pay and assignments to do, reality bites.

Pics from Pinterest

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