CitizenErased
Clean Slate
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2016
- Messages
- 552
Yeah, I've seen that painting before, it's very interesting. The whole woman with drawers for a torso on the ground with her arm raised up looking like she's crying for help towards a shadow of another woman in the distance. Pretty traumatic. My personal favorite is The Hallucinogenic Toreador. It's a major head trip. The backstory is pretty funny too, because it's set in a bull ring and the painting is dedicated to his wife, who had a major hatred for bullfighting, so there's a small portrait of her head looking down in disapproval at a dead bull carcass. There's a lot of hidden stuff in there that's fun to find. I also really like Child Watching the Birth of a New Man. I can see how that can be creepy for a young child though. I used to have a major phobia of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody music video when I was really young and even couldn't listen to the song for years until I got older, so I can relate. And now it's one of my favorite songs by them.
I never knew if the Cabinet was a man or a woman, but making deductions from where the drawers' knobs and keys, I'd say it is a woman. I know Hallucinogenic Toreador! I like the repetiton of elements and superposition of those "sets" of the objects.
I remember being so scared of that painting that my parents had to avoid sitting near it, or they'd place me giving my back to it, because everytime I saw it I felt really angsty (at the same time I couldn't stop looking at it). Oh, when I listened to Bohemian Rhapsody for the first time I was 13 (I didn't listen to music before, except for classical music) and I remember feeling like this:

But being scared of things I now love is like my whole relationship with art. I was scared of Poe's stories, Oscar Wilde's stories made me really sad, my favourite story of Ray Bradbury was Kaleidoscope from The illustrated Man (it's about a man reflecting about life while falling from space) and it made me be really scared of outer space, then I was terrified of the story The Boarded Window by Ambrose Bierce... now they are my favourite authors of all time. The same happened to me with Muse. My first songs were the ones filled with more dispair and falsettos and distorted melodies, and I remember being paralyzed in front of the amplifier picturing it floating in space and black tar pouring out of it... and that's when I realized "this is MY music".
Nice. I really like Diferente by Gotan Project and Jimmy´s Gang by Parov Stelar the best out of the ones listed. I liked all the music videos too.
You should check other videos from the bands; for some reason they're all very creative.
Heroes del Silencio are a rock band, but they have a metallish sound on some of their songs, so I thought maybe you may like them because it seemed like you are a metal fan from the bands you listed on your previous post. I really like this song, the lead singer sings with such passion and the lyrics are also very nice:
The singer has awesome hair! (Sorry, that's the first thing I noticed, haha). The sound reminds me of some Argentine bands, especially this one (probably they're from the same decade) called Ratablanca (their most famous song is La Leyenda del hada y el Mago).
I really like the examples you've provided, especially the song Ya no sé qué hacer conmigo by El Cuarteto de Nos, Fuero o Mas Alla by Eruca Sativa, and Patria al Hombro by Almafuerte. Thanks for the song recommendations. I need to start listening to more Spanish music (and to listen to more improve my Spanish) because I mainly listen to the more famous Spanish singers, like Shakira (her old stuff mainly) and 90's Enrique Inglesias (it's a guilty pleasure, don't judge) with a few random songs here and there. I'm not really in touch with my Latino side when it comes to knowing some really cool bands. Are you of Latin background by any chance?
I'm glad you liked them. I have many more, but if I start listing, I never end, haha If you need to practice Spanish and want to write me, I'm up for it
Yeah, it is kind of difficult at first because you have to draw at a much larger scale. But what I like about larger paintings is that it's easier for me to put in more intricate detail.
That is true, the bigger the painting, the more details you can add. But... let me show you this, it's from Karen Libecap:

When I work on th computer I just have to zoom in and that's it, haha, in "manual" drawing it's way more difficult. I have a 0.1 mm mechanical pencil and I love it with my life, you can't imagine the pleasure of drawing hair with that (it's the same diameter as real hair --I clarify for if you use the imperial system for measuring).