Posts Tagged ‘gothic style’

Lady Eureka and the Lion-Lamb Portrait (Theatre of the Absurd) as Outsider Art

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

“Lady Eureka and the Lion-Lamb Portrait” is inclusive of Outsider Art and its sub-categories. But first, a brief description is required for the terms Outsider Art, Folk Art and Naïve Art to determine if “Lady Eureka and the Lion-Lamb Portrait” series is a hybrid convergence of Gothic style and Outsider Art.

“Lady Eureka and the Lion-Lamb Portrait” is a performance art sub-titled “Theatre of the Absurd” as it ironically depicts contemporary Gothic and Gothic Lolita sub-cultures, which are outside of mainstream art. Outsider Art has emerged as a successful marketing category since the Nineties. The annual Outsider Art Fair for “self taught, visionary and outsider art” has taken place in New York since 1992; I visited the Outsider Art Fair in 2000 to see an international audience appreciating wide range of Outsider Art, from authentic folk art to emulated Naïve Art and particularly to see pieces from William Hawkins, whose paintings are now represented in the Museum of American Folk Art and the High Museum of Art.

Outsider Art was coined by Roger Cardinal, an art critic in 1972 described Jean Dubuffet’s “Art Brut” as art that rejects contemporary art values. Dubuffet championed the art of the insane and artists in the margins of society as examples of avant-garde art challenging established contemporary art practices.

The difference between Outsider Art and Folk Art is that Folk Art typically embodies traditional forms and social values of an indigenous culture, where Outsider Art has a marginal relationship to society’s mainstream. Folk artists produce art works with little or no academic artistic training, nor a desire to emulate High Art. Along with painting, sculpture, and other decorative forms, costumes are also included under Folk Art. The Gothic Lolita garments are hand sewn and worn by Lady Eureka. Members of the gothic and Elegant Gothic Lolita sub-cultures often make elaborate costumes for special events. For example, the Lolita Fashion Day on the first Saturday of June in New York City.

Folk Art is relevant to Naïve Art as both include untrained artists. However, unlike Folk artists, Naïve artists aspire to High Art status and interact with the mainstream art world. Naïve Art is characterized by a childlike simplicity and has become an acceptable art style of artists who did not receive formal education in an art school or academy, such as Henri Rousseau. ‘Pseudo naïve’ or ‘faux naïve’ art describes the work of an artist imitating Naïve Art, such as the reference of the “GothLoli child-like figure” in “Lady Eureka”, to represent Liberty and Freedom from autocratic oppression, combined with the Dark, wild lion-like and Light, domestic lamb-like natures of the “Lion-Lamb” in the “Peaceable Kingdom”.

Since the medieval period, Gothic style sought to bring the viewer into a fuller understanding of some of the more grotesque incidents of the human psyche, such as the crucifixion or the mystical aspects to the understanding of God, as represented by Christian symbolisms of “Salvation”, “Hail Mary and the “Lion-Lamb” images. Lady Eureka name references Hick’s view in the “Peaceable Kingdom” of the “Light” in all living beings and the world, speaking to that which “shines from within every one of us”. Eureka is the inner “Light” of insight gained by facing our deepest fears, which results in sudden clarity emerging from the depths of chaos and the midst of darkness.

Therefore, by integrating Outsider Art and its various sub-sets, along with the historical reference of Gothic Art, “Lady Eureka and the Lion-Lamb Portrait” is a conscious expression that renders it to be ultimately a ‘faux naïve’ art expression and aptly sub-titled, “Theatre of the Absurd”.

hicks_peaceable

END NOTES:

http://www.sanfordsmith.com/outsider.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theatre_of_the_Absurd

http://www.dubuffet.com/

http://www.artpromote.com/gothic.shtml

http://www.mediumatlarge.net/2009/05/lolita-fashion-day-june-6-at-kinokuniya.html

The History of Witchcraft in 7 Steps – Part 1 from Goth Style Secrets

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

The History of Witchcraft in 7 Steps – Part 1 from Goth Style Secrets

Lady Eureka will bring you the “The History of Witchcraft in 7 Steps”, which I wrote two centuries ago (1867). You will learn the ancient secrets why the number 7 is a most magical number and how it applies in our modern world. These secrets have been suppressed over the centuries for the secret elite to maintain their powers since the dawn of humankind. But today, you too will start to learn about this hidden knowledge, long forbidden since the Garden of Eden…


Past Reflection

This is where I show you exactly how witchcraft, sorcery and magic find its roots and even later on through the ages leads to people being either burned, drowned, or hung. These people who were thought to be witches but were not witches, but Protestants within the Christian church. These were the same ones that were protesting the Catholic Church.

As I am trying to put this all together, I hope to bring about an understanding that Witchcraft, like any religion, has undergone its changes throughout the centuries. It is my personal feeling that the religion of Witchcraft has undergone far fewer changes than any other in history.

The secrets of witchcraft, sorcery, magic, finds its roots as far back as Mesopotamia. With their dieties for all types of disasters, such as Utug – the Dweller of the Desert waiting to take you away if you wandered to far, and Telal – the Bull Demon, Alal – the destroyer, Namtar – Pestilence, Idpa – fever, and Maskim – the snare setter; the days of superstition were well underway.

It was believed that the pharaohs and kings, all imbued some power of the gods, and even the slightest movement they made would cause an action to occur. It was believed that a picture or statue also carried the spirit of the person. This is one of the reasons that they were carried from place to place, and also explains why you see so many pictures and statues of these persons with their hands straight to their sides.

In the Bible, we find reference to ‘The Tower of Babel” or The Ziggurat in Genesis 11. ‘Now the whole world had one language and a common speech. As men moved eastward, they found a plain in Shinar (Babylonia) and settled there. They said to each other, ..Come, let’s make bricks and bake them thoroughly.’ They used brick instead of stone, and tar instead of mortar. Then they said, ..Come, let us build ourselves a city, with a tower that reaches to the heavens, so that we may make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the face of the whole earth.’ But the Lord came down to see the city and the tower that the men were building. The Lord said, “If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other.” It goes on to say that the tower was never finished…

In other references, we find that the “Tower” was in fact finished, and that it was a tower that represented the “stages’ between earth and heaven (not a tower stretching to the heaven in the literal sense.) From this reference, it was a tower built in 7 steps. It was a hierarchy on which heaven and hell were based upon. It was actually a miniature world representing the Mountain of Earth.

Each of the mysterious 7 steps was dedicated to a planet, with its angles symbolizing the four corners of the world. They pointed to Akkad, Saburtu, Elam, and the western lands. The 7 steps of the tower were painted in different corresponding colors, which corresponded to the planets. The ‘Great Misfortune, Saturn, was black. The second was white for the color of Jupiter. The third, brick-red for the color of Mercury, followed by blue for Venus; yellow for Mars, gray or silver for the moon. These colors boded good or evil, like their planets.

For the first time, numbers expressed the world order. A legend depicts Pythagoras traveling to Babylon where he is taught the mystery of numbers, their magical significance and power. The secrets of the 7 steps often appear in magical philosophy. The 7 steps are: stones, fire, plants, animals, man, the starry heavens, and the angels. Starting with the study of stones, the man of wisdom will attain higher and higher degrees of knowledge, until he will be able to apprehend the sublime, and the eternal. Through ascending these steps, a man would attain the knowledge of God, whose name is at the eighth degree, the threshold of God’s heavenly dwelling. In our modern times, we find the 7 steps as the 7 energy centres represented in the human body…and the eighth degree is called universal consciousness – widely described in “new age” philosophy.

The square was also a ‘mystical’ symbol in these times, and though divided into 7, was still respected. This correlated the old tradition of a fourfold world being reconciled with the 7 heavens of later times.

It is thought that here was the start to numerology, but for this to have developed to the point where they had taken into consideration the square as the fourfold world, it would have had to have developed prior to this. From Mesopotamia let’s move over to Persia…

Stay tuned for the next mystical issue of “The History of Witchcraft in 7 Steps – Part 2”, a knowledge so powerful that lead the Catholic church had suppressed it for over the centuries, beginning with the “holy war”. You will learn about the Chaldean star religion that taught that luck and disaster were not chance events, but they were controlled from heavenly bodies. You will also discover how the star Sirius would carry messages to the higher gods. And I will also share insights with you about the belief in the “holy war’!

Until your next lesson, read my latest articles in my secret archive by opting into the form at: www.Goth-Style-Secrets.com.

Gothic fashion tips from Burcu’s Angels (Pesky Peacocks)

Friday, May 2nd, 2008

Romantic gothic clothes are made up of selected vintage pieces or vintage-inspired designs. Clothing from the 1920s to 1975 is considered vintage, and clothing manufactured from 1975 until twenty years ago is referred to as retro clothing. 

Pesky Peacocks prom dresses are featured in Goth-Style-Secrets.com, a website that provides information on how to become the absolute Goth you were created to be - with gothic makeup, goth hairstyles and clothing tips, including corsets, PVC, leather and latex! As dark and rich hues are the dominant colors for gothic clothes, check out the vintage prom dresses on this page and more vintage gothic fashion tips on Goth-Style-Secrets.com.

Pesky Peacocks is a new vintage offering from Burcu Ozdemir, owner of alt-fashion emporium Burcu’s Angels of Main Street. Burcu’s Angels is about colour, texture, fun, magic, and I’ve had enough fun according to veteran vintage shop owner, Burcu. Pesky Peacocks is about colour, texture, decadence, magic. It’s only one word that’s different but it’s going to create a new market. Burcu’s new shop located at 221 East 16th Avenue, caters to the vintage clothing collector. There’s no polyester in sight and all pieces are collectables from the 1920s to the 1960s. A few of the pieces at the new Pesky Peacocks were included in a photo shoot for Goth-Style-Secrets.com, an artistic website that includes the romantic gothic look and style.

Gothic Style Design Grand Opening Party April 25 and 26

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Goths started making clothing for themselves and each other on a small scale. Select brands such as Lip Service have succeeded on a much larger scale by offering the right mix of product and price into the fashion marketplace and the scene has grown along with the brand. More and more people are getting into subculture styling because it helps them express their individuality.

Miriam of Flaming Angels Designs have continued to expand with the support of the local gothic scene and this has led to the grand opening of Flaming Angels Boutique on April 25, 2008 inside The Fall Tattooing. This retail space is located in downtown Vancouver on 644 Seymour Street. Read the interview on gothic style design at www.goth-style-secrets.com.