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This illustration was drawn for Robin Laws’ Yellow King RPG‘s Paris book, featuring a Carcosan take on the Parisian Opera Ghost, sailing on Lake Hali beneath the Garnier Opera House. It was created in watercolour and coloured pencil, and took inspiration from the art of the era, including the symbolist and late romantic painters, as well as sculpture and poster design.

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Annihilation and David Altmejd – an aesthetic of evolution, transformation, horror and beauty (TW: body horror)
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posted to: mediatagged: annihilation, body horror, david altmejd, fear, film, Fine Art, horror, sculpture, structure, transformationI adored Annihilation‘s visual approach (among so much of it, gosh I just adored it overall really!) but as we walked out of the theatre, Matt and I realized we’d seen a similar visual theme at work elsewhere: at the MAC (Musée d’Art Contemporain in Montreal) when we caught a career-spanning solo show of David Altmejd’s work. I’m going to share here with you some images from both, because I think the interplay is really neat!
For the record, the images below are going to flirt with body horror in a big way.
First off, let’s look at some key scenes of Annihilation (click to see the source file larger):







Now, let’s admire some of David Altmejd’s work:







Let’s take a good look at some of his figurative stuff:




And for one final comparison, let me share with you the close-up concepts of the horrifying bear’s head in Annihilation:


And a few final pieces of Altmejd’s that really heck me up:


I’m not crying theft here – I’m just always delighted to find themes, and for anyone who loved the visuals of Annihilation, the art world does actually hold interesting and relevant art for you!
Thanks for your time! Comments are open!
3 responses to “Annihilation and David Altmejd – an aesthetic of evolution, transformation, horror and beauty (TW: body horror)”
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Totally agree,,,,,,,resemblance is stunning,,,,,,,coincidence ?Yes and no.
Artists are creatures indeed. -
Darn, this is great work! Going to bookmark this artist. Hope I can see them in person some day.
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I would go back to see his work again on a dime! Def let me know if you see there’s an exhibit coming!
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I took it as an excuse to draw my own characters for a month straight, using preprocessed rag paper I tore down to size and a limited set of art supplies:

Those waterbrushes are filled with different dilutions of sumi ink, making it fun and easy to do greyscale washes.
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Illustrated for 13th Age Glorantha, featuring historically inspired clothing, weapons and accessories. Drawn with graphite and painted digitally.

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Watercolour on cream rag paper.
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The Isle of Pelursk is a mixed media piece from 2018, inspired by the Canadian Shield, twisted pine forests and strange lights at dusk. Created in graphite and Photoshop.












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