
Adult | I occasionally draw and paint in my spare time and post it on here and on Instagram
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Modern Prometheus

Modern Prometheus
Happy (somewhat belated) Halloween!
I originally planned something more elaborate, but in the end I had to settle for this rather quick doodle of Frankenstein, as I am currently a bit short on time. (Hence also the void background and lack of details in this painting)
(Alternative version & close-ups)





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More Posts from Meticulouslymindlessart

☀️Far-Shooting Apollo☀️
The idea for this arose a while (and by while I mean about 4 months) ago, when we were reading the Exposition of the Iliad in class.
I wanted to depict the scene in Book one where Apollo sends a plague to afflict the Acheans by shooting first the mules and dogs, then the men, after Agamemnon denied the release of the priest-daughter Chryseis to her father.
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(Close-Up Time!)






Just a bit of messing around with colours.
(Reddish Orange and desaturated Green is not a combination I expected to work out, but it kinda did)
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(More Zoom-Ins for some details)




So, I've had a watercolour underpainting for this little portrait for quite a while now, and a couple days ago I decided to finally get out my acrylic paints and paint it. I don't use acrylic paint that much, since it tends to be a bit messier and more work to clean compared to, say, watercolour. Still I am quite happy with how the painting looks.

🌾 Demeter and Persephone 🌾
I guess springtime got me thinking about the two of them, which is kind of ironic since this painting is set just before Persephone's departure into the underworld.
I also thought the mother-daughter relationship and Demeter's grief at her daughter's marriage/ metaphorical "death" (as described in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter) would be interesting to explore artistically.
(Close-ups)




“Ephemeral Shell”
This painting (especially regarding the flower imagery) is vaguely inspired by the so-called “Schnitterlied”, an originally anonymous (tho later published, revised and quoted by several authors in the following centuries) German poem/song, dealing with fleeting nature of the material compared to the eternal nature of the soul (as appears to be quite common in texts of this era). I came across it when revising for my school finals (which I am still somewhat in the middle of, hence also the recent lack of posts, sorry).
(Close-Ups)



