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All sprouts shot up from the deep bottom. Everything living arose. A profusion of water lilies spread out as if it were a woven carpet, and lying on it was a sleeping woman, young and beautiful.
#FolkloreSunday #SwampSunday
🗨️H.C. Andersen
🎨 Elenore Abbott
Edmond Dulac's illustration for Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale 'The Nightingale.'
#FolkloreSunday https://t.co/qKlGPT2lrg
The Golden Age of Illustration 1875 – 1920
In this period the popularity, abundance and upsurge in the quality of illustrated books marked a change in the way that publishers, artists and the general public came to view this art form #FolkloreSunday https://t.co/2NSdXWpOYw
"Look at them, mother Troll said. Look at my sons! You won't find more beautiful trolls on this side of the moon" 1915 by Swedish artist John Bauer, an artist I ♥️ and see how he may have inspired Brian Froud's Mystics for The Dark Crystal, my favourite film #folkloresunday
"How cosy it is to sit in the warm glow of the fire listening to tales. Let the wind tell its own story! It can tell you more adventures than all of us put together..."
The Wind's Tale by Hans Christian Anderson, illustrated by Edmund Dulac (1911) #FolkloreSunday
Richard 'Dickie' Doyle (1824-83): Teasing a Butterfly #FolkloreSunday
John Dickson Batten (1860-1932) initially studied law before realising he'd chosen the wrong career. His subsequent paintings contained mythological & allegorical motifs which ultimately steered him toward illustrating fairy tales, nursery rhymes & nonsense tales. #FolkloreSunday
In the Solway Firth, a mermaid fell in love with a sailor whom she rescued when his ship ran aground. She slipped a gold ring on his finger and promised to return, but after many years, he died, alone.
#folkloresunday #swampsunday
#illustration : Arthur Rackham
#FolkloreSunday
Illustrations for Robert Browning’s The Pied Piper of Hamelin by Kate Greenaway (1846-1901.) Note the 18th century costumes in a Queen Anne style, so beloved by Greenaway, and known as the Kate Greenaway style.
In northern counties of England it was said that if you swept the dust from the house out of the front door then you'd effectively be sweeping all the house's luck and good fortune with it. #FolkloreSunday
#FolkloreSunday Witches' Kitchens by Hieronymus Francken II (between 1593 and 1623), Frans Francken the Younger (1610), David Teniers the Younger (between 1630 and 1690), and Francisco Goya (1797-98)
There is a place in the ocean where Neptune stores the heart of every whale that came to rest, at the end of its days, on the floor of the sea. A locket of sorts in lieu of the absent hearts of men.
#FolkloreSunday
#writersoftwitter
#Twitter
Fun fact (for #Hollywood execs) There are 46 SubSaharan African countries. Each of them have an average of 200 - 300 tribes & ethnic subgroups. Each of those distinct pple have their own unique legends; countless folklores, fables etc...
Do you need to #racebend white stories?
Speaking of controversial reimagining of Danish folklores, I'll be surprised if #Disney doesn't call Ariel and Eric problematic since the former got married at 16. Don't believe me? Rewatch the animated film.
— #TheLittleMermaid #ديزني
"The very best of cooks are sorcerers, wizards, shamans and tricksters. They must be, for they are capable of powerful acts of transformation.
-Midori Snyder - In Praise of the Cooks
Alchemists in workshop engraving 1580
#folkloreSunday
“The ripest fruit first falls...”
Richard II, Act 2, Sc 1
#ShakespeareSunday #FolkloreSunday
Image: The Crab-Apple Fairy by Cicely Mary Barker, 1926 #autumn
In #JapaneseFolklore, nasu baba is a #yokai with dark purple skin and the features of an ugly old woman resembling an eggplant with teeth. She haunts a temple complex on Mount Hiei, usually lurking in dark rooms to avoid being seen. Despite her wild and...
#FolkloreSunday
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#CapeCod #FolkloreSunday #food
"Moshup was the first schoolmaster. From his home on the Cliffs he taught the people respect.... He also taught us to be charitable - for when he had great stores of fish he gave of his abundance." --a tribal member
#FolkloreSunday Christina Rossetti's ‘Goblin Market’ tells the story of an encounter between Laura & Lizzie & goblin merchants. Laura exchanges a lock of her hair to taste the goblins’ forbidden fruit & deteriorates till she is ‘knocking at Death’s door’ https://t.co/HeSTxcb51O
#FolkloreSunday
The contents of Pandora’s Box has been likened to the story of the forbidden fruit of the Garden of Eden in Biblical lore, w/the “sin” of the knowledge of good & evil being likened to hindsight or afterthought (Epimetheus) thus robbing one of “innocence.”