Abandoning Ars Goetia demonology the current concept is loosely based on Greek mythological creatures. This unit is reinterpretation of Steropes, one of the cyclops in Hesiod's Theogony. Plain version of yesterday's illustration below:

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"The Cyclops at their Forge"
In Greek mythology cyclopes were three sons of Uranus and Gaea. Their names were Arges, Brontes and Steropes. They had to forge the thunderbolts for Zeus. And that is the scene we are looking at.
by John Murphy after Luca Giordano
London, dated 1788

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In Greek mythology cyclopes were three sons of Uranus and Gaea. Their names were Arges, Brontes and Steropes. They had to forge the thunderbolts for Zeus. And that is the scene we are looking at. Three immensely muscular males at work.
"The Cyclops at their Forge"
dated 1788

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"The Cyclops at their Forge"
by John Murphy after Luca Giordano; 1788.
In Greek mythology cyclopes were three sons of Uranus and Gaea. Their names were Arges, Brontes and Steropes. They had to forge the thunderbolts for Zeus.

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Day 14: Cyclops

⚡️The three Kyklopes that work in Hephaistos’ forge making weapons for the gods are Arges, ‘vivid flash’; Steropes, ‘lightning’; and Brontes - ‘thunder-clap’
(or Akmonides, ‘anvil son’; Argilipos, flashing radiance’; and Pyrakmon , ‘fiery anvil’)

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"The at their

Engraver:
after the painting by
In Greek cyclopes were three sons of and Their names were and They had to forge the thunderbolts for https://t.co/GXxAIFvQDf

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blood kinda--
(asteropes a freak w glowin blue jello blood pass it on)
anyway.
tdcc's new album came out recently and i was listening to it on youtube and satisfaction guaranteed is SUCH a jam and it constantly makes me wanna draw so
here we are w this basard again

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