Long time Star Stable enthusiast Follows from newportangelsHe/Him | Adult | Firestar
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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Another impulsive purchase..
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Took LARPing a bit too serious and now i'm the king of Jorvik
#ssoblr#star stable#riley wolfstorm#my screenshots#I still play!! i just dont have time to post much anymore
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i feel like evergray would feel guilty about not talking to his brother for... *checks wiki* 20 years or less
oh yeah, and my ref sheet is under the cut if anyone's curious
i didn't use it at all but oh well
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why does tiktok sso community not listen about bettersso?
like oh this has malware? oh well
like desperation at its finest.
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OC lore badly explained
Short look at how Odette got to jorvik
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Revenge for @johnlennonyaoi of their star stable character Roman :)
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This is literally the best thing ever,, where are the riley fans at!!!!! THIS IS AMAZING
art fight attack for @jorvikpresident
#Riley wolfstorm#THIS MFFF and he knows i cant attack back bc im BUSYY BUT ITS SO AMAZING im gonan try#freak#ITS SO GOODD
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not to veto the poll goers but I actually kinda like the top... 😒
#this is what i get for asking#Riley Wolfstorm#my art#sso oc#im posting a wip to hopefully make sure i finish this
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#very cute and a great start!!#rendering is hard but i really recommend maro buccis series 10 minutes to better painting on youtube#lifesaverrr
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Can you explain the "breyer horses are stylised" thing you said a while back? Not because I don't believe you but because I don't know enough about horses to see it (besides the mane and tail)
All artistic representations of a horse will be somewhat stylized. Humans can't help it, they imagine details, even when referencing photos or live animals. A swayed back gets exaggerated, sickle hocks are overlooked, the face becomes more expressive, because to a human who loves a horse, and who expresses their own emotions with their face, the horse's face just feels more expressive.
Take a look at this horse from Peter Paul Rubens' "Wolf and Fox Hunt" (1616) and how it compares to a photo of a horse
The artist was clearly familiar with horses, and most likely referenced off a live horse. And yet its face is much more expressive than a real horse's face - it's neotenous and borderline anthropomorphic, with its huge sorrowful eyes, and the short muzzle that puts the mouth in closer proximity to its eyes (making its expression more readable).
I think a lot of people see what they want to see when they look at a horse, and they reflect that in their art. Is the horse an independent agent or a tool of its rider? Is the horse an unthinking animal or a soulful creature like yourself? Does the artist admire animals, in spite of painting them in terrible war-like scenarios? Does the artist paint animals in these scenarios because he admires them? Is the horse meant to elevate the status of its rider, by being depicted as a soulful creature that nonetheless submits to its rider? (You can probably guess my own opinion from these questions)
Earlier art saw horses almost an afterthought, depicted from memory while their rider was drawn reverently. All those art pieces of emperors and kings on horseback, where the horse looks like a cartoonish oaf, use the horse as a symbol of power, with no regard for the animal itself. Even when the horse is beautifully rendered, it's nothing more than a vehicle to carry its rider. The artist has depicted the horse as expressionless, beastly, and soulless.
Even when you get into portraits of horses in the 17-/1800s, they are still stylized, though now you're just as likely to see a lithe and graceful companion, as you are a muscled working horse or a faithful old friend. Horse breeding really took off around this time, as did theories of animal minds, so adoration of horses-as-individuals became more widespread. Examples are "Lustre" (1762) by George Stubbs, "Mare and Foal in a Stable" (1854) by John Frederick Herring Senior, and "A Grey Horse in a Field" (1873) by Rosa Bonheur.
All this is to say that horses will always be stylized in art. Humans can't not twist the horse the suit their own tastes, and that's fine. I actually think it's kinda beautiful. The way horses are stylized can give you insight into the artist's opinion of horses. An artist with a neotenic, expressive stylization probably has more respect for horses-as-individuals than an artist who depicts them as inexpressive, powerful, willing beasts of burden.
Breyer horses have an airy painterly quality to them. Even the draft horses seem almost weightless. Compare Breyer's "George" with the self-released resin horse "Gustav," both sculpted by Brigitte Eberl.
George has much longer hooves and smoother curves in his legs - you could draw a near perfect curve from his hind knee to his toe -, giving him a flowing appearance with very little weight behind it. Gustav, on the other hand, has sharp edges and corners. He feels heavy. I'm a big fan of wrinkles and muscle on model horses, but the muscles on George seem like he's been through a rock tumbler. They're smooth and soft-looking, except for the extremely deep crevices between them, which are probably there to better catch paint and enhance the shading (an effect that's especially noticeable on George's thigh). Gustav, on the other hand, has very subtle muscling and virtually no wrinkles (he deserves neck wrinkles, give my boy neck wrinkles!!). He looks like a working horse with a solid layer of fat over his muscles. George's stylization is, for lack of a better word, smooth. Flawless. A bit too perfect for my liking. George is like the platonic ideal of a visually appealing draft horse. A horse like him can't exist.
I think resin horses by master craftsmen are the closest we'll get to depicting horses exactly as they are in life. The stylistic choices are extremely subtle, and seem more like a consequence of the medium than a deliberate goal on the artist's part (e.g., you can't make a realistic mane out of resin, so you have to compromise).
I love both the stylistic trappings that humans fall into when depicting horses and the endless quest for the perfect artistic representation of the horse. Both are beautiful. All horse art is beautiful.
(Obligatory disclaimer that I'm not an art historian or anthropologist, I literally studied bugs at university, so if you think I'm talking out of my ass you are MORE than welcome to add to this post!)
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snooze
my very first fanart for starstableonline <: drawing fripp was really fun <3
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AHH THANK YOU SO MUCH!! u drew them sooo cute im literally in love eekk
attack on @newportangels !
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Forgot to post before but I did a quick revenge for @doveshovel :D
#my art#others ocs#ssoblr#art fight#Literally still going crazy over that Riley art btw..#unless i attack more ppl in ssobrl if u wanna keep up with my artfight stuff u can check out my main newportangels
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I still cannot believe you attacked mee so quickly with such an amazing drawing too thank you so much!!
Today's artfight attacks :^)
Top left to bottom right: @seshmesh, @yasminewestbank, @cmentary-drive, and @jorvikpresident's SSO characters :D
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