#Lieutenant Odinkirk
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vikkicomics · 1 month ago
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Coloured version!
Vincent and his red-tailed hawk Flosshild, concept art for Moth. A young man and his hawk was a very popular subject for portrait paintings in traditional Japanese woodblock art, which leant inspiration for this piece. This is set in Japan, 1907, when the Japan was still employing Prussian officers to modernize their military.
A young man in a pickelhaube visiting a Buddhist temple, as is shown behind him, creates a striking contrast between Pacifist and Militarist symbols, as well as between Eastern and Western aesthetics and philosophies. Both are condemned by the English-speaking establishment, we are permitted to be neither Pacifists, nor Militarists, everything we do now is expected to be motivated by plutocracy.
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vikkicomics · 8 months ago
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Anniversary of the fall of Königsberg. >Re image 2: POV, you just woke up. The anniversary was actually April 9th, but Tuesdays are so chaotic for me I didn't get around to posting. Now would be a good time for you to go and research the history of the city and it's destruction. The subject of Königsberg should not be used to stoke division, it is the tragic, shared legacy of many European peoples, may we hold hands and morn losses on all sides.
Description of Image 1: Three Prussian Officer Cadets and a junior Lieutenant gather outside of Königsberg Castle, wearing walking out dress, in April 1908. Characters are from my pre-wwi Prussian Officer Cadet drama, Moth. Their names from left to right: Vincent Odinkirk, Leon von Zelewski, Siegfried Isenstein, Gottlieb Witt. Description of Image 2: The same view of the castle, but in April 1945. Three crosses represent the deaths of the comrades in the first image. A Soviet has crawled out from a burning tank and is screaming to be put out of his misery. The Script of Moth, to which these Illustrations relate, does not continue beyond the 1920's. And so, this is likely to be my first and last piece of wwii art. The two images are 37 years and 2 world wars apart, but the castle and the surviving German officer, are meant to lend permanence to the composition. This is the destruction of his home.
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