#naido arts
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The capn'
#miguel o'hara#miguel o'hara fanart#spiderman 2099#atsv fanart#spiderverse fanart#across the spiderverse#atsv#naido arts#I hope this doesn't evidence too much that I'm impatient for the season to start
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something something soldier poet king
#juno's the poet jyr's the soldier han's the king#my art#innsjoart#artists on tumblr#oc art#oc core#young gods#young gods art#yeonaixho sehwohl#ilfther hanishadria#jymaiyri ke naido#yeonaihanyri
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253 yards east of Jack Rabbit's Palace.
#twin peaks#Illustration#art#digital art#frank truman#naido#bobby briggs#deputy hawk#andy brennan#bookhouseboys#white lodge#david lynch#mark frost#sycamore tree
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@joshuahoward Art for Twin Peaks: The Return part 14 #twinpeaks @SHO_TwinPeaks
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June 2017 // Get Messy Season of Color, page 7
Day 187/365 of Year of Creative Habits.
IG: lifethroughjournals
#art journal#visual journal#journal#year of creative habits#get messy art journal#gms15#twin peaks#painting#drawing#illustration#naido#mauve room#acrylic paint#fyeahjournals#journal-addicted#ink#black gesso#mixed media#2017
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blue rose
#the third episode reminds me of my dreams a lot#twin peaks#fanart#art#drawing#sketch#artists on tumblr#black lodge#naido
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Am i the only one who still watches this show? Why is this file so big?:P
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‘Twin Peaks as Fugue’ Theory, Part 2: What is the Black Lodge?
In the second part of my analysis I explore the concept of the Black Lodge as Dale/Richard’s preconscious zone—a place he retreats to in his mind to reset his ‘reality’ when his delusions become too unstable—and I’ll compare the lodge’s inhabitants to the Id, Ego and Superego. I’ll also offer a potential explanation for the significance of the number “430.″
*If you haven’t seen my previous posts yet, you can find my theory summarized here, and Part 1 (about The Log Lady) here.
Continuing with the theory that all of Twin Peaks takes place in Dale/Richard’s mind after suffering a trauma-induced fugue state, I’d like to explore what the Black Lodge could mean in this context. I think one of the biggest clues to understanding this ‘place’ is found by looking at what happens whenever Dale/Richard enters and leaves it: aside from his dreams, we see him first ‘enter’ the lodge in the second season finale, in an attempt to rescue Annie. At this point in the narrative, ‘Dale’ was losing control to Windom Earle and was struggling to save a woman he loved. Windom lures ‘Dale’ into the lodge, and then we get the distinct sense that something bad is about to happen (cue Jimmy Scott!). I’ll get to what happens inside the lodge in a moment, but first, look at what results: ‘the good Dale’ is left ‘trapped’ inside, while his ‘evil doppelganger’ escapes into the ‘outside’ world.
If the fugue theory is true, then this would mean that Dale/Richard’s identity has fragmented into two versions of himself while he was in the Black Lodge. He now divides his conscious thinking into two separate personas, sometimes wandering the ‘outside world’ getting into all manner of dark shenanigans as his doppelganger, ‘Mr. C’; sometimes wandering the lonely hall(s) of the Black Lodge amongst its strange, semi-backward speaking/moving inhabitants, or ostensibly sitting quietly in an art deco armchair and contemplating his mistakes. Who knows what, exactly, goes on when he is ‘in the lodge,’ but suffice it to say that this is a kind of mental purgatory for him.
In psychoanalysis, the “preconscious” mind exists between the conscious and the unconscious mind; preconscious thoughts are those that have been repressed or that originate in the unconscious, but have become available for recall and can be made conscious. It’s a liminal state of awareness, just as the Black Lodge is a liminal space between the world of Twin Peaks and the ‘spirit world’; the void of non-existence; the ‘real world,’ etc., depending on where we are in the narrative.
Later, when Mr. C is confronted with the prospect of returning to the lodge, he takes great pains to stay ‘out.’ If the lodge represents Dale/Richard’s preconscious awareness, then it would make sense that Mr. C would want to avoid it because this is where integration would take place. Mr. C is a product of Dale/Richard’s unconscious; his ‘shadow self’ made conscious. One must always have a shadow self to occupy the unconscious, though, so if Mr. C is ‘out,’ then who is ‘in’? The ‘good Dale’ is in the lodge, i.e. the preconscious zone, so he has virtually been subducted into the unconscious for the duration of Mr. C’s takeover. But the ‘good Dale’ is not fully unconscious, either; I believe the ‘true’ persona (Richard?) has become the shadow self, now.
When ‘Dale’ gets violently ejected from the lodge by The Arm’s doppelganger (this is a tricky one, but I think “The Arm” / the Man From Another Place might be a kind of personification of aspects of Dale/Richard’s Ego in conjunction with the one-armed man—they are the “moderators”—while the Giant/Fireman is the Superego and BOB is the Id... more later!), he ends up falling through a void before being briefly suspended in Mr. C’s monitoring device, then lands on the patio of a structure on some kind of interdimensional island where some weird stuff happens before he travels back into the ‘real world’ through an electrical socket.
I’m not even going to attempt to unravel all of this, but I will mention that the scene in this strange, interdimensional space seems to be a kind of representation of the innermost workings of the ‘hydraulic mind,’ a concept that Freud adopted which seems to recur throughout several of Lynch’s works (Mulholland Drive, Lost Highway, Inland Empire, aka the “blurred identity trilogy”). The hydraulic mind concept views the psychic apparatus in mechanical terms, wherein pressures (from various stressors) build up within the psyche and are subsequently absorbed or discharged. In the interdimensional scene, we see Dale/Richard and Naido reacting to a banging on a door, causing her her climb up onto the top of a TARDIS-like structure and pull a lever, thus seemingly releasing the pressure in a burst of electrical energy that ultimately zaps her into the void. I’ll discuss Naido/Diane in part three, but for now let’s view this scene as a descent into a post-lodge, sub-preconconscious zone, ostensibly taking place in the actual unconscious realm. The ‘sea’ that Dale looks out on from the balcony of the structure is significant, as ocean imagery is commonly associated with the unconscious.
Recall that this sequence precedes ‘good Dale’s’ transformation into ‘Dougie.’ Something forced ‘good Dale’ out of the preconscious zone / lodge before he was ready: I believe this may have been something occurring in the REAL ‘real world,’ e.g. a new treatment being administered by his doctors, possibly shock treatment given the importance of electricity in this transition. Medication might also produce a ‘shock’ to Dale/Richard’s system, simulating electrical impulses as his brain activity changes. This is pure speculation, but not entirely unsubstantiated.
So now we see ‘Dougie’ inhabiting a new world: ostensibly the same Twin Peaks universe, just 25 years later. This becomes his new ‘reality,’ but it still isn’t real. It’s just a new narrative he’s living out after exiting the lodge. He hasn’t lost touch with the lodge, though: he still experiences visions of the lodge and the one-armed man throughout his ‘Dougie’ arc. This is important, because if he did go through shock treatment or something similar, a moderating aspect of his ego is attempting to break through to him from his preconscious awareness. He needs to “wake up” from the deep dream that is Dougie Jones—from his post-treatment stupor—and recall his ‘good Dale’ persona, who still has unfinished business. Before Dale/Richard can ever become fully conscious, he needs to integrate all of his fractured personas into a single, multidimensional self and this can’t be accomplished until each have been deconstructed.
Without straying too far off topic, let’s briefly consider that the world that Dougie and Mr. C inhabit are meant to be one and the same, but when we follow their specific arcs, we can observe distinct differences in tone between Dougie’s world and that of Mr. C. The former is somewhat kitsch (think: the Lucky 7 Insurance Agency, the Silver Mustang Casino, even the local police station), whereas the latter is much darker (Buella’s house, Yankton prison, The Farm). We can assume that the environment and ‘interpersonal’ interactions that Dougie and Mr. C (as ‘alters’ of Dale/Richard) experience are influenced by and structured around each persona’s unique worldview. When these worlds collide—when Hutch and Chantal arrive on Lancelot Court along with the Mitchum Brothers’ troupe (and don’t forget the FBI stakeout, representing the hovering Dale persona)—chaos ensues.
I can’t claim the ability to diagnose a fictional character or anyone else, but I should note that Dissociative Identity Disorder doesn’t seem to be Dale/Richard’s only problem. He’s probably also suffering from psychotic depression with symptoms of depersonalization and derealization. If this is the case, and if he has been hospitalized as a result of his psychosis, he probably would have spent a lot of time lying in hospital beds while being dosed with all manner of medications; and if this was also true, he would have overheard a lot of medical talk as doctors checked on him and discussed his treatment with family, staff, etc.—whether he was conscious of it, or not—and do you know what medical term he might have heard repeatedly throughout this process? “DRG-430.”
The DRG (diagnoses-related group) is a system hospitals/physicians/insurance companies use to classify a disorder and establish a treatment protocol. DRG-430 is code for a patient suffering from psychoses. If my theory holds up, it would be highly likely that Dale/Richard would be classified under DRG-430. When the Giant/Fireman tells him to remember the number 430, I believe that the Giant/Fireman—as an agent of truth (recall my discussion of “fire” and “truth” in Part 1) and as a personification of the Superego—was trying to remind Dale/Richard of who he really was (Richard, probably) and what he was supposed to do (integrate). More on this later.
A quick note about parallels to other works by Lynch: I mentioned the “blurred identity trilogy” earlier, and should point out that these films all include scenes wherein characters who are experiencing identity crises (e.g. fugue states resulting from the unconscious trauma of unrequited love) encounter mysterious but revealing clues about their true selves after passing through/entering a space involving red curtains. We see these prominently featured in Fred’s home in Lost Highway, and in one scene he’s seen disappearing into a darkened space with a red-curtained background as he goes deeper into the mystery (read: his preconscious mind). We see them again when Betty and Rita enter the red-curtained Club Silencio in Mulholland Drive, and Betty finds a significant clue in the blue box. Then in Inland Empire, we see Sue pass through a red-curtained hallway before she enters into a convoluted, increasingly dreamlike sequence of events before the “valley girls” give her a clue about what will happen in the future, when she wakes from a kind of sleep. All of these scenes can ostensibly be linked to these characters’ preconscious awareness of their true identities.
Let’s look at the lodge scene in TP:FWWM, now: this is after Leland kills Laura, when we see him standing in the lodge’s “red room” in front of the one-armed man, who is seated beside the Man From Another Place. BOB appears beside Leland after his body moves around strangely, then floats up and remains suspended in the air at an odd angle. The MFAP then places his hand on the O-AM’s shoulder and seems to speak through and with him in unison, saying: “BOB... I want all my garmonbozia (pain and sorrow).” BOB angrily complies, pulling a bloody wound out of an unresponsive Leland’s belly and depositing it in a splatter on the lodge floor, which the MFAP then seems to absorb and covert into creamed corn, which he proceeds to consume.
This exchange seems to support the idea that the MFAP and the O-AM represent aspects of Dale/Richard’s Ego, in that they share a kind of moderating role in the lodge, and have some degree of control over BOB (as Dale/Richard’s Id). Freud has said of these concepts: “The ego is that part of the id which has been modified by the direct influence of the external world. ...The ego represents what may be called reason and common sense, in contrast to the id, which contains the passions...in its relation to the id it is like a man on horseback, who has to hold in check the superior strength of the horse.” Its main concern is with the individual's safety and allows some of the id's desires to be expressed, but only when consequences of these actions are marginal. "Thus the ego, driven by the id, confined by the super-ego, repulsed by reality, struggles...[in] bringing about harmony among the forces and influences working in and upon it," and readily "breaks out in anxiety—realistic anxiety regarding the external world, moral anxiety regarding the super-ego, and neurotic anxiety regarding the strength of the passions in the id.” (x).
I don’t want to go too deep into an examination of how these psychoanalytical roles are mirrored in each of the four characters discussed above; hopefully their relationship to Freud’s concept is not so far-fetched when viewed in this light. We can interpret the lodge scene with Leland as a kind of preconscious integration of this character’s emotional trauma, without speculating on who Leland represents in Dale/Richard’s dreamworld (yet). This process is happening without Dale/Richard’s conscious awareness, but it is preconscious rather than unconscious, because he is present enough for us to hear his voice as the word “Judy” is whispered when the monkey’s face appears onscreen. I discussed the significance of this transition already, but to briefly reiterate: “garmonbozia”/pain and sorrow is synonymous with trauma, and though the garmonbozia seems to be the trauma surrounding Laura’s murder in this scene, Judy’s whispered name in this moment strongly supports the theory that the real, underlying trauma involves something that happened between Judy and Dale/Richard.
Once again, this analytical tangent has already gone on much longer than I intended but I can’t bail out without mentioning the very important Black Lodge scene in the final act:
This time, Dale/Richard enters the lodge without any more fanfare than hearing a backwards rustling/scratching sound, then looking to the side toward a red glow. In the next moment he is seated in the red room again, and the one-armed man is asking him “Is it future... or is it past?” (we can liken this transition to a kind of “waking up” from the nightmare of losing Laura in the woods; Dale/Richard’s mind compensates for the trauma of this nightmare scenario by abruptly returning him to the preconscious zone for a veiled ‘reality check’). Soon he’s meeting the evolution of The Arm again, who asks him “Is it the story of the little girl who lived down the lane? Is it?” We’ve seen this before, just as we’ve seen the following scene where Dale/Richard is seated as Laura Palmer approaches to whisper something in his ear, causing him to gasp. I may be mistaken, but I believe this is the only time we see Dale/Richard moving in semi-reverse motion in the lodge just like the other lodge inhabitants, which would be significant (he moves with rather than counter to them, perhaps suggesting that he is closer to something in that moment than he has been at any other time). Also, if you compare Dale/Richard’s reaction to whatever Laura whispers to him in this scene to it’s nearly identical one in the beginning of the season, you’ll see that in the earlier scene, Dale reacts with a gasp of apparent horror whereas in this finale scene, the gasp has more of a confused/disturbed tone (more like a “huh??”). Whatever she communicated to him seems to have a profound effect, because after she screams and is ripped up and away by some unseen force again, we see a new persona emerge for the first time. For clarity’s sake, I’m going to just call him ‘Richard.’ Now we see the curtain part and a more ashen-faced, serious ‘Richard’ emerges, briefly encountering Leland again who tells him to “Find Laura.” Something has changed; ‘Richard’ even walks differently. With a wave of his hand the lodge’s curtain is manipulated into opening to reveal Glastonbury Grove, where Diane is waiting. She asks “Is it you? Is it really you?” and he confirms that it is, but somehow neither she—nor we—are entirely convinced, especially after what follows.
So what has happened? I think Dale/Richard came too close to the truth this time in the preconscious lodge zone when Laura whispered in his ear, but instead of retreating into another safe, Dougie-like persona, something got through to him and one of the false layers fell away, leaving a persona that was more true to his actual identity than any other we’ve seen before. This ‘Richard’ persona still goes through the motions of trying to fix the broken dream, just like ‘Dale’ would, but he is tiring of the pretense. He is losing control of his own narrative and can’t maintain it for much longer. He leaves the lodge having come close enough to its preconscious information for some of it to leak through to his conscious mind, and the effect of this leak plays out in the rest of the episode as the false ‘reality’ becomes increasingly unstable: ‘Richard’ wakes in a strange motel that is different from the one he arrived at to find Diane/’Linda’ gone and a different car parked in a different place. This happens after he and Diane pass through a point in the road that is apparently 430 miles from somewhere. I think this transition is actually the point at which real world Dale/’Richard’ agrees(?) to undergo some kind of new therapy that his therapist, Diane (Linda?) warns him could have negative side effects. The number 430 marks this point of transition because 430 is the code for the diagnoses-related group (DRG) that Dale/Richard, the patient, has been assigned (psychoses). It is a kind of subliminal clue from his subconscious mind, as well as from the remote Superego (Fireman). I’ll explore what happens next—along with an explanation for why Naido’s face became the Black Lodge for a moment before she transformed into Diane—in Part 3. Stay tuned!
#twin peaks fugue theory#the black lodge#psychosis#derealization#430#twin peaks: the return#twin peaks spoilers#dale cooper#richard#david lynch#lost highway#mulholland drive#inland empire#parallels#the red room#analysis#preconscious#DRG-430#Judy#freud#psychoanalysis#id#ego#superego#the man from another place#the one-armed man#the giant#BOB#consciousness#explanation
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Tarizapa by Philipp Rehm
“Germany’s Super Bassplayer” 2004 (chosen by German bass magazine “Bass Professor”)
2002 “Mannheim Music Award” with band Popgear 2006 performance at “Euro Video Grand Prix” in Tirana/Albania with german singer Martin Kilger
2009 performance at german TV-contest Bundesvision Song Contest with singer Cassandra Steen, followed by tours, and concerts
References Pop/Rock:
The Flames (Top10 Germany 2002), Cassandra Steen (Top10 Germany 2009), Dinho Alves (Viva-Act 2002), Pallavi Arun, Popgear, Valy Hedjasi (Noor TV Awards 2008, Afghanistan Top10), Martin Kilger, Hubert Kah, Metaphysics (Söhne Mannheims), Adel Tawil (Ich&Ich), Silke Hauck, Gregor Meyle (SSDSDSSWEMUGABRTLAD), Ralf Gustke (Xavier Naido, Schiller), Armin Rühl (Herbert Grönemeyer), concerts, tours and TV-shows in germany and international
References Instrumental/Jazz:
Jürgen Friedrich, HR-Radio-Bigband, Mannheim Jazz Orchestra, Bruno‘s Boogaloo & Funk Orchestra, Jazz Against The Machine, Emilio Martins, Uli Brodersen, NicoleJo, Norbert Scholy, concerts and festivals in germany and international
References TV:
ARTE-inconcert, 3sat (3sat-Festival), Pro7 (TV-Total, Bundsevision Song Contest 2009), RTL Ultimate Chart Show, sat1 (Kerner‘s Jahresrückblick), SWR (NewPopFestival), WDR (1live krone), HR (HR-Nacht), RTL2 (The Dome), ZDF (Fernsehgarten) and many more
MP3: http://www.sozo-music.com/Tarizapa.mp3
EPK: http://philipprehm.com/en/info/#press
FACEBOOK: https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1554052161518484&ref=content_filter
IG: https://www.instagram.com/philipprehmbass
SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/album/6EpxyCyZeskiJKF1m9Kko7?si=iJDhRXDqStyS-XRMJ44A9Q
BIO: http://philipprehm.com/en/info/#moreaboutphil
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Something I started back in early spring, which I've just picked up again. Realised that mauve is exactly the same as Part 3 #twinpeaks 💜😜🏔🏔😱🌲🌲🌲☕️👍🏻 #coincidence #forest #artist #art #painting #acrylicpainting #purple #purpleroom #coniferpainting #douglasfir #firtree #woods #purplesky #thereturn #davidlynch #davidkeithlynch #markfrost #naido #part3 — view on Instagram http://ift.tt/2xqUBew
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Been postponing finishing this Miggy for a while but here he is at last _(:3 」∠)_
#miguel o'hara#miguel o'hara fanart#spiderman 2099#atsv#atsv fanart#across the spiderverse#spiderverse#naido arts#I had so much fun drawing this one kjgfkgj
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Sum Miggy and Peter from my twitter ⋆⭒˚。⋆
#them boys enjoying sum empanadas#las empanadas unen vidas#peter b parker#miguel o'hara#spiderman 2099#spiderverse fanart#atsv fanart#atsv#across the spiderverse#naido arts
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wanted to draw 2 of the savant arguing in formalwear and this was the result :]
#sadihak rouwae#jymaiyri ke naido#these two huh#theyre funny#innsjoart#young gods#oc core#oc art#young gods art#my art
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welcome to the innsjoblog
basics
she/her or they/them pronouns
bisexual
21
usamerican, cst
i speak english + a bit of french and german but not much else
you can commission me to draw art for you. information here
more under cut
tags
oc core (all oc reblogs & og posts)
young gods (posts related to the young gods writing project)
yeonaixho sehwohl, jymaiyri ke naido, ilfther hanishadria, sadihak rouwae, petrai alphanzeyouri (individual tags for young gods characters)
innsjotxt (my textposts & self-reblogs), innsjopoll (my polls), innsjoart (my art)
finn the kitty (finn posts), padme the cat (padme posts)
tagging notes
i tag nsfw under 'nsfw' or 'nsfwish' only on my own posts. if you want me to tag any post i make or reblog with anything, please tell me!
other stuff
i have a twitter and an ao3. any other social media i have does not matter to the likes of you
i will block you if: you are a bot, you look like a bot, you spread harmful messages, you harrass me or anyone i know, you post too much about a fandom i find annoying, you make rude comments on my post, or i find you annoying
despite the fact i may often reblog fandom content this is not in any way a fandom affiliated blog
i often reblog media for the following fandoms: the magnus archives, hermitcraft, 3rd/last/double life, empires smp, the locked tomb series, the roots of chaos series, star wars and some other ones you'll see but i'm too lazy to put on my list
this being said i do have a mcyt blog where i reblog fandom stuff @redliferiot
feel free to shoot me an ask or a message about anything in particular as long as you're respectful about it
tho on that note do not send me anything pertaining to discourse/identity politics/drama i don't involve myself in that shit
i have two cats named finn and padme you will hear plenty about them here
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finally finished up some long-overdue refs of the savant (organized in height order, for god knows what reason)
#oc core#ocs#my ocs#oc art#original character#original character art#oc reference#original character ref#petrai alphanzeyouri#ilfther hanishadria#jymaiyri ke naido#sadihak rouwae#yeonaixho sehwohl#the savant#young gods#young gods art#innsjoart#my art
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thinking about them*
(*yeonaiyri)
#oc core#ocs#my ocs#oc art#original character#original character art#oc ship#yeonaixho sehwohl#jymaiyri ke naido#yeonaiyri#young gods#my art#innsjoart#young gods art
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