#surreal
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grimcarve
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In Waves.
#gif#eye strain#jamie xx#in waves#art#artists on tumblr#design#pi-slices#animation#abstract#trippy#black and white#loop#3d#octane#c4d#surreal#aesthetic
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Astral Realm by KosmosAshes
This artist on Instagram
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Ashoe
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Yo wait this reminds me of that art that was like a blob creature fighting/entangled with itself does anyone know what im talm bout??? Like it was legit that but just stranglehugging itself. I need to see the abomination
New-York Tribune, January 16, 1916
#1910s#vintage#art#help#modern art#weird art#surreal#surrealist art#I think he was Portuguese??#horror art#freaky#but like in a good way
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a cloudy apparition
#photography#goth#gothcore#digital#digital art#surreal#surrealism#surrealcore#photomanipulation#gothic#dreamcore#naturecore#dark forest#darkcore
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"Monstrous Melody" by Aaron Johnson
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That Michal Ajvaz quote about introducing cruel polytheism into the city transportation system is pure gold.
A few more: Maldoror, by Comte de Lautreamont aka Isidore Ducasse, for pedal-to-the-metal weird; Michael Marshall Smith's Only Forward (surreal sci fi noir); Kazuo Ishiguro's The Unconsoled; Djuna Barnes' Nightwood; A Dark Stranger by Julien Gracq (don't expect too much from the characters, who really only play a supporting role to the mesmerising evocation of place); Fernando Pessoa's The Book of Disquietude; Edward Dorn's Gunslinger, an epic acid western poem that was a big influence on me; Patrick White's The Aunt's Story.
Anything by Rikki Ducornet is worth checking out. The Fountains of Neptune is one of my all time faves, dreamlike yet perfectly constructed, written with great beauty, emotionally engaging, somewhere between magical realism and surrealism on the odd-ometer I guess. Heartily seconding the rec in the comments for Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita, also magical realism. While we're on Russian authors I want to sneak in a mention of Oblomov -- not really an odd book I guess, but without giving too much away it's about an eccentric character, and as a bonus the author is (Ivan) Goncharov.
Goose of Hermogenes by Ithell Colquhoun is a short surreal book with an alchemical theme.
Three odd/surreal/weird Jeffs: Jeff VanderMeer, Jeff(rey) Ford and Jeff Noon.
Surrealist Women: An International Anthology, Ed. Penelope Rosemont, is a large collection of work by often-sidelined female creators.
Carson McCullers' The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, The Member of the Wedding, and The Ballad of the Sad Cafe are all well seasoned with oddness. (ETA : I should have said, oddness is fundamental to them.)
Decadent oddness: J.K. Huysmans' A Rebours (Against the Grain), Rachilde's Monsieur Venus, Aubrey Beardsley's Under the Hill, the latter a romp and an easy read. Also light reading: The 'Decadent' quartet -- the Decadent Cookbook, Gardener, Traveller and Sportsman -- by Medlar Lucan and Durian Gray, live up to the promise of the authors' names.
Pls give recommendations for Odd books 🙏
Here we go, a list of literary oddity :) This post contains majestic spheres, alien taxonomies, cruel subway polytheism, a fourth-dimensional cat, disturbing earthworms, infinite space football, existential mussel terror, a Parisian absurdist time loop, and a picture of a telegraph-pole-man-cheetah. I'm not exactly recommending these books, in the sense that I won't take any complaints if you find them more odd than good, and some of them transcend the concepts of good and bad anyway.
• The Other City, Michal Ajvaz. It's all like this:
• Contes du demi-sommeil, Marcel Béalu ('Half-asleep tales') —is the book that prompted my post about stories that have no ambition or justification beyond being odd. I'm sad that it hasn't been translated :( One of the tales is about a strange opaline sphere that rolls on the road. It doesn't accelerate when the road becomes a steep slope but continues rolling majestically. At one point it floats away towards the sky. Someone wonders if it was the moon. Someone else says authoritatively "It was an angel's egg." Everyone is reassured by this explanation. The whole thing feels exactly like remembering a dream you had. There is also a man who reads too much and whose body atrophies so only his head is left and his wife puts it in an egg cup for better stability.
• Leonora Carrington— The Skeleton's Holiday, or maybe the Hearing Trumpet. I've read them so long ago but I think the latter is the one with the old ladies and nuns? There's also a guy who was murdered in his bath by a still-life painter because he said there was a carrot in one of his paintings, but it might not have been a carrot? It's hard to remember details from this book without feeling like I might be making them up. Bonus Leonora Carrington painting which kind of feels like a short story:
• The Codex Seraphinianus, of course. I wish there were more bizarre encyclopaedias out there.
Also I love this review:
• Sleep Has His House, Anna Kavan —I really liked the way this book used language; making life feel like a fever dream even more than in Samanta Schweblin's Fever Dream (which I really liked too.)
The eye is checking a record of silence, space; a nightmare, every horror of this world in its frigid and blank neutrality. The actual scope of its orbit depends on the individual concept of desolation, but approximate symbols are suggested in long roving perspectives of ocean, black swelled, in slow undulation, each whaleback swell plated in armour-hard brilliance with the moonlight clanking along it . . .
• The second half of Michael Ende's Neverending Story, where things get stranger! I remember the hand-shaped castle with eyes and the city of amnesiac former emperors and the miserable ugly worms who cry all the time out of shame then create beautiful architecture with their tears...
• The Gray House, Mariam Petrosyan. This is the one I had in mind when I talked about a 'museum of the strange, but one you wouldn't want to be trapped in after closing time'. Another book that made me feel uncomfortable in a similar (good) way was Edward Carey's Observatory Mansions, the protagonist of which is a man who curates an odd private museum and can't stand the sight of his own hands.
• Oh, speaking of uncomfortable, and hands—He Digs A Hole, by Danger Slater. To me this book was in the more-odd-than-good category but I liked its refusal to have a coherent philosophical meaning. It's about a man who can't sleep so he goes to his garden shed and saws off his hands and replaces them with gardening tools. Then he starts digging a hole. And then it gets weird. (Read at your own discretion if you have a worm phobia; there's some body horror featuring sexually aggressive earthworms. And then it gets disturbing.)
• 17776 — Someone sent me an ask a few years back to recommend this online multimedia narrative to me and I really enjoyed it! Here's the summary, borrowed from the wiki page: Set in the distant future in which all humans have become immortal and infertile, the series follows three sapient space probes that watch humanity play an evolved form of American football in which games can be played for millennia over distances of thousands of miles. The work explores themes of consciousness, hope, despair, and why humans play sports.
• Saint-Glinglin, Raymond Queneau —the author admitted that this book presents some "internal discontinuities." I didn't like it much but I respect the talent it takes to write a novel where everything feels like a random digression, including the key suspenseful scene that matters to the plot. The one digression I loved had to do with the way the narrator is existentially horrified by various sea creatures. It's like he dreads them so much he can't help but think about them when he should be telling a story.
The oyster... This gob of phlegm, this brutal way of refusing the outside world, this absolute isolation, and this disease: the pearl... If I conceptualise them even a little, my terror starts anew. The mussel is even more significant than the oyster and even more immediately admissible in the domain of terror. Let us indeed consider that this little sticky mass whose collective stupidity haunts our piers, consider that it is alive in the same way as a cow. Because there are no degrees in life. There is no more or less. The whole of life is present in every animal. To think that the mussel, that the mussel has, not a conscience, but a certain way of transcending itself: here I am once again plunged into abysses of anxiety and insecurity.
Near the beginning he philosophises about what would happen if a man and a lobster were the only two survivors of the apocalypse. The lobster would break the man's toe and the man would say, "We are the only beings that remain on this devastated Earth, lobster! The only living beings in the universe, struggling alone against the universal disaster, don't you want to be allies?" But the lobster would disdainfully walk away towards the ocean, and "the sight of the inflexible and imperturbable lobster pierces the sky of humanity with its unintelligible claws." (I can't overstate how little this has to do with the rest of the book.)
• Autumn in Beijing, Boris Vian —needless to say the story does not take place in autumn nor in Beijing.* To the extent that it can be said to be "about" something, it's about people trying to build a train station in a desert with tracks that lead nowhere. (I just went on goodreads to check the title, and it's actually called Autumn in Peking in English. I also discovered that it was featured in a list of Books I Regret Reading. I liked this book, but I understand.)
(* French writers love doing this—like when Alphonse Allais said about his 1893 book The Squadron's Umbrella "I chose this title because there aren't any umbrellas of any sort in this volume, and the important notion of the squadron, as a unit of the armed forces, is never brought up at all; in these conditions, hesitating would have been pure madness.")
• The Library at Mount Char, Scott Hawkins—I fear this one makes a little too much sense for this list, but you can't say it isn't weird; and I loved it and recommend it any chance I get.
• The Eleven Million Mile High Dancer, Carol Hill —this book was so wacky and made me laugh. I've not yet managed to successfully recommend it to someone; its brand of odd didn't resonate with the people I know who've read it but that's okay. You could say it's about a woman astronaut whose weird cat disappears into the fourth dimension (or the quantum realm?) and she goes to space to save him—but that makes the book sound more straightforward and less messy than it is. Her cat leaves her a note before he disappears:
• The Bald Soprano, Ionesco —fun fact, there's a tiny theatre in the Latin Quarter in Paris where this absurdist play has been staged every night for nearly 70 years, with the exact same set design and costumes and everything, like the actors are stuck in a time loop. They celebrated the 20,000th performance this year! There's an actress who has been playing her character for 40 years and said joining this theatre was like joining a religion. I've been going to see this play as a New Year tradition with my best friend since we were 14, so I love it madly, though I wouldn't say it's good, necessarily—the author said it was about "absolutely nothing, but a superior nothing."
• Statuary Gardens; or Les Mers perdues (apparently not translated) by Jacques Abeille. This man is obsessed with weird statues. Unfortunately I find his writing style rather dull—I feel like he takes strange ideas and makes them feel mundane in a bad way...! But his books still have a nice, quiet, oneiric atmosphere, and images that stayed with me, like a solitary gardener trying to grow stone statues in the depleted soil of a walled garden. Here are some illustrations from the second one:
I'll look into some of the books recommended on my previous post! (and I agree with the people who brought up Cortázar, Borges, and Junji Ito. <3) Some potentially-odd books I have on my to-read list: Clive Barker's Abarat, Goran Petrović's An Atlas Traced by the Sky, Salvador Plascencia's The People of Paper, Jean Ray's Malpertuis; Jan Weiss's The House of a Thousand Floors; Brice Tarvel's Pierre-Fendre.
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mary syring
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PLEASE FORGIVE MY TRANSGRESSIVE FORM
#ragsycon exclusive#ragsymakes#artists on tumblr#my art#surreal#freshwater fish#neon tetra#digital art#clip studio paint#weird art#wyrm
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LSD Dream Emulator Playstation 1998
#gaming#video games#retro gaming#nostalgia#aesthetic#90s#1990s#playstation#low poly#psx#ps1#psone#sony#1998#lsd dream emulator#lsdem#fuurikanzan#furinkanzan#japanese#japanese language#kanji#glitch#glitchcore#glitch aesthetic#surreal#virtual photography
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Thats so pretty…..
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Sivanchron Grand Thaumaturgist - Vzuormnovöerg'czulmn
#illustration#codex noirmatic#artists on tumblr#art#drawing#artwork#draw#surreal#creature#monster#body horror#horror#dark art
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Morning Star, photoshop illustration by Caio Diniz
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"an artwork with some buildings on one side and a moon in the sky"
#surreal#painting#nature#screenshot#landscape#retro#3d render#dream#creepy#horror#infiniteartmachine#unreality
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