Sunday, March 17, 2013

RUNES



This is the third drawing I've made for this manuscript series/project. The drawing is basically an explanation of the runes I've created, and what runes are, in a general historical sense.

Runes are angular letters used by the peoples of ancient Europe. They were carved into metal, stone or wood, and hence do not make use of curved lines. The most famous set of runes is the Futhark, used by the Norse. Tolkien's Cirth runes draw heavily from these runes. I have not drawn heavily from either set, being influenced by the Japanese Katakana alphabet, I have gone for simplicity, not linguistic correctness, and so my alphabet is quite small. Katakana employs a small mark called a diacritic (they call it a hakuten, I believe), this mark shifts their “g” into their “k”, from a voiceless to a voiced consonant. Taking this idea, I've managed to reduce my alphabet to eighteen runes, some of which stand for more than one letter. Letters like C and Q do not have their own runes. Ha!

The illuminated parts of the drawing reference old manuscript details, specifically of books and monks and saints and scholars copying books or studying. The mistletoe in the background is a druidic fertility symbol, and the oak that it is usually parasite to has significance in paganism. There are no visible band references in this drawing, which is pretty incredible. I cut a lot of details about gods of language and quasi masonic word magic from this drawing, and I think it is better for it, especially as this piece was meant to help people understand what I am doing. I am willing to help people.

Friday, March 1, 2013

NOOTHGRUSH II



This is the second of my manuscript drawings, and the second to focus Narrowly on the Californian sludge trio (now a quartet?!) Noothgrush. For more information about Noothgrushes, please refer to Dr. Seuss' "There's a Wocket in my Pocket".

I'm starting to understand more what manuscripts are all about, but this piece is still more heavily illuminated than any "true" Medieval manuscript would have been. The drawing focuses on Noothgrush's disdain for the human race, and the tendency of our species to upset the natural order and completely render anything we touch unlivable. Or dead. Noothgrush, as well as other bands around the mid nineties who played shows in the same scene, Grief, Man is the Bastard, Seized, expressed a misanthropic mindset, which sometime bordered onto actively promoting human extinction. This is an interesting concept when one realizes that the population of Europe did in fact almost face extinction during the time when these handmade books flourished, due to the spread of the bubonic plague. Noothgrush, however misanthropic you find them, do make salient points about the callousness of our species in regards to ecology, and especially our sense of entitlement and superiority, neither of which is founded on anything concrete. The text in this manuscript is from a 1997 interview, but it is informed by the same worldview which they held (and still do hold) while writing songs such as Stagnance and Useless.

I find the manuscript format quite appropriate when looking at these seemingly flippant, though very wise and well meaning words. Manuscripts were used to record knowledge, not just of canonical bible verses (and indeed the format of a handwritten bible is responsible for much of the look and format, and likely the errors too, in the modern bible) but also the teachings of various saints and lesser religious leaders. They were kept in monasteries and rewritten into other languages, after being borrowed, in whole or in piece, by other monks or scholars. I think that their is a great deal to be gained from looking at song lyrics, and interviews with bands from the grind/sludge/powerviolence, especially the cluster of great bands from the state of California.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

NOOTHGRUSH

These are photos of the first page I've drawn in a series which will resemble unbound, oversize manuscript pages. There were a number of different types of hand written books in Medieval Europe, and though they served different purposes, we have come to kind of combine them in our heads over time. Some were secular, and some were sacred, some contained no illustrations, some were much more image heavy than others. I'm drawing upon two types of manuscripts, those which were for daily use by Medieval people, and those containing psalters, decretals and glosses of various saints and theologians. I'm going to make drawings which resemble manuscripts in their visual style (word heavy, use of blackletter, margins and illustrated borders and letters) but use band interviews and lyrics for their textual content. Essentially it is a kind of metal / hardcore zine, but made to resemble a very old religious text.

There is wisdom to be gleaned from old band interviews and their lyrics. Inasmuch as the bible and other religious texts and declarations (such as the famous reformation of Martin Luther) were read or memorized as part of daily Medieval life, contemporary lyrics and their accompanying philosophies serve a somewhat similar role to (a smaller group of) people today. Books like the Ars Moriendi, or Art of Dying, expounded upon a 15th century audience ideals of "how to die". People aimed to live in christ's image, to imitate him, to live well and to die well. My "book", really a series of page-like drawings, will instead expound upon a few themes found in the music of bands like Noothgrush, Man is the Bastard, Neanderthal, Insect Warfare and Dystopia: the idea that the human race is destructive, self destructive, superstitious and baser than the "animal" life on this planet. This applies to our creation of religion and systems of government and the reliance of these structures upon fear for control. In a way, this will be a kind of "punk" guide to life, intended to mimic early Medieval texts and offer a more humanist philosophy without demanding pious, impossible to follow behaviour, while acknowledging the flaws of our species to live harmoniously with one another or with the nature.

Sunday, January 20, 2013

ANNWN

This is a drawing of Mick Barr, guitarist of Orthrelm, Krallice, Octis, Ocrilim...the first of many such drawings for a zine I would like to create. The zine will be a one off, a simple collection of drawings I've done of metalheads whose music I enjoy. Ideally, it would cover a good range of countries and genres, and the pictures themselves aren't going to look too “metal”; the aim being to find source images of these musicians offstage, just being really cool human beings. This is Mick's Blog, http://ocrilim.blogspot.ca/

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

HAPPY NEW YEAR

This is a quick little drawing of myself topless in front of a giant, highly stylized snake. I think that about sums it up.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

FINISHED!

These are photos of the drawing I have been working on for the last two months. The drawing is titled "Ars Moriendi", "The Art of Dying". I won't be making drawings of this size for a while, one of the main reasons being that it is a lot harder to keep an eye on your overall composition when the piece is so big you can't see the left side while you work on the right side. I'm getting much better photos taken by a friend; I will not be scanning this piece. I should post a mini-essay with that photo. In the meantime, enjoy these two pictures.

Friday, December 7, 2012

JGABBA 2

This is the second in a series of EP's I'm releasing online. They're really a kind of atrocious pop/dance parody. This one has a lot of obscure IDM and techno samples, and noise as well. The next one is coming along nicely!
http://www.mediafire.com/?29ux1navr9ka711