John Coulthart Resurrects R’lyeh, and along the way muses at length on the differences between Rotring ink pens and digital tablets.
R’lyeh re-inked
16 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
16 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
John Coulthart Resurrects R’lyeh, and along the way muses at length on the differences between Rotring ink pens and digital tablets.
15 Monday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
DMR notices that Ian Miller has turned 75, and celebrates with a long illustrated post. British Lovecraftians will recall Miller as the artist who made the distinctive Panther paperback covers for their popular edition of Lovecraft’s. There’s are a number of items in the post that I’d not seen before, including a more pop-art cover he once did for Pan books.
10 Wednesday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
09 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Kittee Tuesday, Lovecraftian arts
I don’t normally feature the ever-present fiction anthologies or their calls, but Felis Futura: An Anthology of Future Cats fluffed my tail when I read about it. It also seems to have Lovecraftian potential. The anthologist are seeking b&w art as well as stories…
Stories, poetry, and visual art about the future which feature cats. The interior of the book will contain B&W illustrations. Payment: $10 per accepted poem, 1c/word ($5 minimum) for accepted fiction ($15 per page for graphic narrative fiction), $20 per accepted piece of non-narrative internal visual art $100 (negotiable) for the cover illustration. Deadline: 31st December 2021.
Submit to Felis Futura, with publication mooted for Spring/Summer 2022.
Also rather amusing, Carry On, Cthulhu!. A comic as-if presenting a lost film script in the much-loved Carry On feature-film comedy series, that ran from the late-1950s into the mid-1970s. Recently crowd-funded.
04 Thursday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Humble Software Bundle: The Maps Bonanza. This is a current fundraiser bundle of fantasy/sci-fi mapping software. £22+ (about $30) gets you the core Campaign Cartographer software for RPG map makers, plus a lot of add-on packs including “The Age of Cthulhu” (not to be confused with the Goodman game of the same name).
I can’t find this “Cthulhu” add-on pack anywhere except for the bundle, and local searches of the Campaign Cartographer site, store and blog all come up empty. I suspect it’s a combo of two of the packs they release inside the Annuals they release each year? One obviously being Cthulhu City (December 2017), which appears to be free if you dig into their blog.
04 Thursday Nov 2021
Posted in Housekeeping, Lovecraftian arts, Lovecraftian places
My ‘H.P. Lovecraft’s Poster Collection – 17 retro travel posters’ is now available to buy and download on ArtStation Marketplace, as an $18 fundraiser for Tentaclii. Just over $1 per printable poster, all bundled in a .ZIP file.
03 Wednesday Nov 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
I find that the Barlow-Lovecraft meeting in Florida has been subject to at least one artistic rendering, on the cover of Lovecraft Studies #42-43. The style suggests it must be by Jason Eckhardt. Tentaclii readers will recall my several recent posts on the likely terminus in the centre of De Land.
This Autumn 2001 issue also featured the article “H.P. Lovecraft in Florida,” by Stephen J. Jordan.
02 Tuesday Nov 2021
Posted in Historical context, Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
Dark Worlds Quarterly has a fine new illustrated timeline of Henry Kuttner’s Fan Letters to Weird Tales.
Talking of Weird Tales, S.T. Joshi’s Blog has updated. Among other items he brings news of a forthcoming collected stories of Robert Barbour Johnson, an author best known for his Lovecraftian ‘in the subways’ Weird Tales story “Far Below” (1939). I recall there’s already been at least one such collection, though perhaps not complete? The new book will also collect some of Johnson’s essays.
31 Sunday Oct 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
28 Thursday Oct 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
Found, another series of H.P. Lovecraft comics adaptations of which I was previously unaware. Previews reports it has now been mostly reprinted in paper by Caliber, and that “The Statement of Randolph Carter” is being added to the series soon. The latter is said to be re-set in the modern age.
I had of course been aware of Caliber’s two volume Lovecraft’s Worlds anthology collection, seen below. It’s been out ages and I’m fairly sure I’ve even interviewed one of the artists.
But despite my occasional perusing of Previews I was not aware that they’d been adding to the series. For instance, a third volume of Lovecraft’s Worlds in 2018.
Then there’s H.P. Lovecraft: The Early Stories. Not a comic but a heavily illustrated edition using Joshi’s texts and with an introduction by him.
And a The Shadow Over Innsmouth adaptation in 80 pages.
There are other interesting looking indie titles at Caliber, of the sort you’ll never hear about via the corporate press. Such as a 165-page Arthur: King of Britain.
This focuses on how Arthur was originally understood in the 12th century…
From veteran comic writer/artist Michael Fraley comes this history of the famous and legendary character known as King Arthur. This fully illustrated comic series and collected graphic novel is faithfully based on the original adventure of Arthur as it was written by Geoffrey of Monmouth in the 12th century. Geoffrey’s work is considered one of the most important books of the medieval period, and served as the skeletal framework from which all Arthurian tales have since been based.
Arthur: King of Britain is available as a five-book £10 Kindle series on Amazon.
Talking of comics, I’m pleased to see one of my Digital Art Live colleagues on the cover of the latest ICC Magazine #16, and with an interview inside.
25 Monday Oct 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
Martine Chifflot-Comazzi kindly informs that her stage play, Lovecraft, my love — “created for streaming in Clermont-Ferrand (March) and in Paray-le-Monial with the public (September)” — is now available in translation. Sadly I can’t find the link to this new book at either of her Facebook pages, but she writes in a comment at Tentaclii that…
The text has been translated and is available (20 euros)
Previously available in French from Aigle Botte Editions, 2018. Amazon UK has no sign of the new translation yet.
24 Sunday Oct 2021
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
A superb new 3D H.P. Lovecraft by Khoi Nguyen, posted to ArtStation a couple of weeks ago. ZBrush / Substance Painter / some Maya hair dev and rendered in Arnold.
Outstandingly good. I was thinking of having a go at shaping a DAZ G3 into a Lovecraft head, or perhaps souping up the old Meshbox/Miyre 3D Lovecraft with Some Awesome PBR Textures. But it would not have looked as good as this. Such a pity it couldn’t have been included, possibly alongside an interview with the maker, in the now-published “Gothic” issue of Digital Art Live magazine.