bloodyvampchrons:

auricaedus:

Samhain Marius for Samhain?
Happy Halloween!~ 🎃

My human death was long finished, I was ravenous, and surely my face was no more than a living skull. No doubt my eyes were bulging from their sockets, and my teeth were bared. The white robe hung on me as on a skeleton. And no clearer evidence of my divinity could have been given to the Druids, who stood awestruck as I came out of the tree. […]
The voices were singing in concert around me as the priests placed the flowers in my hair, on my shoulders, at my feet.

lestat-and-louis-de-lioncourt:

Lestat: Joyeux anniversaire Nicki! Because today is your birthday you deserve something special. Only for you I bought one of the best wines in France and one fresh baguette ❤ Come and get your birthday wine ~ you can open the bottle with your mouth if you want >D~

sheepskeleton:

“The Temptation of Amadeo”
commission for @morganeskylar 💙

I did my best to reconstruct the infamous artwork that Marius paints in TVA, according to the description in the book and additional materials by Anne. The garden with flowers is my addition because it seemed fitting for something done by Marius. 😉

another Armand – edited for better quality

amadeo-child-of-the-renaissance:

Edit: funnily enough, the quality turned out much better when taking pictures of this vampire boy in daylight.

image

Old version, the picture was taken by night:

image

//Sorry for the bad quality of the photographs. My phone wasn’t cooperating and it looks like it distorted the big picture a little aswell. The insane amount of detail of the hair was lost in the process.

Do you think fan art will ever be equated with other more accepted kinds of art? Sorry if this is a dumb question, but I really respect what you do and would be interested in knowing your thoughts on how fan art can push through barriers related to classism and sexism.

:

Yes. Some of it already is.

I think it can start with the artists.

If you make fanart, you can treat it like real art. Learn to talk about it. Learn how to talk about your work and the choices you make. Respect what you make and what others are making. So much of fanart is tangled up in the internalized misogyny within fandom communities—it’s hard to see yourself or others as the artist you actually are if you can’t respect the art and why it matters. Fandom communities are very strong and very passionate, and we are lucky to have them. Other art communities don’t even come close to that. 

And with art, you either have to be what they want or change their minds about what they want.

So. I think we do both. We can treat the act of fan creation with the respect it deserves because of what it is: a powerful, subversive reclaiming of your right to see yourself in stories and to belong to a mythology that has been taken from you. 

And we can use that to change minds. Fandom can and has been a great force for change in how stories get told, and social media is the best vehicle there is, and I think raising ourselves up to a level where we treat our art and others’ art with the respect we’d treat more accepted art is the most powerful thing we can do (or continue to do, for the many who are) to push through barriers.

Thank you for the question.