Throwing a spotlight on my favourite Doctor Who/Big Finish character(s) today, with my newest sticker sheet!
Featuring the renegade Time Lord, the Eleven (and Two, and Eight, and Nine, and Twelve, and The Union...) These guys are the reason I fell in love with BF, so it only felt fair to give them a sheet.
Only drawing the regenerations we've met so far, because I'm not that flush with time.
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Gwendolyn, John French Sloan, ca. 1918
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The Ashcan School, also called the Ash Can School, was an artistic movement in the United States during the late 19th-early 20th century that produced works portraying scenes of daily life in New York, often in the city's poorer neighborhoods. The members were: Robert Henri (founder) William Glackens, John Sloan, George Luks, Everett Shinn, Arthur B. Davies, Maurice Prendergast, and Ernest Lawson. George Bellows was later associated with The Eight and a representation of his work will be included here.
Robert Henri (1865-1909) Snow in New York • 1902 • National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
William Glackens (1870–1938) East River Park (New York City) • c. 1900-04 • Brooklyn Museum, New York
Joan French Sloan (1871-1951) • McSorley's Bar • 1912 • Detroit Institute of Arts - Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
George Luks (1867-1933) • Bleeker and Carmine Street (Greenwich Village, NYC) • c. 1915
Everett Shinn (1876-1953) • Tightrope Walker • 1927 • Dayton Art Institute - Dayton, Ohio
Arthur B. Davies (1862-1928) • Every Saturday • 1895-96 • Brooklyn Museum, New York
Maurice Prendergast (1858–1924) • Central Park, New York • 1901 • pencil and watercolor • Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Ernest Lawson (1873-1939) • The Flatiron Building (New York City) • c. 1903-05 • Private collection
George Bellows (1882-1925) • Cleaning Fish • 1913 • The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art - Kansas City, Missouri
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I was wondering, do you have ocs of the eight that rule the meekrob?
I just have vague ideas about what they're like, probably pretty intimidating for blobs of electric jelly. I meant this to be a sketch to illustrate how I imagine them, but as usual it got out of hand.
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@parkerpresentz asked me for The Eight's favorite MLP pony's(The Seven's actually but i'm throwing in the s/i for funsies)but my dumb ass forgot when you save asks they get drafted in the same spot the time you got it so here it is as a post💀👍🏼Mb bestie /gen
Percy-Rainbow Dash obviously,i need not elaborate
Lex-Fluttershy for the same reason and Perlex and Flutterdash is the same
Annabeth-Applejack,he loves her country girl swag and canon butch lesbian rep
Jason-Sunset Shimmer,he just thinks she's neat and also her life is just his...in a way /Gravity Falls ref
Piper-Trixie Lulamoon,she is deranged and she loves that
Leo-Rainbow Dash or Discord,it's a tie and you will NOT make him choose.Wait Discord's not a pony nvm but they are indeed tied for his fave
Hazel-Pinkie Pie,this is literally Hazel irl
Frank-Twilight,she caters to him specifically ykwim?
I think Nico and Reyna were also asked for but even if not here's their bonuses:Fluttershy(he takes after Lex)and Cadance(sprung on her by 'The Bride and The Ugly ass Groom' meme but her fave before her was Cheese Sandwitch)
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Pigeons, 1910
John Sloan
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I'm a good man...
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John Sloan, Sunday - Women Drying Their Hair, 1912, oil/canvas (Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover)
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George Bellows (American, 1882 -1925)
Men of the Docks, 1912
National Gallery in London
https://www.latimes.com/world/worldnow/britain-national-gallery
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A little character design challenge I set for myself last year, attempting to draw every incarnation of The Eleven from the Big Finish Doctor Who range.
The incarnations with actors are based on their actors (and I gave them a little update a few months later, hence the bottom picture) the rest are all based on context clues/voices/personal headcanon.
I love these terrible, terrible people.
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Luxembourg Gardens, Stormy Sky, Robert Henri (1865-1929)
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John French Sloan (1871-1951) was an American painter and etcher. He was recognized as the founder of the Ashcan School of American Art. He was also a member of "The Eight" group.
Sloan was known for his urban genre scenes. While living and working in the New York City neighborhood of Chelsea, he observed the urban landscape and its people from his studio window.
A realist painter, he was known to have been a socialist, producing illustrations for the periodical The Masses. He, however, denounced his work as motivated by political ideals.
Self-portrait • 1890 • Oil on • Delaware Museum of Art, Maryland
"I was never interested in putting propaganda into my paintings, so it annoys me when art historians try to interpret my city life pictures as 'socially conscious.' I saw the everyday life of the people, and on the whole I picked out bits of joy in human life for my subject matter." ~ J.S.
Sunday Paper on the Roof • 1918 • Nelson Atkins Museum of Art - Kansas City, Missouri
Sunday, Women Drying Their Hair • 1912. Oil on canvas • Addison Gallery of American Art - Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts
Rain Rooftops, West Fourth Street • 1913 • Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
A Woman’s Work (1912) • John French Sloan • Cleveland Museum of Art
"Work, play, love, sorrow, vanity, the schoolgirl, the old mother, the thief, the truant, the harlot. I see them all down there without disguise. These wonderful roofs of New York bring to me all of humanity.” ~ John Sloan
June 1914 cover of The Masses depicting the Ludlow Massacre
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you know you’re in too many fandoms when you have seven documents compiling fanfics and hcs for three different shows/movies/books in each and one master doc holding the list of everything you hold dear
i’ve got over fifty in my master doc. how about you
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Throbbing Fountain, Madison Square
John Sloan (American; 1871–1951)
1907
Oil on canvas
Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
In 1906, Sloan wrote in his diary, “Madison Square Throbbing Fountain with men and women and children watching it and in many cases feeling its sensuous charm.”
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