IT'S HALLOWEEN TIME!!!!!! I had to take down my previous post because it didn't seem to capture the spirit of the holiday. Let's try again...this time with true Halloween feeling!
Wow! What do you think of this hanging skull? I think it's first rate and if I can find one I'll happily add it to my permanent collection.
I feel it in my bones...the big selling kid costumes this year will have to do with Batman!
Before I saw this picture (above) it never occurred to me that home appliances need Halloween costumes too. When you think about it, of course they do!
Yikes!
Above, a three-headed dog, guarding the entrance to the Netherworld. This gets my nomination for best pet costume of 2013.
Nice, very nice...a mask depicting a simple-minded homicidal henchman (above) who kills at his boss's command. He's paid for his work with candy and a pat on the head.
No doubt about it...the best Halloween masks (above) are the ones you make yourself!
Showing posts with label best halloween masks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label best halloween masks. Show all posts
Friday, October 11, 2013
Saturday, April 25, 2009
ART OF THE SOUTH SEA ISLANDS
I love the art of the South Pacific Islands, which is also called "oceanic art." There are striking similarities in the styles of islands spread thousands of miles apart, and it's hard to resist the idea that all these cultures had some common country of origin. I'd guess a combination of ancient India and aboriginal Australia, but what do I know?
This art is memorable because of it's complete "otherness." Europeans just don't think this way. The make-up and masks seem to threaten with weird, supernatural horror.
But the difference is greater than that. If you can judge by the sculpture, island people seem to have had more of a sense of humor than Europeans. A lot of them were of the opinion that their their neighbors were outrageously funny-looking, if not downright ugly, and they took every opportunity to lambast them with carved caricatures that they set up outside their huts. No wonder they were at war all the time.
I've seen lumpy heads like this one (above) plenty of times in the National Geographic. I guess that's what happens when you live around trillions of bugs.
There's a theory that primitive people who go around naked don't think of themselves as naked. As long as they have that little string around their waists they feel completely clothed. Woe to the uncouth villager who forgets to put his string on in the morning.
Here (above) Balinese style seems to merge with an island sensibility. And look at the symmetry. It's odd how primitive man is often so wedded to symmetry
Nice mask (above)! A flat out caricature!
These masks from the 19th Century all look contemporary. I just can't believe they're as old as claimed.
Labels:
best halloween masks,
masks,
polynesian art
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