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Monday, August 30, 2010
Protozeric Collage
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Flugsaurier 2010 coverage
John (Conway) discussed why pterosaur palaeoart – sorry – palaeontography – would benefit from a far more scientific approach. He’s dead right: pterosaurs are frequently portrayed with entirely incorrect proportions, muscle construction and unlikely colour schemes.
And: another write-up by Dave Hone with great coverage... and links to abstracts... in Chinese...
Argh. Looking forward to the detailed papers, particularly of water-launching pterosaurs and Helmut Tischlinger's UV lit discovery of oversized headcrests.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
ART Evolved is One of the Best Blogs for Paleontology Students (apparently!)
#43: ART Evolved: Take a look at art and movies involving dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures in this entertaining blog. Recommended posts: “The Ceratopsians Gallery” and “Reconstructing Ichthyosaurs.”Hmm, interesting description. Thanks to Alan and Bachelor Degree for adding us!
Our next Time Capsule opens in about a week, so be sure to send in you submissions for the summer spectacular Pop-Culture Gallery to artevolved@gmail.com!
Be sure to VOTE for November's gallery as well! Check the right sidebar and cast your vote. Only 5 days left to make a difference!
Why not subscribe to ART Evolved's new Network RSS Feed? It's so easy! Just click on the button above and you'll be able to follow all the wonderful blogs in the ART Evolved Network! And who doesn't like clicking buttons? Click click!
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
New! Art Evolved aggregate feed
By clicking the shiny, shiny button above, you can follow all the blogs in the Art Evolved group!
There's like, 20 of us in the network at present, making paleo-themed art that ranges from scientific illustration to surreal to silly.
Check out the blogs!
- http://babbletrish.blogspot.com/
- http://blogevolved.blogspot.com
- http://coherentlight.blogspot.com/
- http://seancraven.blogspot.com/
- http://www.weaponofmassimagination.blogspot.com/
- http://prehistoric-insanity.blogspot.com/
- http://cawbox.blogspot.com/
- http://drawnintime.blogspot.com/
- http://paleoking.blogspot.com/
- http://traumador.blogspot.com/
- http://www.phillyrawrblog.blogspot.com/
- http://blacknick-sculpture.blogspot.com/
- http://www.drip.de/
- http://whenpigsfly-returns.blogspot.com/
- http://art-by-angie.blogspot.com/
- http://subhumanfreak.blogspot.com/
- http://mambobob-raptorsnest.blogspot.com/
- http://www.etrilobite.com/
- http://petersaurus.blogspot.com/
- http://glendonmellow.blogspot.com
(Did I miss anybody?) I've also made a feed widget available to our members that will show the 5 most recent posts by anyone in the Art Evolved community. It looks like this:
Interested in joining? A lot of our members were invited to join, having submitted artwork to the themed galleries (Next: Pop Culture, September 1st!) and expressed an interest in Art Evolved by sending in links and being a part of the paleo-art community through comments and dialogue. Be seen! Make images! Talk to us!
Saturday, August 14, 2010
November Poll is up...
We have decided on an all mammal gallery, as there has never been one. So pick your prehistoric mammal of choice today!
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Palaeo Fiction Genres...
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Probably the oldest fictional archetype, and certainly one of the most appealing, has been the "Lost World" model. In these humans come across some remote corner of the Earth (or in a few really out there stories whole other planets!) in which prehistory never ended, and a palaeo-environment survives. What happens in the story can vary, but inevitable a great deal of discovery and danger ensues.
The means by which prehistory endures are as numerous and diverse as the number of these stories. Geographic isolation is a key ingredient but this can be provided from the reasonable to the outright fantastic. In the reasonable category prehistory has been cut off from its extinction and the outside world by being in/on a remote island, plateau, valley, etc. The more fantastic means of preserving prehistory often are themselves a big part of the story, to explain how the humans arrive. Otherwise it would make little sense for Dinosaurs to be discovered in underground realms, frozen away in the ice, contained within a volcano, all the way on another planet...
Cryptozoologic
A less ambitious version of the Lost World model is to simply have a single element of prehistory survive into the present, nestled among an otherwise normal modern environment. The majority of these tend to be about exploitation by the human discoverers and an ensuing rampage. Though in a few cases it can simply be a tale of discovery.
Time Travel
Probably the other "great" Palaeo Pop Culture genre is the time travel one. Rather than bring prehistory to the present, take the humans back to the past... Or in some cases the past forward to the present. This genre is pretty straight forward, but has a lot of quirky extremes and twists that have been taken.
Scientific Resurrection
Radioactive Resurrection
A much older version of scientific resurrection, an equal response to technological innovation, is a radioactive infused prehistory model. These tended to involve long dormant creatures being awoken or reanimated by exposure to radioactivity (whether an explosive or just some radiation). In some of the most famous stories the creatures involved gained super powers, but this was by no means a constant. As these tales typically were a commentary on the dangers of atomic energy there tends to be a lot of destruction for humanity in the end.
Dinotopia by James Gurney
When you can't have a plausible explanation for prehistory and humans to co-exist just make belief they should. As fantasy lets you do anything you want, there's not much for me to say other than this is a very diverse genre.
Another way to bring prehistory into the present and into conflict with modern man is to have intelligent ancestors of the extinct creatures reappear. Whether they hid in a lost world, are a by-product of time travel gone wrong, or returned from outerspace these big brained remnants of the past tend to give us a fair challenge.
Anthropomorphized
Through combination of the intelligent Dinosaur and fantasy genres, fiction writers sometimes want to tell their stories from the prehistoric creatures point of view. Sometimes this is simply a narrative of a normal animal, and is more like a first person documentary. At the extreme we get humanized creatures.
Cave People
While this last category is more plausible than human-like Dinosaurs, I leave it to the end as it is the most fictional of the lot. In the cave people scenario humans and Dinosaurs are presented as having coexisted. Which is of course completely made up, but admittedly fun. In these man battles against the adverse odds of a savage world (in as few clothes as possible :P).