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#johnmartin — Public Fediverse posts

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  1. The Genius of John Martin’s HELLISH Landscapes 🔥

    Every now and again we discover an artist whose work floors us. John Martin (1789-1854) is another example, a Romanticist whose spectacular work (see Pandemonium from 1841 above) covered fantastic art, vast spectrums of light, and berserk religious adherence.

    We’ll get into all that in a bit, but for now behold the majesty of Martin’s spectacular and imposing landscapes. Feel free to quake a little bit in terror, too.

    John Martin’s World of Biblical Catastrophes

    The above piece (The Plains of Heaven from 1851, part of a triptych of oil paintings called The Last Judgement) was what drew our attention to Martin’s work. It’s one of the more vibrant and welcoming pieces he painted, but most of his artistic themes were shaped by various tragedies in his personal life.

    It was much the same for Alfred Kubin’s macabre and disturbed pieces, who covered recently.

    Martin’s work often merged Biblical references with landscape painting with literature. His Pandemonium painting is arguably his most famous, which was his artistic take on John Milton’s poem Paradise Lost (1667). In that, the capital of Hell is Pandæmonium.

    For a start, we really like the idea of Hell having a capital. Somewhere you can hang out for a bit, grab a tea or coffee and a bite to eat, before being mercilessly tortured by demons.

    But for the artist, this was no joke. And he could create a feeling of human insignificance, distant figures bickering whilst dwarfed by enormous landscapes, with big open skies as if GOD’S presence is peering down on humanity and sneering.

    Fantastic art scenes there, in line with talented peers such as gothic master Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840). But where Friedrich used bleak subtlety, Martin was full on bombastic in his hellscape visions.

    There are also, by accident over design, hints of future artistic trends.

    Such as graphic novels, with Destruction of Pharaoh’s Host (1836) having that eerie sunset off in the distance. It wouldn’t be out of place in something such as Jesse Lonergan’s rather riveting DROME (2025).

    John Martin was born in July 1789 in Northumberland, North East England. His father cultivated his artistic talents before moving to London in 1806. He married at the age of 19 and earned a living by providing drawing lessons and selling watercolour paintings.

    He had three brothers, one of whom (Jonathan) struggled with mental illness and set fire to the cathedral York Minster in 1829.

    Early in his career was when a series of tragedies struck. In one year (circa 1810), he lost his father, mother, grandmother, and his young son. His brother Jonathan was also institutionalised for arson.

    To be clear, this didn’t influence the nature of his work (unlike Alfred Kubin, whose work was defined by the death of his mother). He was already painting apocalyptic scenes before these personal tragedies.

    He maintained that focus for his whole career, see below with The Destruction of Tyre (1840).

    Under modern comprehension, we can see in this work existential philosophy. The total insignificance of humans to the backdrop of a remorseless universe.

    But for John Martin, he created his works to highlight more GOD’S eternal power over us all, deeply influenced by his religious upbringing, he seemed hellbent on exploring the nature of judgement, cosmic apocalypses, and eternal wrath.

    All very vivid to behold now, especially that focus on grand scale natural settings how the simultaneous awe and terror the natural world can create.

    The difference is Martin thought it was all a divine energy. When these days, being atheists here at Professional Moron, we see the natural absurdity of existence.

    #anarchy #Art #Artistic #cosmicism #hell #History #JohnMartin #landscapes #Lifestyle #oilPaintings #painting #Philosophy #Religion
  2. The Genius of John Martin’s HELLISH Landscapes 🔥

    Every now and again we discover an artist whose work floors us. John Martin (1789-1854) is another example, a Romanticist whose spectacular work (see Pandemonium from 1841 above) covered fantastic art, vast spectrums of light, and berserk religious adherence.

    We’ll get into all that in a bit, but for now behold the majesty of Martin’s spectacular and imposing landscapes. Feel free to quake a little bit in terror, too.

    John Martin’s World of Biblical Catastrophes

    The above piece (The Plains of Heaven from 1851, part of a triptych of oil paintings called The Last Judgement) was what drew our attention to Martin’s work. It’s one of the more vibrant and welcoming pieces he painted, but most of his artistic themes were shaped by various tragedies in his personal life.

    It was much the same for Alfred Kubin’s macabre and disturbed pieces, who covered recently.

    Martin’s work often merged Biblical references with landscape painting with literature. His Pandemonium painting is arguably his most famous, which was his artistic take on John Milton’s poem Paradise Lost (1667). In that, the capital of Hell is Pandæmonium.

    For a start, we really like the idea of Hell having a capital. Somewhere you can hang out for a bit, grab a tea or coffee and a bite to eat, before being mercilessly tortured by demons.

    But for the artist, this was no joke. And he could create a feeling of human insignificance, distant figures bickering whilst dwarfed by enormous landscapes, with big open skies as if GOD’S presence is peering down on humanity and sneering.

    Fantastic art scenes there, in line with talented peers such as gothic master Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840). But where Friedrich used bleak subtlety, Martin was full on bombastic in his hellscape visions.

    There are also, by accident over design, hints of future artistic trends.

    Such as graphic novels, with Destruction of Pharaoh’s Host (1836) having that eerie sunset off in the distance. It wouldn’t be out of place in something such as Jesse Lonergan’s rather riveting DROME (2025).

    John Martin was born in July 1789 in Northumberland, North East England. His father cultivated his artistic talents before moving to London in 1806. He married at the age of 19 and earned a living by providing drawing lessons and selling watercolour paintings.

    He had three brothers, one of whom (Jonathan) struggled with mental illness and set fire to the cathedral York Minster in 1829.

    Early in his career was when a series of tragedies struck. In one year (circa 1810), he lost his father, mother, grandmother, and his young son. His brother Jonathan was also institutionalised for arson.

    To be clear, this didn’t influence the nature of his work (unlike Alfred Kubin, whose work was defined by the death of his mother). He was already painting apocalyptic scenes before these personal tragedies.

    He maintained that focus for his whole career, see below with The Destruction of Tyre (1840).

    Under modern comprehension, we can see in this work existential philosophy. The total insignificance of humans to the backdrop of a remorseless universe.

    But for John Martin, he created his works to highlight more GOD’S eternal power over us all, deeply influenced by his religious upbringing, he seemed hellbent on exploring the nature of judgement, cosmic apocalypses, and eternal wrath.

    All very vivid to behold now, especially that focus on grand scale natural settings how the simultaneous awe and terror the natural world can create.

    The difference is Martin thought it was all a divine energy. When these days, being atheists here at Professional Moron, we see the natural absurdity of existence.

    #anarchy #Art #Artistic #cosmicism #hell #History #JohnMartin #landscapes #Lifestyle #oilPaintings #painting #Philosophy #Religion
  3. Explore the breathtaking beauty of John Martin's "The Valley of the Tyne." This watercolor masterpiece captures the serene grandeur of Northumberland, blending vast landscapes with exquisite detail. What emotions does this tranquil scene evoke for you?
    #JohnMartin #ClevelandArt #WatercolorArt
    clevelandart.org/art/1997.138

  4. John Martin's "The Valley of the Tyne" masterfully blends grand landscapes with intimate details. Ominous clouds loom over a serene Northumberland valley, inviting a contemplative gaze. How does nature's beauty inspire your own creative expression?
    #JohnMartin #ClevelandArt #Watercolor #ArtInspiration
    clevelandart.org/art/1997.138

  5. “after words: visual and experimental poetry in little mags and small presses, 1960-2025”: exhibition and book

    After Words: Visual and Experimental Poetry in Little Magazines and Small Presses, 1960-2025, (catalogue and exhibition), Curated by Steve Clay and M. C. Kinniburgh of Granary Press, The Grolier Club, New York, NY, April 23 – July 26, 2025
    [from garadinervi & Granary Books]

    Clay, Steve and M.C. Kinniburgh:

    AFTER WORDS: VISUAL AND EXPERIMENTAL POETRY IN LITTLE MAGAZINES AND SMALL PRESSES, 1960–2025

    Granary Books, 2025. Item #3913

    click to enlarge

    10.75 x 8.25 in., 232 pp. smyth-sewn in wrappers. Printed full color.

    This book offers a visual and thematic journey through avant-garde, concrete, visual, and experimental poetics as they appeared in ephemeral little magazines and small press publications from the 1960s onward. This book serves as an exhibition catalog for After Words: Visual and Experimental Poetry in Little Magazines and Small Presses, 1960–2025 from April 23rd to July 26, 2025, at The Grolier Club exhibition in New York City. [«The exhibition presents a wide range of international works with approximately 150 publications, including Assembling, Kontexts, Poor.Old.Tired.Horse., blewointment, Rhinozeros, The Marrahwanna Quarterly, Granary Books, Something Else Press, Edition Hansjörg Mayer, Ou, and Stereo Headphones. Poets presented include Cecilia Vicuña, bpNichol, Johanna Drucker, Tom Phillips, Emily McVarish, d.a. levy, Mirtha Dermisache, and Philip Gallo among many others»]

    Small presses include: 7 Flowers Press, Agentzia, Anabasis, Asylum’s Press, Ayizan Press, Beach Books Texts & Documents, Beau Geste Press, blewointmentpress, Burning Press, C Press, Chax Press, Coach House Press, Edition Hansjörg Mayer, Edizioni Geiger, Expanded Media Editions, Fleye Press, Goliard Press, Grabhorn-Hoyem, Granary Books, Druckwerk, Hawk’s Well Press, Heiner Friedrich, The Hermetic Press, Hermetic Gallery, John Martin, Joseph Melzer Verlag, Kickshaws, Kontexts Publications, Letter Edged in Black Press, Luna Bisonte Productions, Membrane Press, Milano: East 128, New Wilderness Foundation, Nietzsche’s Brolly, Nova News, Open Book, Openings Press, PANic Press, Phenomenon Press, Poltroon Press, Renegade Press, Roaring Fork Press, Scorribanda Productions, Seedorn Verlag, Seripress, Siglio Press, Station Hill, Tarasque Press, Tetrad Press, Visual Poetry Workshop National Poetry Society of London, Wild Hawthorn Press, and Xexoxial Editions.

    Little magazines include: “before your very eyes!”, A: An Envelope Magazine of Visual Poetry, Abracadabra, Alcheringa, Anti-Isolation, Approches, AQ, Assembling, Blank Tape, Bulletin From Nothing, Cenizas, Diagonal Cero, E pod, Fruit Cup, Ganglia, Geiger, Gnaoua, Industrial Sabotage, Interstate, Journeyman, Kaldron, Klacto 23, Kontakte, Kontexts, Kroklok, L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E, Libellus, Life Begins with Love, Lines, Lost and Found Times, Lost Paper, Mini, New Wilderness Letter, Pages, Poor.Old.Tired.Horse., Rawz, Revue OU, Rhinozeros, Sammelband Futura, Schmuck, Shi Shi: Concrete & Visual Poetry, Signal, Soft Need, Sondern, Spanish Fleye, Stereo Headphones, Taproot Reviews, The Acts: The Shelf Life, The Difficulties, The Improbable, The Insect Trust Gazette, The Marrahwanna Quarterly, The San Francisco Earthquake, The Subtle Journal of Raw Coinage, Toothpick Lisbon & the Orcas Islands, Unarmed: Adventurous Poetry Journal, UNI/vers(;), WhiteWalls, Xerolage, and xtant.

    #19602025 #3913 #7FlowersPress #AAnEnvelopeMagazineOfVisualPoetry #Abracadabra #AfterWords #AfterWordsVisualAndExperimentalPoetryInLittleMagazinesAndSmallPresses #Agentzia #Alcheringa #Anabasis #AntiIsolation #Approches #AQ #Assembling #AsylumSPress #avantGarde #AyizanPress #BeforeYourVeryEyes_ #BeachBooksTextsDocuments #BeauGestePress #BlankTape #blewointment #blewointmentpress #bpNichol #BulletinFromNothing #BurningPress #CPress #CeciliaVicuña #Cenizas #ChaxPress #CoachHousePress #concrete #dALevy #DiagonalCero #Druckwerk #EPod #EditionHansjörgMayer #EdizioniGeiger #EmilyMcVarish #exhibit #exhibition #exhibitionCatalog #ExpandedMediaEditions #experimentalWriting #FleyePress #FruitCup #Ganglia #Geiger #Gnaoua #GoliardPress #GrabhornHoyem #GranaryBooks #HawkSWellPress #HeinerFriedrich #HermeticGallery #IndustrialSabotage #Interstate #JohannaDrucker #JohnMartin #JosephMelzerVerlag #Journeyman #Kaldron #Kickshaws #Klacto23 #Kontakte #Kontexts #KontextsPublications #Kroklok #LANGUAGE #LetterEdgedInBlackPress #Libellus #LifeBeginsWithLove #lines #lostAndFoundTimes #LostPaper #LunaBisonteProductions #MCKinniburgh #materialiVerbovisivi #MembranePress #MilanoEast128 #Mini #MirthaDermisache #NewWildernessFoundation #NewWildernessLetter #NietzscheSBrolly #NovaNews #OpenBook #OpeningsPress #Ou #Pages #PANicPress #PhenomenonPress #PhilipGallo #poets #PoltroonPress #PoorOldTiredHorse_ #Rawz #RenegadePress #RevueOU #Rhinozeros #riviste #RoaringForkPress #SammelbandFutura #Schmuck #ScorribandaProductions #SeedornVerlag #Seripress #ShiShiConcreteVisualPoetry #SiglioPress #Signal #smallPresses #SoftNeed #SomethingElsePress #Sondern #SpanishFleye #StationHill #StereoHeadphones #SteveClay #TaprootReviews #TarasquePress #TetradPress #TheActsTheShelfLife #TheDifficulties #TheGrolierClub #TheHermeticPress #TheImprobable #TheInsectTrustGazette #TheMarrahwannaQuarterly #TheSanFranciscoEarthquake #TheSubtleJournalOfRawCoinage #TomPhillips #ToothpickLisbonTheOrcasIslands #UnarmedAdventurousPoetryJournal #UNIVers_ #vispo #visualPoetry #VisualPoetryWorkshopNationalPoetrySocietyOfLondon #WhiteWalls #WildHawthornPress #xerolage #XexoxialEditions #xtant #zines

  6. John Martin, The End of the World, The Great Day of His Wrath, Tate Britain, London, 1851-53
    #art #JohnMartin

  7. Now look back. Again. Here’s Martin’s ‘The Great Day of His Wrath’ (1851-3). And then here’s Harry Durgin’s incredible shot of Mauna Loa from this week, 2023. On the scene. With a high-spec digital camera. A full 171 years later.

    #maunaloa #Volcano #volcanology #photography #johnmartin #victorian #painting #romanticism #thegreatdayofhiswrath #geology

  8. These astonishing photos of this week’s Hawaiian volcano Mauna Loa by Harry Durgin are strikingly like one of 19thC British Romantic painter John Martin’s apocalyptic visions brought to life.

    Just look at The Great Day of His Wrath (1851) & The Fallen Angels Entering Pandemonium (attrib? 1841).

    #hawaii #maunaloa #Volcano #photography #reportage #volcanologist #johnmartin #painting #romanticism #victorian #Milton #paradiselost #apocalypse #pandemonium

  9. Left: Detail from an #illustration by #HenryHoliday to fit8 in #LewisCarroll’s "#TheHuntingOfTheSnark" (1876).
    Right: Detail from the painting "#TheBard" (c. 1817) by #JohnMartin (mirror view of a horizontally compressed detail).
    Background: Segment of John Martin's "The #Bard".

    I suggest that the #monstrance-like shape of the tree drawn by Henry Holiday is a #PictorialReference to the monstrance-like shape of a tree in John Martin's #painting.

    snrk.de/page_the-bard/

  10. Inlay: Detail from the #illustration by #HenryHoliday to fit5 in #LewisCarroll’s "#TheHuntingOfTheSnark" (1876).
    Background: From the painting "#TheBard" (c. 1817) by #JohnMartin. The area to which Holiday alluded has been highlighted.

    snrk.de/page_the-bard/

  11. left (inlay): Detail from an #illustration by #HenryHoliday to fit8 in #LewisCarroll’s "#TheHuntingOfTheSnark" (1876).
    right (inlay): Detail from the painting "#TheBard" (c. 1817) by #JohnMartin (mirror view of a horizontally compressed detail).
    Background image: Segment of John Martin's The #Bard.

    I suggest that the #monstrance-like shape of the tree drawn by Henry Holiday is a #PictorialReference to the monstrance-like shape of a tree in John Martin's #painting.

    snrk.de/page_the-bard/

  12. This is bycatch from my Snark hunt and not related to Henry Holiday's illustrations.

    Left: Segment of Maurits Cornelis #Escher's "#CiminoBarbarano", 1929 (in Escher’s “Italian” period). This reproduction of the original print has been horizontally compressed and segments on the right side and of the left side of the image have been removed.

    Right: Segment of #JohnMartin's "The #Bard", ca. 1817. In that grayscale reproduction, the segments on the top and the bottom have been removed.