Tumgik
sentienttoastah Ā· 3 hours
Text
Art block has me in shambles but I drew a deer today. I still think about whales constantly but brain is saying ā€œnuh uh!ā€ why it be like that sometimes
Tumblr media
0 notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 2 days
Text
Tumblr media
Herman Melville's Moby Dick: or, The Whale. Custom binding designed by Susan Ebanks and bound by Chaim Ebanks of Exeter Bookbinders; white Chieftain Goatskin leather with blind tooling, gilt lettering, and glass prosthetic eye, 2023. [x]
Part of an upcoming exhibition at the Peabody Essex Museum, "Draw Me Ishmael: The Book Arts of Moby Dick" opening on June 1, 2024.
1K notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 5 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Trying out new art styles. Whale skeletons are very cool :) And of course it wouldnā€™t be complete without the usage of the colour green for no reason in particular (Spoilers: I think I like the colour green).
Thoughts on Moby Dick for today: A bit of the cetology chapters and a bit of Ishmael! Becauseā€¦ Whale.
We all know thereā€™s copious amounts of whale anatomy lessons in Moby Dick, some of which are true and some are more outdated. This is usually the least favourite part of the book for many people, and understandably so. It can be annoying for those who only read for the story and probably even more annoying for people who are actually interested or knowledgeable on the modern topic of cetaceans (or marine biology in general I mean like Ishmael called a seal (or was it a walrus? I forgot) an amphibian I donā€™t think I have to elaborate).
But Iā€™ve always thought the way Ishmael narrates the story, even though itā€™s through a book, is as if you were actually there sitting in front of him while he tells you the tale. Like listening to an actual sailor ramble about the ocean. Like a one-sided conversation, you could say. It just gives those vibes. That feeling of a naturally flowing conversation was actually what kept me really interested in the book because even though he barely talks about himself you can feel a kind of connection to Ishmael.
So if we were to treat it like him actually telling you all of this in one sitting on the spot I thought wouldnā€™t it make sense for him to want to avoid the worst parts of the story? So he drags it out before getting to the sad part. Or alternatively, the more logical explanation is the fact itā€™s a sailor telling a story about the sea to a land dweller so of course he would want to give them quick context notes. And especially considering the time this book was first published many people were unaware about even the basic facts of a whale.
Because among the many reasons Melville wrote Moby Dick was to educate people on the wonders of whales. And he succeeded! ā€¦Partially. He might not be the one we should give all of our credit to for the research of whales but at the very least he sparked a kind of curiosity in the common people back in the day. Sure itā€™s outdated but he tried his best and I think thatā€™s very cool :) shout out to Herman Melville for that.
Oh oh wait! I just thought of something. We can also view it as Ishmael writing a personal diary instead of being an actual book to publish to many. That works well too, and gives him more reason to want to drag out the tale. Heā€™s not just writing about their death and demise heā€™s writing about their lives to remember as well. A diary.
But on a different note, since I think that whole previous subject is already commonly thought about enough by Moby Dick readers;
Whale skeletons like I mentioned before are very cool too. But at the same time they kinda freak me out. Cause it looks like both a fish and a mammal at the same time. The skull especially reminds me of I think horses or other medium sized quadrupedal herbivores?? And the fingers are freaky too. The fingers are the freakiest. Iā€™m sure if you showed them to someone who has never seen a whale skeleton theyā€™d be very confused or scared. Maybe both.
But it really is curious to see the remnants of their land dwelling days through their bones!
22 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 5 days
Text
I just realised I keep forgetting itā€™s called ā€œDaily Dickā€ and not ā€œDick Dailyā€ I made that mistake in my posts Iā€™m sorry my brain was swallowed by the sea šŸ™šŸŸ
Although we might as well call it both at this point. That works too
Someone mentioned in the reblogs of the last post about their preferred interpretation of Moby Dick and after seeing that I had a little personal thought discussion of my own in my brain and like ahahsjsjs it made me so happy
I just love looking at this book in a more serious way than I usually do so thank you to whoever that was :)
And speaking of, I think from now on Iā€™ll give actual (only occasional!) literary commentary on Moby Dick for these Daily Dick posts because I cannot discuss this book with anyone else except the internet so yes. But for the sake of those who only want to see funky whale drawings I will keep them under the postā€™s cuts!!
Plus if I didnā€™t the post would be ungodly long.
Tumblr media
Today, I tried to draw a bit of the crew but then I remembered I suck at drawing humans so even more extremely and unnecessarily green shaded Moby instead. Didnā€™t have much time so I just gave that fella the Outlast camcorder filter treatment. Dw, the cameraman is fine. Donā€™t like how this turned out though :(
I want to draw whale skeletons tomorrow :D
Anyways, delusional whale ranting time. Be warned this is way longer than my last one and will contain spoilers for those who havenā€™t finished the book!
So the reblog tag I saw went along the lines of interpreting Moby Dick as not a god but to have the reader doubt that fact throughout the book until the end because of the descriptions we get of him and honestly, yes. I absolutely agree on that for the original novel. It gives us dread while reading!!
Although I will say that if we were to add/accept some kind of mysticism to Moby Dick and see him as not only a whale and as something else, he still wouldnā€™t be a ā€œgodā€. Yet at the same time he isnā€™t exactly a whale either. Or at least not a normal one (that much is clearly obvious I suppose). Like if thatā€™s not a god then what is a god? And if thatā€™s not a whale what is it? Itā€™s all vague!!
One of the many messages or themes in Moby Dick is humanityā€™s constant struggle against the unknown and the uncertain. We all fear the unknown in one way or another whether we realise it or not. Why else do we dread our future? Or what will happen tomorrow? Or what will happen after death? Because we donā€™t know.
With Moby Dick we understand that heā€™s described as a massive white whale who is known to wreak havoc among sailors. But aside from that what else do we actually know about Moby? The only information we get about him all come from 3rd party sources (such as that other whaling crew they met at chapter 54) and then through Ishmael as our narrator. Like Ishmael himself has only encountered Moby Dick once. How do we know if the information he got from others is true?
And even if it was true it still doesnā€™t tell us a lot about Moby Dick. We donā€™t understand why he attacks ships, was he angry? Was he in pain? Was it his own form of revenge? Or was he genuinely just trying to mind his own business? We donā€™t understand how he became so intelligent, or whether it really was Moby Dick that they saw in the apparitions of chapter 51 or was it just a squid like we see in a later chapter? If it was Moby why was he following them?
The vagueness of Moby Dickā€™s position in being either whale or something else makes him haunting. So in my own interpretation Iā€™d say to keep the final verdict completely undecided. He appears, then disappears. As only one of the many horrors of the deep. Moby Dick isnā€™t a horror book by any means but it is about the ocean, the ocean just so happens to be scary because we havenā€™t truly discovered everything it has to offer. Who knows whatā€™s down there?
Also, not only the fear or mystery he gives to us as the readers but to the crew in the story as well. Moby Dick took victory from doing what other whales the crew have hunted never do. He was ā€œunpredictableā€ as described. That wraps back to the beginning where I mentioned humanityā€™s struggles against the unknown and uncertain. But yet, even when we fear what we donā€™t know we are constantly challenging it still. Weā€™re intrigued by it. Ishmael does so by wanting to learn more about whales and go off on more voyages despite his experience the first time around, and the pequod crew or most notably Ahab does so by challenging Moby Dick.
Speaking of Ahab, he himself can also be compared to Moby Dickā€™s unpredictability. He might not be vaguely god-like as Moby is, but thereā€™s definitely something about him. Ishmael even quotes something about a mad man, a man who has let go of all rationality and morality, to be more dangerous than any beast. Why? Because he will become an unpredictable man. A man who will do anything to get what he desires even at the cost of others. Which is exactly what Ahab does. Humans are already dangerous enough when we understand them but when we donā€™t understand them? Even more dangerous no doubt.
Thatā€™s why his crew feared him after all. They didnā€™t know and nor did they want to know what would happen if they disobeyed him. Even Ahab doesnā€™t understand himself as he mentioned in the chapter with Starbuck. Why does he do the things he do? For revenge? For glory? For gold? He doesnā€™t understand except the fact he knows (or feels?) he has to. And itā€™s tragic.
In conclusion; aside from accepting differences, democracy, and the dangers of unhealthy obsession or copious amounts of whale anatomy, Moby Dick is also about the unknown and the uncertain. Thereā€™s a lot of other instances like Starbuckā€™s hesitation and Fedallahā€™s entire existence but I donā€™t want to drag out the rant for too long and obviously Iā€™m not the first person to come up with this.
But what do you think? And thank you to anyone who actually read all my crap frfr šŸ™šŸŸ
9 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 5 days
Text
aaaa I havenā€™t gotten time to be properly online on tumblr for a few days so I semi-forgot about Daily Dick
But yaaaay!! Moby Dick discussions!! :D
Iā€™m very happy you added onto my points especially using actual quotes and chapter indications! Itā€™s been such a long time since I actually read the book so I didnā€™t get to fully cite those in mine but Iā€™m glad you did!! (In fact Iā€™m thinking of rereading the book after this to spark up more discussions and whale rants lol..)
And I especially love the comparison you made between Ahab and Ishmael! I remember when I first started my read the only thing I got from the beginning was that it was a story of obsession and that Ahab and Ishmael are parallels of healthy and unhealthy ones. So your addition of them being contrasts of how we deal with the fear of the unknown was actually something I never actually thought about despite me bringing up that original topic first in my post. Definitely gonna think on that a lot now!
Thank you for the discussion :D
Someone mentioned in the reblogs of the last post about their preferred interpretation of Moby Dick and after seeing that I had a little personal thought discussion of my own in my brain and like ahahsjsjs it made me so happy
I just love looking at this book in a more serious way than I usually do so thank you to whoever that was :)
And speaking of, I think from now on Iā€™ll give actual (only occasional!) literary commentary on Moby Dick for these Daily Dick posts because I cannot discuss this book with anyone else except the internet so yes. But for the sake of those who only want to see funky whale drawings I will keep them under the postā€™s cuts!!
Plus if I didnā€™t the post would be ungodly long.
Tumblr media
Today, I tried to draw a bit of the crew but then I remembered I suck at drawing humans so even more extremely and unnecessarily green shaded Moby instead. Didnā€™t have much time so I just gave that fella the Outlast camcorder filter treatment. Dw, the cameraman is fine. Donā€™t like how this turned out though :(
I want to draw whale skeletons tomorrow :D
Anyways, delusional whale ranting time. Be warned this is way longer than my last one and will contain spoilers for those who havenā€™t finished the book!
So the reblog tag I saw went along the lines of interpreting Moby Dick as not a god but to have the reader doubt that fact throughout the book until the end because of the descriptions we get of him and honestly, yes. I absolutely agree on that for the original novel. It gives us dread while reading!!
Although I will say that if we were to add/accept some kind of mysticism to Moby Dick and see him as not only a whale and as something else, he still wouldnā€™t be a ā€œgodā€. Yet at the same time he isnā€™t exactly a whale either. Or at least not a normal one (that much is clearly obvious I suppose). Like if thatā€™s not a god then what is a god? And if thatā€™s not a whale what is it? Itā€™s all vague!!
One of the many messages or themes in Moby Dick is humanityā€™s constant struggle against the unknown and the uncertain. We all fear the unknown in one way or another whether we realise it or not. Why else do we dread our future? Or what will happen tomorrow? Or what will happen after death? Because we donā€™t know.
With Moby Dick we understand that heā€™s described as a massive white whale who is known to wreak havoc among sailors. But aside from that what else do we actually know about Moby? The only information we get about him all come from 3rd party sources (such as that other whaling crew they met at chapter 54) and then through Ishmael as our narrator. Like Ishmael himself has only encountered Moby Dick once. How do we know if the information he got from others is true?
And even if it was true it still doesnā€™t tell us a lot about Moby Dick. We donā€™t understand why he attacks ships, was he angry? Was he in pain? Was it his own form of revenge? Or was he genuinely just trying to mind his own business? We donā€™t understand how he became so intelligent, or whether it really was Moby Dick that they saw in the apparitions of chapter 51 or was it just a squid like we see in a later chapter? If it was Moby why was he following them?
The vagueness of Moby Dickā€™s position in being either whale or something else makes him haunting. So in my own interpretation Iā€™d say to keep the final verdict completely undecided. He appears, then disappears. As only one of the many horrors of the deep. Moby Dick isnā€™t a horror book by any means but it is about the ocean, the ocean just so happens to be scary because we havenā€™t truly discovered everything it has to offer. Who knows whatā€™s down there?
Also, not only the fear or mystery he gives to us as the readers but to the crew in the story as well. Moby Dick took victory from doing what other whales the crew have hunted never do. He was ā€œunpredictableā€ as described. That wraps back to the beginning where I mentioned humanityā€™s struggles against the unknown and uncertain. But yet, even when we fear what we donā€™t know we are constantly challenging it still. Weā€™re intrigued by it. Ishmael does so by wanting to learn more about whales and go off on more voyages despite his experience the first time around, and the pequod crew or most notably Ahab does so by challenging Moby Dick.
Speaking of Ahab, he himself can also be compared to Moby Dickā€™s unpredictability. He might not be vaguely god-like as Moby is, but thereā€™s definitely something about him. Ishmael even quotes something about a mad man, a man who has let go of all rationality and morality, to be more dangerous than any beast. Why? Because he will become an unpredictable man. A man who will do anything to get what he desires even at the cost of others. Which is exactly what Ahab does. Humans are already dangerous enough when we understand them but when we donā€™t understand them? Even more dangerous no doubt.
Thatā€™s why his crew feared him after all. They didnā€™t know and nor did they want to know what would happen if they disobeyed him. Even Ahab doesnā€™t understand himself as he mentioned in the chapter with Starbuck. Why does he do the things he do? For revenge? For glory? For gold? He doesnā€™t understand except the fact he knows (or feels?) he has to. And itā€™s tragic.
In conclusion; aside from accepting differences, democracy, and the dangers of unhealthy obsession or copious amounts of whale anatomy, Moby Dick is also about the unknown and the uncertain. Thereā€™s a lot of other instances like Starbuckā€™s hesitation and Fedallahā€™s entire existence but I donā€™t want to drag out the rant for too long and obviously Iā€™m not the first person to come up with this.
But what do you think? And thank you to anyone who actually read all my crap frfr šŸ™šŸŸ
9 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 8 days
Text
Tumblr media
Tumblr have you heard the news?
18 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 9 days
Text
Someone mentioned in the reblogs of the last post about their preferred interpretation of Moby Dick and after seeing that I had a little personal thought discussion of my own in my brain and like ahahsjsjs it made me so happy
I just love looking at this book in a more serious way than I usually do so thank you to whoever that was :)
And speaking of, I think from now on Iā€™ll give actual (only occasional!) literary commentary on Moby Dick for these Daily Dick posts because I cannot discuss this book with anyone else except the internet so yes. But for the sake of those who only want to see funky whale drawings I will keep them under the postā€™s cuts!!
Plus if I didnā€™t the post would be ungodly long.
Tumblr media
Today, I tried to draw a bit of the crew but then I remembered I suck at drawing humans so even more extremely and unnecessarily green shaded Moby instead. Didnā€™t have much time so I just gave that fella the Outlast camcorder filter treatment. Dw, the cameraman is fine. Donā€™t like how this turned out though :(
I want to draw whale skeletons tomorrow :D
Anyways, delusional whale ranting time. Be warned this is way longer than my last one and will contain spoilers for those who havenā€™t finished the book!
So the reblog tag I saw went along the lines of interpreting Moby Dick as not a god but to have the reader doubt that fact throughout the book until the end because of the descriptions we get of him and honestly, yes. I absolutely agree on that for the original novel. It gives us dread while reading!!
Although I will say that if we were to add/accept some kind of mysticism to Moby Dick and see him as not only a whale and as something else, he still wouldnā€™t be a ā€œgodā€. Yet at the same time he isnā€™t exactly a whale either. Or at least not a normal one (that much is clearly obvious I suppose). Like if thatā€™s not a god then what is a god? And if thatā€™s not a whale what is it? Itā€™s all vague!!
One of the many messages or themes in Moby Dick is humanityā€™s constant struggle against the unknown and the uncertain. We all fear the unknown in one way or another whether we realise it or not. Why else do we dread our future? Or what will happen tomorrow? Or what will happen after death? Because we donā€™t know.
With Moby Dick we understand that heā€™s described as a massive white whale who is known to wreak havoc among sailors. But aside from that what else do we actually know about Moby? The only information we get about him all come from 3rd party sources (such as that other whaling crew they met at chapter 54) and then through Ishmael as our narrator. Like Ishmael himself has only encountered Moby Dick once. How do we know if the information he got from others is true?
And even if it was true it still doesnā€™t tell us a lot about Moby Dick. We donā€™t understand why he attacks ships, was he angry? Was he in pain? Was it his own form of revenge? Or was he genuinely just trying to mind his own business? We donā€™t understand how he became so intelligent, or whether it really was Moby Dick that they saw in the apparitions of chapter 51 or was it just a squid like we see in a later chapter? If it was Moby why was he following them?
The vagueness of Moby Dickā€™s position in being either whale or something else makes him haunting. So in my own interpretation Iā€™d say to keep the final verdict completely undecided. He appears, then disappears. As only one of the many horrors of the deep. Moby Dick isnā€™t a horror book by any means but it is about the ocean, the ocean just so happens to be scary because we havenā€™t truly discovered everything it has to offer. Who knows whatā€™s down there?
Also, not only the fear or mystery he gives to us as the readers but to the crew in the story as well. Moby Dick took victory from doing what other whales the crew have hunted never do. He was ā€œunpredictableā€ as described. That wraps back to the beginning where I mentioned humanityā€™s struggles against the unknown and uncertain. But yet, even when we fear what we donā€™t know we are constantly challenging it still. Weā€™re intrigued by it. Ishmael does so by wanting to learn more about whales and go off on more voyages despite his experience the first time around, and the pequod crew or most notably Ahab does so by challenging Moby Dick.
Speaking of Ahab, he himself can also be compared to Moby Dickā€™s unpredictability. He might not be vaguely god-like as Moby is, but thereā€™s definitely something about him. Ishmael even quotes something about a mad man, a man who has let go of all rationality and morality, to be more dangerous than any beast. Why? Because he will become an unpredictable man. A man who will do anything to get what he desires even at the cost of others. Which is exactly what Ahab does. Humans are already dangerous enough when we understand them but when we donā€™t understand them? Even more dangerous no doubt.
Thatā€™s why his crew feared him after all. They didnā€™t know and nor did they want to know what would happen if they disobeyed him. Even Ahab doesnā€™t understand himself as he mentioned in the chapter with Starbuck. Why does he do the things he do? For revenge? For glory? For gold? He doesnā€™t understand except the fact he knows (or feels?) he has to. And itā€™s tragic.
In conclusion; aside from accepting differences, democracy, and the dangers of unhealthy obsession or copious amounts of whale anatomy, Moby Dick is also about the unknown and the uncertain. Thereā€™s a lot of other instances like Starbuckā€™s hesitation and Fedallahā€™s entire existence but I donā€™t want to drag out the rant for too long and obviously Iā€™m not the first person to come up with this.
But what do you think? And thank you to anyone who actually read all my crap frfr šŸ™šŸŸ
9 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 10 days
Text
First of all, this is gonna be a stupidly long whale rant. Be warned. And second, to the two people in last postā€™s notes who said ā€œDaily Dickā€, yes. Absolutely. That is the objectively correct answer thank you and I will be using that as an actual tag from now on.
So, Daily Dick it is. Today I realised I never had a consistent scale for my Eldritch Moby Dick drawings. Sure, fellaā€™s big but the size consistency wasnā€™t really there so I thought of making a little reference sheet.
But it kinda just devolved into me making delusional eldritch whale lore. Here you go.
Tumblr media
The idea was whales but as beings representing the faults of humanity or maybe human emotion? I donā€™t know it came to me at 2 AM.
But yeah, at least I have a size comparison for him now.
Tumblr media
If youā€™re interested in my 2 AM induced whale god lore thereā€™s more close-up screenshots of my notes under this cut, youā€™re not obliged to read them!
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I am by no means an expert in ichthyology, cetology, or anything related to the science of the ocean. My knowledge is extremely shallow level (pun intended) but I have always loved fictional critters, both realistic or mythological like eldritch Moby here.
Iā€™m definitely gonna be watching whale documentaries or something like that to learn more about them, but for now Iā€™ll just hope this is good enough. I mean heā€™s technically god-like here so he shouldnā€™t be too realistic in general but still. If anyone is more informed on the topic of cetology or marine life than I am feel free to share :)
Or if there are any questions on my Moby depiction, those are welcome too.
If you managed to read through my delusional whale talk thank you and have a nice day fr
šŸ™šŸŸ
5 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 11 days
Text
Messed around with the image thing for canto 7 and that fella there looks familiar
Tumblr media
no wayā€¦ā€¦ Was that a reference to one of the characters made by the popular japanese songwriter, vocalist, and author: Eve??
Nah, just fooling. Would be funny though.
20 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 13 days
Text
Ahoy. More Moby art. I am definitely not obsessed with this whale or his book, and no I am not secretly Ahab.
But if I ever end up making 5 Moby Dick related artwork posts in a row should I just make it a daily thing? Like Moby Dick Daily? Daily dose of Moby? How do I make it not sound weird without calling it simply whale weekly.
Tumblr media
Also, I hid a little easter egg on the skiff (yes the little dark thing there is supposed to be a skiff) itā€™s hard to see but maybe you can spot it if you zoom enough :]
Iā€™m getting bored of posting about just the whale. Next time, Iā€™ll try my hand at drawing the crew maybe?
96 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 14 days
Text
More Moby Dick fanart but this time itā€™s actually Limbus Company.
Tumblr media
A personal redraw of that cutscene from canto 5. Like seriously I love that scene. And surprisingly I barely ever see actual art for the pallid whale. Come on guys heā€™s so cool!! Heā€™s literally Moby!!
Tumblr media
Original image.
Iā€™m not exactly happy with the result of this one either but I will keep experimenting with more styles. And that means more whale art on the way for sure. Maybe even Ishmael some day?
32 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 15 days
Text
Hey bestie cool boat you got there would be a shame if I made it disappear and never to be seen again.
Tumblr media
Moby dick but eldritch (as if the way he was described wasnā€™t eldritch enough). Also, the design is mostly based on the Limbus Company depiction/adaptation he just looks so cool there :D
56 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 23 days
Text
yaaaaayy harpy birthday skelšŸŸšŸŸšŸŸšŸŸšŸŸšŸ‹šŸŸšŸŸšŸŸ
Tumblr media
a bday gift for a certain someone (skel)
4 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 23 days
Text
Tumblr media
A little card i made for my friend, and to be the counterpart to @sentienttoastah's Rin card! Happy Birthday Skel!!!! Hope you had a GREAT day! (hope this is good enough-)
5 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 23 days
Text
Birthday card for a friend šŸŸ
Tumblr media
Went slightly overboard on this one and the artstyle is outdated by a month but HAPPY BIRTHDAY SKELšŸ—£ļøšŸ—£ļøšŸ—£ļøšŸ”„šŸ”„šŸŸšŸŸ
HOPE YOUR DAY BIRTH IS SPARKLY SHINY GIRLYPOP AWESOME WOW SFX (with no whales)
Edit: Check out @cottonthebunā€™s as well!! šŸŸ 2nd Edit: And @windowsmeisbest-jbp šŸŸšŸŸšŸ‘‹šŸ‘‹šŸ‘‹šŸ‘‹
7 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 24 days
Text
Tumblr media
Quick cover art for a PMD fanfic based on the Sherlock Holmes novels.
10 notes Ā· View notes
sentienttoastah Ā· 26 days
Text
Tanaka screenshots I happen to have saved on my gallery but anyways
Tumblr media Tumblr media
yeah.
Tumblr media
Also heā€™s kinda (very) fruity.
0 notes