Drawing Blood: An Inktober Unlucky 14 for Halloween

As shadows lengthen and crispy leaves chase one another down the now-empty streets at dusk, the October People take centerstage, working their special magic upon the season of all things horrific, creepy-cute, and otherworldly. In this spirit, Jake Parker’s annual Inktober event offers a series of prompts for artists to ink their way through the 31 days of October. All you need to do is draw. Paper, inks, graphite, tablet – all are welcome. The flurry of postings tagged #Inktober and #Inktober2018 are all seasonal eye candy – and we don’t mean that stinkin’ kandy korn, either! Nope, this is the good stuff. Full bars. Let the inky phantasmagoria begin with an Unlucky  14 of haunt-worthy IG accounts to follow:

@enginervster

Images via @enginervster

Terry Ramdhany uses a blackwork approach with pencil and ink. Stunning linework often punctuated with blood red or acid green, these beasties are the stuff of nightmares but somehow in the most delicate way. Originals are available directly from the artist if your crypt needs a little spiffing up.

@mrrevenge

Images via @mrrevenge

Ricky & Richelle Romero’s comix-inspired sketchbook takes some hilariously bloody shots at pop culture cartoon icons like a few bunnies and kitties we could name. If those darlings of childhood just plain give you the creeps, this one’s for you. Their shop at ScaryBearyAndCompany has lots of originals, prints, stickers, and books, too.

@nnyhr

Images via @nnyhr

Exquisite detail couples with the blackest of black inkwork to explore the mythos inside FloRhynn‘s head. These nightmares have spawned Encre Nous, a positively delicious crowd-sourced art book, and an array of Lovecraftian clothing with many designs harboring a Tarot card vibe.

@peppa_potter

Images via @peppa_potter

Lest you forget that Inktober is not limited to stinkin’ ink, the digitally drawn peculiar pets and preternatural spirit animals of Peppa Potter are here to remind you with dancing bats, hairy spiders and melancholy monsters.

@paolopetrangeli

Images via @paolopetrangeli

Working with biro pens, Rome, Italy-based Paolo Petrangeli envisions a scary-sweet, color-washed Halloween world of fat little pirate moons, stick-limbed waifs, and teetering mansions that just double-dog dare you to ring the bell and demand your treats. His etsy shop includes prints and original paintings.

@faunwood

Images via @faunwood

Dark meets adorbs in the beautiful and otherworldly denizens of Faunwood where artist Miranda Zimmerman puts pen to paper (or sometimes drink coasters). She is inspired by the prompt lists of many different artists and usually combines several in an October onslaught of inky eeriness.

@blackheartcollection

Images via @blackheartcollection

Well, this is some wretched cuteness right here! Kat’s goulish ladies and their feline friends began their unlife intended as book illustrations but they also wind up on some pretty sweet swag in her etsy shop including tees, prints, and pins, some of which she makes by hand. The admittedly Halloween-obsessed Kat shares her whimsically dark world of original characters, cats, and coffee.

@cwehrle

Images via @cwehrle

Drawing upon a childhood filled with campy 80s horror, Chad Wehrle just does what he loves, which he describes as “drawing cool shit.” Damn straight, Chad!  His Society6 shop is full of cool shit. His Etsy shop is full of cool shit. There’s even a series of books he created from his previous years of Drawlloween mastery. He keeps it simple with pencil, eraser, and paper blender.

 @behemot_crta_stvari

Images via @behemot_crta_stvari

Slavic mythology fuels the creepy-cute weirdness of self-taught Bosnian artist Igor – yes, that’s his real name. He credits the obsession-worthy Tim Burton as one of his earliest influences, along with those horrid fairy tales that scarred our souls and gave us freaking nightmares as children. His threadless shop offers clothing and accessories to complete your otherworldly ensemble.

@animvs

Images via @animvs_

Melancholic ossuaries, tattered bats, and halo’d wraiths are among the dark offerings at Animvs Stvdio with an occultish, dark aesthetic. In page after page of esoteric pointillism, the creeping horrors shamble into view.

@darktownsally

Images via @darktownsally

Like dark folk art, inks and watercolors combine in these velvety, shadowy little panels from Dark Town Sally. Every time she releases a new run of prints, they sell out like Halloween candy on the 1st of October (yes, that fast!) so you might want to visit her shop to add a few to your treat or treat bag.

@sorrowgrips

Images via @sorrowgrips

Indonesian artist Sorrow Grips offers exquisite nature studies with an eldritch bent – skulls, bats, snakes, goats, and moths frolic in the darkness of his imagination. His store offers a small selection of prints and original pen & ink drawings for collectors.

@findnatatat

Images via @findnatatat

Graphite artist Natalie B. has an eye for that cool retro 40s/50s style complete with hand lettering, creepy kiddies, and bodacious Halloween babes. Plus, prints and originals are available in her shop if you need a sugar-free hit of Halloween before the big event.

@austinpardunart

Images via @austinpardunart

If your twisted childhood included paging in bug-eyed terror through stacks of horror comic books by flashlight, you’ll scream with delight – for it’s surely Eternal Halloween in the world of Austin Pardun. With campy cats, lowbrow ladies and cryptid dance parties, the halftone Halloween horror show conjures pulpy memories of Tales From the Crypt.

Image via inktober.com

The gory granddaddy of October Ink remains Inktober, but the permutations are myriad. Quite a few variants are gathered at Inktoberprompts on IG but a favorite around here remains the glorious Mab Graves’ Drawlloween. Her list has been thematically organized to allow time-crunched inkies to combine several prompts into one larger drawing if you can’t keep up daily. You really can’t go wrong with any of these prompt lists – there’s one for every taste from the horrific to the creepy-sweet. So grab a pen and splash some ink! And tag that shit for everyone to see!

Featured image via @austinpardunart

Words & Wonders:
The Artwork Of Jason Limon

In Jason Limon’s eccentric menagerie, quizzical creatures pose for us in their own strange world of words. They have the air of an odd and desperately whimsical circus, with typography spelling out a single word juxtaposed against oddly smiling critters and their elements of magic and wonder. Limon’s early career as an award-winning commercial graphic designer now serves him well as a painter and sculptor. His love of type, color, and composition are on full display in his paintings, often presented in a series of interconnected works. Every time I look through his work I see even more details, more quiet little jokes or a new play on words. A recent series entitled “Three Letter Words” explores the idea that a single word can be a complete statement with layers of meaning:

“Three Letter Words: Ask” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art
“Three Letter Words: Key” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art
“Three Letter Words: Sin” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art

Wow x Wow Gallery notes that Limon had always sought out art and artists as inspiration, dreaming of a place in that milieu while still remaining safely within the graphic design arena: “I used to spend my days sitting behind a computer working in the graphic design biz and almost every single day I’d scour through illustration annuals and art books. For the longest time it was a place where I always felt I belonged, but was frightened to jump into.”


Limon creates a world of strangely beautiful creatures that meld an odd cryptid sweetness with the artist’s love of packaging and design. His “Three Letter Words” series embodies packaged ideas, to my mind. I desperately wish for the strange “products” he has envisioned to be real things that I could scoop right off the panel and tinker with, turning things over in my hands to explore and play with these strange and wonderful toys. The details, the rich yet chalky colors, the charming smiles of his weird little friends, the words and symbols — every facet makes me want to peruse further, perhaps starting up a guileless conversation with these little one-word-wonders.

“Three Letter Words: Car” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art
“Three Letter Words: Bee” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art

In his Artist’s Statement, Limon shares his thoughts about old commercial pieces and how that inspires his current work: “Within the elements that surround us every day are bits of someone else – a record of thoughts made up of color, typography and symbols marked onto paper and metal to represent products throughout time. As an artist I’ve grown to value these pieces of history; to survey and connect them to craft my own thoughts and feelings.”


I readily admit to having kind of a thing for old toys. Limon’s images often make me think of those “misfit toys” who endure in their own preternatural realm between real and not-real, alone but not lonely, waiting for a child-like soul to come play with them.

“Hideaway” (Acrylic on Panel) Image via Limon Art
“Calling All Numbskulls” (Acrylic on Panel) Image via Limon Art

In his Artist’s Statement, Limon also touches upon the fact that his earlier work was based more on nature and magical creatures: “Over time I have explored a range of subjects, from ideas based on nature to otherworldly beings. As I progress through my work there is one field where I started and tend to gravitate toward the most: history. History is all around.”


Personally, I am very drawn to many of Limon’s earlier works. They have a very loose and organic feel compared to his later works, almost worshipful of nature and magic. Many are are large canvasses rather than the panels he began utilizing in later pieces. The texture and tactility this lends also feels very natural with the subjects which have a fantastical vibe and a certain quality of light and depth that feel very different from the harder edges of his later, and equally fascinating, work.

“Entangled Swarm” (Acrylic on Canvas) – Image via Limon Art
“Light” (Acrylic on Panel) – Image via Limon Art

In 2007, Limon took the leap from a successful career in graphic design to begin painting full time, exhibiting his work in galleries across the United States and Europe. Dozens of group shows, solo exhibitions, publications, and awards have also spawned a squee-inducing array of toys, tee shirts, pins, and stickers. All are available on his website along with prints, very affordable print sets, and original paintings. I dare you to come away with only a single treasure! I have dozens already and have just found a few more vital acquisitions because I never seem to have enough artwork, screamingly weird-cute tee shirts, and enamel pins. I have been known to buy art instead of food so Limon’s shopify site is dangerous for me. There is seriously no saturation level for this stuff and no end in sight for Limon’s output, either. Check the blog on his site for a steady stream of updates that will send you running for your credit card and clearing space on your walls.

“Feast” (Fine Art Print) – Image via Jason Limon Art – Shopify
“Particles Print Set” – Image via Jason Limon Art – Shopify
Stinkbox (Blindbox Mini Series) – Image via Jason Limon Art – Shopify
“Gumball,” “Drop,” “Shitface” (Hard Enamel Pins) – Image via Limon Art
“Guppy” (Cotton Tee Shirt) – Image via Jason Limon Art – Shopify

Follow Jason Limon on Instagram and Twitter for a seemingly endless barrage of incredible imagery. It is seriously page after page of wonderful stuff! A rather staggering archive of Limon’s work is currently available via his flickr stream where his quirky humor and obvious love for his bizarre little giggling creatures and cryptids is on full display. I always see a few images here that I haven’t caught elsewhere so it’s worth scrolling through the entire stream if you find yourself drawn into his juicy little world. Then head back to his shop and score a few treasures for your own juicy little world!

 

Featured Image via Jason Limon Art – Shopify