Flat Dreams yippeeee
also hi guys sorry 4 not being as active in my tumblr !
just busy with school so nothin’ 2 worry about
flatland fixiation is still raging on >_0
Also, forgot I had more art to throw around here. Hello Loreen enjoyers I bring more ghost content (ignore the low quality, did this in between some of my classes)
Me when I discover the 3rd dimension
Anyways The Flatland movie was awesome! :oD
I LOVE FLATLAND‼️‼️
My Oc Universe au thingy under the cut tee hee
collection of all my completed ref sheets Yes a lot of them probably look different from how I actually draw them but i can never consistently draw flatties
The fuck is that Octahedron waffling about
Ok fr, we got Imagen (the octahedron on the right) and H Pentagon (the pentagon on the left).
My story between these two is kinda complicated so long story short: H wants to become 3D because he wishes to be a superior being, and throws all his flat rizz at Imagen to try and convince her to find a way to make him into a prism because he is socially inept and thinks if Imagen was in love with him she'd surely grant him planes and volume.
redraw of one of my favorite lines from le chat du rabbin that i think fits these two very well
og under the cut + explanation
“Je lui demande de me montrer une image de Dieu. Il me dit que Dieu, c’est une parole.”
R. Line justifies her neglect and disdain towards Trey, her own son, by using the Gospel of Three Dimensions, claiming that the Holy Sphere purposefully guided evolution to give Women larger brains than the Isosceles of the village. Women are inherently better, and are above the Isosceles: this is the structure set in stone. Trey, suffering daily under this dogma, questions their religion and the existence of the Holy Sphere. If the Sphere was real, he would have already saved them from the conditions of poverty and suffering their villages are put into. Because of R. Line's overbearing nature and refusal to accept any other point of view other than her own, Trey does not believe that the Third Dimension or an afterlife exist. R. Line is content with sending her son to his own death, under reassurance that their next life in a higher dimension is all that matters.
umm now some very choppy explanation of symbolism in this bc it's hard to put into words:
-The background is yellow to show the idea of the Sphere, specifically R. Line's ideal of the Sun as a holy object that is intertwined with the Holy Sphere: Only R. Line's beliefs are what matter, and are extremely overbearing and searing. R. Line is outlined in yellow, as well as the pupil of her eye being yellow to show this ideal is the lens she views the world through. Trey does not conform to the idea of a Holy Sphere, and has no yellow on him, but he is surrounded by it because it is forced onto him.
-Also relating to their pupil colors: In white, Trey is seeking out an answer grounded in reality and truth. In yellow, R. Line makes up her own answers, and justifies them through saying they are only what the Sphere would want. Similarly to this: Trey has a very solid outline because he wants direct answers that make logical sense and can be proven. R. Line's outline is blurry/indistinct because she is willing to lead her life using blind faith. Trey's limbs are fading because his limbs are the body part that have the most semblance to his mother (very angular + have spikes on the shoulders), and no matter what he does, he is still his mother's son. + it also shows how he does not have much time left before his death
-The black holes on the bottom represent the cross-sections of a Sphere, and the Sun in the back represents R. Line's pendant. These are not concepts that can be translated correctly into 2-Dimensions, and stick out as something that is really not true. These concepts are shadows displayed on a wall in an attempt to mimic the real thing, hence them being black and solid. It is an attempt for them to project the Sphere into their lives, but in the end, it is all false. The idea that R. Line dedicates herself to, an all-powerful and omnipotent Sphere that will bring salvation, is false. But she whole-heartedly believes in them, and willingly allows them to consume her life. It is also why she is fully black: Her life is only a vessel for her belief in the Sphere, and she has no real emotional connection to this plane of existence. This is also why blood is draining into the most prominent cross-section: She allows so much death and suffering, ruins the lives of all that get close to her, watches her son's death without lifting a finger to prevent it. All in the Sphere's name.
[ID: a mini tufted rug of A. Square from the 2007 Flatland film on a shabby wooden crucifix hung on a grey wall. End ID].
nerd