an invocation of the sensually gothic    
     
   
 
Book of Days: Volume I
January February March April
May June July August
September October November December
 
April Days
 
 
1
2 Dragonology
3 Girl on a Bridge' ~ Love, with edge-play
4 The Plucker & Darkwerks by Brom
5 Gregorian Chimes
6 Opeth ~ Scandinavian Black Metal
7 McFarlane's Dragons: Series 3
8 The Romance of Writing: Scented Ink
9 Artemisia: A film by Agnès Merlet
10 The Sword of Shannara
11 Peter Gabriel: the Early Music of Genesis
12 Bloodsucking Fiends
13 Destress with Voodoo
14 Blade Runner
15 The Witches Almanac - Elizabeth Pepper
16 Chocolate in the Cauldron - Fat Witch!
17 The Worm Ouroboros ~ Classic Fantasy
18 Tombs of the Blind Dead
19 Azure Ray ~ Southern gothic angels
20 The Mammoth Book of Historical Erotica
21 The Blood Show by Mark Ryden
22 Free Scoops at Ben & Jerry's, April 25!
23 The definitive guide to The Twilight Zone
24 The Hot Girls of Weimar Berlin
25 Santa Sangre: Surreal Horror
26 Scarling ~ Neo-goth, art-rock, punk-pop
27 Rue Morgue Magazine
28 Creepy Films of William Castle
29 Introducing: Laurie Cabot
30 The Legacy of Edward Gorey
 
 
April 30, 2006
 
Edward Gorey: a celebrated (macabre) legacy

Before there Emily Strange ... before The Nightmare Before Christmas, there was Edward Gorey. And while many were first introduced to Gorey when Academy Award Winning director Derek Lamb animated his quirky and whimsical characters for the opening to PBS' MYSTERY!, (in 1980) his works and notoriety really began much earlier; in 1953, with his work, The Unstrung Harp. In fact, it is well known that the works of Tim Burton were largely influenced by Gorey's pen & ink drawings.

Both a writer and a fine artist, his work was ethusiastically collected before his death in 2000 and is highly coveted and prized today. Although he would frequently state that his formal art training was "negligible," Gorey studied art for one semester at the Chicago Art Institute in 1943. He has illustrated works as diverse as Dracula by Bram Stoker, The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells, and Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats by T. S. Eliot. Gorey evan had a successful run in theatre with the Broadway production of Dracula, for which he designed both the sets and costumes; winning a Tony Award for the latter.

 

"A is for Amy who fell down the stairs.
B is for Basil assaulted by bears.
C is for Clara who wasted away.
D is for Desmond thrown out of a sleigh..."
~ from The Gashlycrumb Tinies (1981)"

Did that last line remind you of Ethan Frome?

Gorey's legacy now resides in the wealth of his work, easily found on Amazon, and aggressively collected on eBay. We invite you to explore the world that was, and will always be, Gorey!

 
 
A very small sampling of a very rich collection of works by the late Edward Gorey
           
 
 
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