Rachel Alexander's Blog, page 278

February 12, 2019

ancienthouseofydell:

therkalexander:

A First Press of Olives“I am more comfortable with you than I...

ancienthouseofydell:



therkalexander:



A First Press of Olives

“I am more comfortable with you than I am with myself and I trust you implicitly. We said we wanted to know each other in every way possible, did we not?”

~ Aidoneus to Persephone
“A First Press of Olives” by Rachel Alexander
A Hades and Persephone (mostly PWP) One-shot

https://archiveofourown.org/works/17750741


A First Press of Olives - KataChthonia - Greek and Roman Mythology [Archive of Our Own]



OMG RACHEL.

I need to go lay down for a long while. God.

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Published on February 12, 2019 23:21

artofelaineho:Part 2 of the Receiver of Many fanart that I did...



















artofelaineho:

Part 2 of the Receiver of Many fanart that I did in 2015-2016. Sketches/speedpaints all around!

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Published on February 12, 2019 22:10

gdfalksen:

art 









gdfalksen:



art 

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Published on February 12, 2019 21:43

persephoneandthepomegranates:

fdevitart:



“Praxidike” is one...



persephoneandthepomegranates:



fdevitart:





“Praxidike” is one of Persephone’s many epiteths and means “Exacter of Justice”.
Every reference to Beyoncé is purely coincidental. 

Check the prints and other products of this drawing on my Redbubble and TeePublic stores! 

P.s.: I need to thank @persephoneandthepomegranates who gave me the idea for the title (here’s the web page with all the infos/epiteths/etc. about Persephone that she gave me, thank you soooooo much



It looks so beautiful

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Published on February 12, 2019 20:55

artofelaineho:

Figured I should repost the fanart I did for...













artofelaineho:



Figured I should repost the fanart I did for Receiver of Many, since I switched tumblr handles over the years. I did these in 2015-2016 (wow, time flies), so here’s part 1. A bunch of Persephone and Aidoneus illustrations and facial concepts!

Receiver of Many is a retelling of the Persephone/Hades greek myth. It’s one of my favorite books. @therkalexander is now working on the sequel, The Good Counselor, so head over there if you’re interested!

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Published on February 12, 2019 20:47

ajstudio:

artofelaineho:

Figured I should repost the fanart I...













ajstudio:



artofelaineho:



Figured I should repost the fanart I did for Receiver of Many, since I switched tumblr handles over the years. I did these in 2015-2016 (wow, time flies), so here’s part 1. A bunch of Persephone and Aidoneus illustrations and facial concepts!

Receiver of Many is a retelling of the Persephone/Hades greek myth. It’s one of my favorite books. @therkalexander is now working on the sequel, The Good Counselor, so head over there if you’re interested!



Oh good golly! That Hades is gorgeous! This pictures are breathtaking!

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Published on February 12, 2019 00:40

How would you describe the sibling relationship between Apollo and Artemis? If you've ever even thought about it. Being twins I always imagined them being rambunctious and mischievous when they were children.

So many ideas about these two…

Artemis and Apollo were thick as thieves when they were younger.  They were constantly getting into trouble, running around the palace at Olympus, teasing Ares, accidentally knocking over a pithos and dumping olive oil into the hearth in Hestia’s apartment, standing on each other’s shoulders to pick apples from Hera’s trees. 

They shared everything, were each other’s best friends, and thought they would be inseparable forever.  But their tastes started drifting apart when they got older.

In my telling Artemis is asexual, aromantic.  This didn’t sit well with Apollo.  He was convinced that they were meant for each other, halves of the same soul.

To make sure that she wasn’t married off, Artemis took her vow of perpetual virginity within a day of menarche.  She thought her brother would support her.  He didn’t and was heartbroken when she told him.  Artemis said he should join her cause, be unbound, unbeholden to the lusts that drove most of the Olympians to folly.  But Apollo, once he reached manhood, took an entirely different path.

Artemis, disgusted by her family’s behavior, drew nymphs to her who also wanted to keep away from men, keep themselves safe in a world ruled by men, a world where women were traded and used like property.  She created the Nymphae Artemisiai, a band of Oceanids and Hyperboreads who could join her at the age of nine, before menarche, take the vows and rely on safety in numbers.

Apollo pursued just as many nymphs on his own.  Embittered by Artemis’ supposed rejection, he would often pursue women until death.  When this happened— especially after Daphne chose becoming a laurel over being with him— he would think about what Artemis had told him when they were young, how he should free himself of the passions that plagued the rest of their kind.  He would throw himself into obsessive study after each failed pursuit.

Artemis rarely spoke to Apollo after Daphne.  She viewed him as dangerous, and always grew sad when he was mentioned because she knew that he could have taken another path through life.  Apollo quickly changes the subject if anyone mentions his sister.  Their roles in the Dodekatheon mean that they must sit together, interact with each other when the gods meet.  The casual observer assumes their treatment of each other is simply regal, dignified regard instead of icy silence.  But those who knew them looked upon them forlornly, remembering the fair haired children who used to laugh and dance and pick apples together and lay in the grass and name the stars at night. 

As the centuries passed, Apollo’s fatal attractions and obsessions died or turned themselves into flowers or trees, which drove him back to intense study so he could purify his mind and forget.  In the process he became a patron of medicine, art, music, and even learned how to drive Helios’ chariot across the sky.  But always echoing in his heart and soul was one name.  Artemis.

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Published on February 12, 2019 00:28

February 11, 2019

therkalexander:

A First Press of Olives“I am more comfortable with you than I am with myself and I...

therkalexander:



A First Press of Olives

“I am more comfortable with you than I am with myself and I trust you implicitly. We said we wanted to know each other in every way possible, did we not?”

~ Aidoneus to Persephone
“A First Press of Olives” by Rachel Alexander
A Hades and Persephone (mostly PWP) One-shot

https://archiveofourown.org/works/17750741


A First Press of Olives - KataChthonia - Greek and Roman Mythology [Archive of Our Own]

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Published on February 11, 2019 23:46