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Fictional Painting
- 304 statements
- 57 feature instances
- 32 referencing feature instances
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Fictional Painting | comment |
What happens when a work focuses on art, but the story itself is entirely fictional? You get this: the fictional painting, which only exists in-universe. Often these paintings are quite important to the story to where the plot hinges on them, so creative control over the exact details of the painting can be very helpful. If one of the characters is a painter themselves, chances are they'll end up making one of these paintings, but more often they're treated as famous historical works found in museums and galleries. More notable examples such as the eponymous portrait in The Picture of Dorian Gray tend to be prone to Defictionalization, sometimes resulting in several different contradictory versions by different artists. Sister-trope to Fictional Document, Fictional Video Game, Fictional Board Game, and the Show Within a Show. Using this method can avert Artistic License – Art. Related to Anomalous Art. |
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Fictional Painting | fetched |
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Fictional Painting | parsed |
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Fictional Painting | processingComment |
Dropped link to Arcanum: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Dropped link to CreepyChangingPainting: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to MacGuffin: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to MilestoneCelebration: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to Sculptors: Not an Item - FEATURE | |
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Dropped link to SeriesFinale: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Dropped link to SpacePirate: Not an Item - UNKNOWN | |
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Arcanum | |
Fictional Painting | isPartOf |
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Fictional Painting / int_18916544 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_18916544 | comment |
Fillmore!: In "Masterstroke of Malevolence", Mrs. Lawson's field trip to the Modern Contemporary Natural History, Art, Science and Miniature Museum takes a horrifying turn as someone draws a mustache on the priceless painting "The Lobster Man at Port". | |
Fictional Painting / int_18916544 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_18916544 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fillmore! | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_18916544 | |
Fictional Painting / int_1c34acd2 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_1c34acd2 | comment |
Rocketship Voyager The Caretaker shows off various artworks and technology plundered by his Space Pirates, including a sculpture called Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. Voyager's wardroom is decorated by a framed 2-D painting; a Chesley Bonestell pastiche of Voyager flying over the rings of Saturn, its silver hull reflected by the ice crystals beneath (a Mythology Gag on the Title Sequence). |
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Fictional Painting / int_1c34acd2 | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_1c34acd2 | featureConfidence |
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Rocketship Voyager (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_1c34acd2 | |
Fictional Painting / int_2221ecbd | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_2221ecbd | comment |
CSI: NY: One of the three cases in "Tri-Borough" centers around a fictional early-American painting called Immortality by fictional artist Jacques de Suis. At first it is thought to be a forgery, but turns out to be real in-universe. | |
Fictional Painting / int_2221ecbd | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_2221ecbd | featureConfidence |
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CSI: NY | hasFeature |
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Fictional Painting / int_24740992 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_24740992 | comment |
In the Black Emporium DLC, one of the codex entries found in the eponymous location talks about the "Velvet Cailans," a weird collection of portraits of King Cailan of Ferelden on black velvet canvas. It's an in-universe riff on the real-world phenomenon of portraits of Elvis Presley on black velvet. | |
Fictional Painting / int_24740992 | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_24740992 | featureConfidence |
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Elvis Presley (Music) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_24740992 | |
Fictional Painting / int_261c8d3f | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_261c8d3f | comment |
The Simpsons: In The War of Art, Homer and Marge purchase a painting from a yard sale which is appraised as a lost work by the (fictional) 20th century artist Johann Oldenveldt. It’s eventually revealed to merely be a forgery done in Oldenveldt’s style, but so convincing that it could have sold for $100,000 if the fraud was never uncovered. | |
Fictional Painting / int_261c8d3f | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_261c8d3f | featureConfidence |
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The Simpsons | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_261c8d3f | |
Fictional Painting / int_2e97446c | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_2e97446c | comment |
Ib is about the various artworks of a fictional artist named Guertena. | |
Fictional Painting / int_2e97446c | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_2e97446c | featureConfidence |
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Ib (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_2e97446c | |
Fictional Painting / int_2ea6ae26 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_2ea6ae26 | comment |
The Star Trek: Picard episode Penance features a painting of one General Jean-Luc Picard in Chateau Picard. | |
Fictional Painting / int_2ea6ae26 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_2ea6ae26 | featureConfidence |
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Star Trek: Picard | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_2ea6ae26 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3b6a0502 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_3b6a0502 | comment |
Kirby: Canvas Curse: The Big Bad Drawcia is revealed to be a painting brought to life, and turns back into a painting in the end. | |
Fictional Painting / int_3b6a0502 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3b6a0502 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Kirby: Canvas Curse (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_3b6a0502 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3bccdb5a | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_3bccdb5a | comment |
The Labours of Hercules: Hercule Poirot takes on twelve cases that correspond with the titular Labors from mythology. The ninth case, "The Girdle of Hippolyta," is about a fictional Rubens painting depicting the Amazon queen presenting her girdle to Hercules. The painting goes missing and Poirot must track it down while solving the apparently unrelated case of a schoolgirl who, after vanishing from a train she was riding with fellow students, turns up miles away with no recollection of what happened. | |
Fictional Painting / int_3bccdb5a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3bccdb5a | featureConfidence |
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The Labours of Hercules | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_3bccdb5a | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d10c6d1 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d10c6d1 | comment |
Animal Crackers: In both the Broadway show and the film, the entire plot revolves around a painting, "After the Hunt," by the fictional artist Beaugarde, and two student copies of it, one of them quite good, the other not. | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d10c6d1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d10c6d1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Animal Crackers (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_3d10c6d1 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d6b7986 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d6b7986 | comment |
Matilda: Small roles but symbolically important ones: When Miss Honey was a child a portrait of her father hung over the fireplace in her childhood home. When said home is taken over by her cruel aunt Agatha Trunchbull, the portrait is removed and replaced with one of the Trunchbull in her Olympic Prime. When Matilda uses her newfound powers to scare the living daylights out of the Trunchbull, she telekinetically throws the Olympic portrait into the fire and re-hangs the one of Mr. Honey (there's even a great cinematographic moment where camera rapid cuts between the portrait's eyes and the Trunchbull's eyes staring into each other). | |
Fictional Painting / int_3d6b7986 | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_3d6b7986 | featureConfidence |
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Matilda | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_3d6b7986 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3e5c6c5a | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_3e5c6c5a | comment |
Most of the paintings in the Princess Toadstool's castle in Super Mario 64 are entrances to worlds in Mushroom Kingdom, where Mario has to recover the stars and save the princess from Bowser. | |
Fictional Painting / int_3e5c6c5a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_3e5c6c5a | featureConfidence |
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Super Mario 64 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_3e5c6c5a | |
Fictional Painting / int_42bf5062 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_42bf5062 | comment |
Pickman's Model: Focuses on the paintings of Mad Artist Richard Pickman, who is ostracized by the art community for his violent scenes of hideous monsters. When he gives his friend Thurber (the narrator) a tour of his studio, Thurber is extremely unsettled by the level of realism in one particular painting, which depicts one of the monsters gnawing on a human corpse. He's even more unsettled to learn that the reference image he pocketed is a photograph of the model. | |
Fictional Painting / int_42bf5062 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_42bf5062 | featureConfidence |
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Pickman's Model | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_42bf5062 | |
Fictional Painting / int_42ffb88e | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_42ffb88e | comment |
SCP Foundation SCP-151 ("The Painting"). SCP-151 is a painting of an underwater scene. Anyone who looks at it will slowly drown over the next 24 hours. SCP-800 ("An Eastern History"). SCP-800 is an East Asian paper scroll painting that alters its appearance to symbolically represent current armed conflicts in Asia. SCP-1074 ("Stendhal's Nightmare"). SCP-1074 is a painting called Stendhal's Nightmare that consists entirely of a grey background. Anyone looking at it suffers from Stendhal syndrome (increased heart rate, sweating, and vertigo). They will describe seeing a highly detailed painting, but each person will give a different description. SCP-1753 ("Vertigo"). SCP-1753 is a painting of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. It causes the viewer to perceive a drop of any height as being a 2,000-foot high cliff face. If the viewer jumps over the drop, they will impact the ground as if they had actually fallen 2,000 feet. SCP-1891 ("Constructeur"). SCP-1891 is a painting of a humanoid clothed in construction tools (wrenches, hammers, etc.). If any other painting is brought into the same structure as SCP-1891, the other painting will change into a depiction of large industrial machines. The humanoid will disappear from SCP-1891 and appear in the other painting, maintaining the machines. SCP-2071 ("Sir Michael Cavendish, in the Guise of the King of Serpents"). SCP-2071 is a painting of a snake man wearing an 18th-century British military uniform. Anyone touching the painting dies from snake venom created by their own body. All reptiles within 5 kilometers of the painting try to move toward it if possible. There are three other anomalous paintings by the same painter: The Rood and the Pit, The Hunting Party and Celia Penrose, in the Guise of a Fountain. |
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Fictional Painting / int_42ffb88e | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_42ffb88e | featureConfidence |
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SCP Foundation (Website) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_42ffb88e | |
Fictional Painting / int_4522fd1 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_4522fd1 | comment |
Whateley Universe: The painting of Lord Paramount in Whateley Academy's Homer Gallery, which all students are required to see, annually. It also has an enchantment to hide his presence to those who've seen the picture. The painting of Lady Jettatura in the Green Witch's lair, flipped so it's facing away from the room, enchanted so Lady Jettatura cannot scry into her lair. |
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Fictional Painting / int_4522fd1 | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_4522fd1 | featureConfidence |
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Whateley Universe | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_4522fd1 | |
Fictional Painting / int_468bebb0 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_468bebb0 | comment |
Discworld: Featured in several books, Leonard of Quirm's "Woman Holding Ferret" is the Disc's equivalent of the "Lady with an Ermine", and "Mona Ogg", which is obviously the Disc's equivalent of the "Mona Lisa" (which portrays a young Nanny Ogg). The most plot-significant one is "The Battle of Koom Valley" by Methodica Rascal, which plays a significant role in Thud! | |
Fictional Painting / int_468bebb0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_468bebb0 | featureConfidence |
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Discworld | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_468bebb0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_4c0debc2 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_4c0debc2 | comment |
One of Hotel Dusk: Room 215's big mysteries revolves around the missing painting of the artist Osterzone called "Angel Opening a Door". | |
Fictional Painting / int_4c0debc2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_4c0debc2 | featureConfidence |
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Hotel Dusk: Room 215 (Visual Novel) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_4c0debc2 | |
Fictional Painting / int_50a97b8c | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_50a97b8c | comment |
Light Verse: Light-sculptures, a form of Hologram art, are generated by light-consoles. Despite being a popular medium of artistic expression, Mrs Lardner is widely celebrated as one of the best artists and her art is the biggest draw to her parties. | |
Fictional Painting / int_50a97b8c | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_50a97b8c | featureConfidence |
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Light Verse | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_50a97b8c | |
Fictional Painting / int_542776ac | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_542776ac | comment |
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader: Loose example. The painting in question has no long-term effect on the plot, but it is the portal that the characters travel through to reach the world of Narnia, thus setting the entire plot in motion. | |
Fictional Painting / int_542776ac | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_542776ac | featureConfidence |
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The Voyage of the Dawn Treader | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_542776ac | |
Fictional Painting / int_55fcb799 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_55fcb799 | comment |
The Grand Budapest Hotel: Has the Boy with Apple, which becomes central to the plot once it's mentioned in a will. | |
Fictional Painting / int_55fcb799 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_55fcb799 | featureConfidence |
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The Grand Budapest Hotel | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_55fcb799 | |
Fictional Painting / int_56ba784f | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_56ba784f | comment |
Candyman: Daniel Robitaille was a portrait artist in life; his paintings are central to the plot of the third film. | |
Fictional Painting / int_56ba784f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Fictional Painting / int_56ba784f | featureConfidence |
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Candyman | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_56ba784f | |
Fictional Painting / int_57e3ab58 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_57e3ab58 | comment |
In The Dick Van Dyke Show episode "October Eve," a painter does a portrait of Laura. While the painting is never shown to the camera, we can infer from their reactions that Laura is depicted as mostly or entirely naked, to her shame and Rob's embarrassment. | |
Fictional Painting / int_57e3ab58 | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_57e3ab58 | featureConfidence |
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The Dick Van Dyke Show | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_57e3ab58 | |
Fictional Painting / int_5921531c | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_5921531c | comment |
Persona 5 has the 'Sayuri', a painting of a young woman looking down and smiling, which delighted the art world in its mystery - who is that woman and why is she smiling? The painting was produced by Yusuke's mother as a self-portrait, and the original version showed her holding the baby Yusuke in her arms. When Madarame took advantage of her death and took Yusuke on as a protégé, he painted over her arms so that the baby was no longer visible on the correct prediction that the ambiguity of the image would make it more appealing (and profitable). | |
Fictional Painting / int_5921531c | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_5921531c | featureConfidence |
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Persona 5 (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_5921531c | |
Fictional Painting / int_5a02178d | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_5a02178d | comment |
Duma Key: The main character is an artist, who describes several nonexistent paintings. Many of them sound beautiful, or at least intriguing in their surrealism and spookiness, until you realize what the paintings do... King's short story "The Road Virus Heads North" is about a man who purchases the titular painting, which depicts a sharp-toothed man sitting in a truck, from a yard sale. The woman who sells it to him mentions that it used to belong to her uncle, who recently died under mysterious—and violent—circumstances. As is par for the course with King, the buyer realizes that the painting is transforming as time goes by: specifically, the backdrop is changing as if the truck is actually driving. When the man sees that the background is the yard sale, now utterly destroyed with the woman's bloody corpse nearby, he turns on the news and discovers that the real yard sale suffered the same fate. The story ends with the buyer looking at the painting one final time: the truck is empty, with fresh bloodstains on the seat, and his own house is the backdrop... |
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Fictional Painting / int_5a02178d | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_5a02178d | featureConfidence |
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Duma Key | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_5a02178d | |
Fictional Painting / int_5d3b510f | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_5d3b510f | comment |
In Black Lagoon, the crew is hired to retrieve a fictional Nazi War Propaganda painting that went down with a U-boat after the fall of the Third Reich off the coast of Thailand. Of course, Neo-Nazis are also after it. | |
Fictional Painting / int_5d3b510f | featureApplicability |
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Fictional Painting / int_5d3b510f | featureConfidence |
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BlackLagoon | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_5d3b510f | |
Fictional Painting / int_6ac55ec7 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_6ac55ec7 | comment |
Dungeons & Dragons, D&D Expert adventure DA1 Adventures in Blackmoor. The Comeback Inn in Blackmoor has a number of paintings on its walls. One is called Blackmoor Hostel. It shows the Inn itself. Five paintings depict events in the life of King Uther Andahar of Blackmoor: Uther the Justifier, Uther at the Berne, Uther and the Thin Black Line, The Raising of the Royal Banner at Blackmoor and The King and His Companions. Pictures of three of the paintings (Blackmoor Hostel, Uther at the Berne and Uther and the Thin Black Line) are provided in the adventure for players to look at. | |
Fictional Painting / int_6ac55ec7 | featureApplicability |
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Dungeons & Dragons (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_6ac55ec7 | |
Fictional Painting / int_6f76d71a | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_6f76d71a | comment |
In the third and fourth installments of The Sims, the player's Sim can gain the Painting skill if they have an easel. More artistic Sims have an easier time painting. When a Sim is finished painting, they can hang it on their wall or sell it for money. Different styles of paintings, such as abstract art or portraits, are unlocked the higher their Painting level is. Emotional paintings can be made if the Sim feels sad, excited, or angry, among other feelings. | |
Fictional Painting / int_6f76d71a | featureApplicability |
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The Sims (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_6f76d71a | |
Fictional Painting / int_72e7d7f6 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_72e7d7f6 | comment |
Thrones, Dominations: In this Lord Peter Wimsey novel, the artist Chapparelle paints two portraits: The first is of Harriet, and its in-story purpose is to show her character and to let her see the second portrait in-progress. The second portrait is of Rosamund, and is destroyed by her murderer to hide the clue it portrays: a papier-mâché mask that the murderer used to fool a witness into thinking the victim was still alive — and thus provide the murderer with an alibi. | |
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Lord Peter Wimsey | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_72e7d7f6 | |
Fictional Painting / int_73b4d4c1 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_73b4d4c1 | comment |
Call of Cthulhu Campaign Shadows of Yog-Sothoth. Several rooms in the lodge hall of the Hermetic Order of the Silver Twilight have a number of murals with horrible images that can cause any viewer to lose SAN (sanity) points. The Asylum And Other Tales, adventure "Westchester House". The MacGuffin of the adventure is a $15,000 painting called "The Hunter". It depicts a man on horseback with two dogs at the horse's feet. The dogs are looking back over their shoulders at a primal forest. Some viewers say they can make out something in the forest looking out at the unsuspecting horseman. |
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Call of Cthulhu (Tabletop Game) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_73b4d4c1 | |
Fictional Painting / int_7460586f | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_7460586f | comment |
Archer: Gustavo Calderón has what appears to be a blank canvas prominently displayed in his mansion. Calderón explains that it's actually a colorful masterpiece that's been covered with layer after layer of white paint so no trace of the color shows through. Sterling and Malory Archer are stunned to learn that the piece is worth $40 million. | |
Fictional Painting / int_7460586f | featureApplicability |
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Archer | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_7460586f | |
Fictional Painting / int_7aaf9e41 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_7aaf9e41 | comment |
Batman: Bruce Wayne has a painting that's supposedly an early example of the Hudson River school despite not looking like anything from the group. Damian destroyed it in the pages of Robin (1993). | |
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Batman (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_7aaf9e41 | |
Fictional Painting / int_803072ec | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_803072ec | comment |
The Two Georges: The titular Thomas Gainsborough painting depicts a meeting between George Washington and King George III that led to a peaceful resolution of the issues between Great Britain and her American colonies. Two hundred years later, the territory that never became the United States is still under British dominion as part of the North American Union, and the painting is considered a powerful symbol of unity. Terrorist group the Sons of Liberty steal the painting, and the protagonist must recover it before it is destroyed. | |
Fictional Painting / int_803072ec | featureApplicability |
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The Two Georges | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_803072ec | |
Fictional Painting / int_81692f99 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_81692f99 | comment |
Star Trek Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Requiem for Methuselah". While in Flint's mansion, Spock discovers a number of da Vinci paintings that have never been catalogued. It later turns out that Flint is an immortal who was da Vinci and other famous men. He created the new works after leaving Earth. The Star Trek: Picard episode Penance features a painting of one General Jean-Luc Picard in Chateau Picard. |
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Star Trek (Franchise) | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_81692f99 | |
Fictional Painting / int_819b8c9e | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_819b8c9e | comment |
An episode of Warehouse 13 involves a Van Gogh painting called "Stormy Night", which has developed dangerous magical properties. Artie retrieves it and uses another artifact to make a perfect, non-magical copy. It's implied the Warehouse has done this for a lot of famous and non-famous pieces. | |
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Warehouse 13 | hasFeature |
Fictional Painting / int_819b8c9e | |
Fictional Painting / int_8c05f749 | type |
Fictional Painting | |
Fictional Painting / int_8c05f749 | comment |
Death in Paradise: "An Artistic Murder" centers around The Girl from the Mermaid, the final painting by Saint Marie's most famous artist. | |
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Fictional Painting | |
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The Emperor's Soul: "Lily of the Spring Pond" is a famous masterpiece, painted by the great artist Han ShuXen for a woman he loved, eventually donated by her children to the Imperial Gallery, and finally stolen by the protagonist Wan ShaiLu. She actually burned it at the request of ShuXen, who reviled the Rose Empire and could not bear to have his work displayed in the palace. | |
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Fictional Painting | |
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Known Space: The Kdatlyno are blind aliens who create artworks called "touch-sculptures". At the start of the short story At the Core, Beowulf Schaeffer is looking at a touch sculpture called FTLSPACE by a Kdatlyno named Hrodenu. It looks like a mishmash of a painting, a relief mural, and a sculpture. In the short story "Grendel", space pirates kidnap the famous Kdatlyno touch-sculptor Lloobee and Beowulf Schaeffer helps to rescue him. In thanks, Lloobee creates a set of touch-sculptures depicting Schaeffer and the pirates. |
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Fictional Painting | |
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Dungeon magazine Issue #13 adventure "Going Once...Going Twice". At an auction, one of the items is a painting called "The Seeker" by Michalardo L'Angelo. It's oil-on-wood, about 300 years old and measures two feet by three feet. The subject is a couple of adventurers wearing old-time clothes, holding a map and pointing at a far-away mountian. The minimum bid for the painting is 5,000 gold pieces. Issue #68 adventure "By Merklan's Magic". In the wizard Merklan's house are four paintings. "Thunder God" shows a bearded man standing in the clouds holding a thunderbolt; "King of Birds" has a giant eagle standing on a mountainside; an untitled work depicts a unicorn head with a golden horn, and "The Trap" is of five fairies caught by an Entangle spell. |
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Art of the Dead: Centres around a series of seven painting by Mad Artist Dorian Wilde. Known collectively as 'The Animals', each of the paintings depicts an animal representing one of the Seven Deadly Sins. The paintings are said to bring madness and misfortune to whoever possesses them. | |
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The Picture of Dorian Gray: The eponymous portrait is probably one of the most famous examples of a fictional work of art. The titular character obtains it as part of a Deal with the Devil to gain eternal life and youth, commenting that he wishes he could remain as beautiful and unchanging as his painted visage. True to form, Dorian remains completely physically unchanged—but the painting itself having becomes gradually more distorted and grotesque as time goes on, mirroring the real Dorian's own moral decay. The ending of the story reveals that the painting also functions as a Soul Jar—when Dorian stabs it in a fit of rage, he dies and instantly becomes the aged, monstrous version of himself from the work, while the painted Dorian goes back to its original form. | |
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Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Requiem for Methuselah". While in Flint's mansion, Spock discovers a number of da Vinci paintings that have never been catalogued. It later turns out that Flint is an immortal who was da Vinci and other famous men. He created the new works after leaving Earth. | |
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Fictional Painting | |
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Two Murder, She Wrote episodes set in the art world feature paintings that turn out to be clues to the murder: an untitled nude in "Simon Says 'Color Me Dead'" and "The Roommate" in "Portrait of Death". | |
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The plot of Layers of Fear is driven by the increasingly unstable painter protagonist's attempt to finish his last portrait which he believes will bring back his wife, who he Drove To Suicide with neglect. A few other paintings by him also make appearances, including Baby Face, a portrait of a child with hypertrichosis. Subverted in that most of the paintings, even the ones that the Artist painted, are real works of art painted by others (Baby Face, for example, is actually Portrait of Antonietta Gonzalez by Lavinia Fontana). | |
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Shadowrun supplement Tir Tairngire. Jenna Ni'Fairra is one of the members of the Council of Princes. She has an extremely old painting which depicts her with thorns growing out of her skin. This is a portrait of her when she was Alachia, the elven Queen of the Blood Wood in the Earthdawn setting. | |
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Ghostbusters II: Features a portrait of Vigo the Carpathian, a sixteenth-century tyrant from Moldavia. The painting becomes central to the plot when Vigo's spirit inhabits the painting and uses it to order museum worker Janosz to do its evil deeds. | |
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Far Rainbow: The painting "Wind", the Magnum Opus of a famous artist visiting the title planet, is the only inanimate object transported off the planet before it is devastated by the Wave. | |
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Minecraft lets you craft paintings to decorate your base with. While most of them are based on real paintings by Kristoffer Zetterstrand, one◊ is original to the game, depicting the construction process of the Wither. You can modify them or even create your own paintings if you access the game's texture files for the in-game paintings, and some mod or texture packs come with their own modified paintings. | |
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Doctor Who: In "The Pandorica Opens", Vincent van Gogh paints the TARDIS exploding, much to his distress. The painting first appeared in "Vincent and the Doctor". In the Milestone Celebration episode "The Day of the Doctor", the "Undergallery" of the National Gallery in London contains various secret paintings that are not on display to the public for various reasons, like a portrait of Queen Elizabeth I with the Tenth Doctor; a version of The Raft of the Medusa, except with Cybermen; and some 3D paintings made with Time Lord technology. |
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Doctor Who | hasFeature |
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The first episode of Night Gallery featured a segment about a rich man who owns a large painting of his property. After his Evil Nephew kills him for his money, details in the painting start changing to reflect the dead man's grave, and then him slowly rising from it and coming toward the door. The nephew panics and ends up accidentally killing himself, at which point the family butler gloats over his trick—he was the one secretly adding the new elements to the painting so he could steal the fortune. But the end of the episode shows the painting changing on its own, with the nephew now making his way toward the house, spelling a grisly end for the butler. | |
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In volume #7 of Meridian, Sephie describes a work of art kept on Cadador, the island her Uncle Ilahn rules: | |
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Meridian (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Fictional Painting | |
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Kirby: Kirby: Canvas Curse: The Big Bad Drawcia is revealed to be a painting brought to life, and turns back into a painting in the end. Kirby: Triple Deluxe introduces one of the bosses, Paintra, who used to be a normal painting until Taranza gives her life. Her Flavor Text mentions that she and another painting are described as "a pair of sisters separated at birth". |
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Dragon Age II has a couple of examples: If Bethany is the surviving sibling, there is a minor quest in Act 1 in which Hawke presents her with an old portrait of their mother Leandra, from long before any of them were born. The picture is not shown to the player, but Bethany is thrilled with how beautiful and happy their mother looks in the painting. In the Black Emporium DLC, one of the codex entries found in the eponymous location talks about the "Velvet Cailans," a weird collection of portraits of King Cailan of Ferelden on black velvet canvas. It's an in-universe riff on the real-world phenomenon of portraits of Elvis Presley on black velvet. |
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Midsomer Murders: In "The Black Book", the sale of a previously unknown painting by an 18th-century painter sends Barnaby into an investigation of murders as well as art forgery. The episode features an entire fictional catalog of paintings by this artist. | |
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Midsomer Murders | hasFeature |
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Unknown Armies has The Ascension of the Magdalene, a medieval scenario in which an eponymous painting of the ascension of a woman into the archetypical Invisible Clergy has reality-warping powers, paralleling the standard modern setting in which a videotape fills the same conceptual role. | |
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Fictional Painting | |
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Kirby: Triple Deluxe introduces one of the bosses, Paintra, who used to be a normal painting until Taranza gives her life. Her Flavor Text mentions that she and another painting are described as "a pair of sisters separated at birth". | |
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Kirby: Triple Deluxe (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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Artemis Fowl: The Opal Deception has "The Faerie Thief", which depicts an elf trying to snatch a human baby from its cradle. Legends say the painting was stolen soon after completion and has only ever changed ownership through theft; as a result, its existence is known only to a few of the world's most experienced art thieves, and ownership of it is considered a badge of honor and testament to one's skills as a criminal. | |
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Artemis Fowl | hasFeature |
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Fictional Painting | |
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In Hellsing, there is a passing mention of a fictional painting, Battle on the Mammon Plains, by Kaster, depicting the clashing front lines of two armies. | |
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Hellsing (Manga) | hasFeature |
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