Fear in the Age of Knowledge was a series of surrealist ink and watercolor illustrations I made between October 2018 and March 2019. It started as a response to the year’s Inktober prompts and evolved into an exploration of what it means to be afraid in an era of science, technology, and media.
Wyrmopleurodon
Suggested by my friend and Twitch mod Daedlogistics, this one is a combination of a Dune sandworm and a liopleurodon (who’s name I couldn’t have butchered harder in the handwritten description).
Fear in the Age of Knowledge, No. 15
Fear in the Age of Knowledge was a series of surrealist ink and watercolor illustrations I made between October 2018 and March 2019. It started as a response to the year’s Inktober prompts and evolved into an exploration of what it means to be afraid in an era of science, technology, and media.
Temples
When I was a kid, I hoped that I would grow temples of white hair like Reed Richards from the Fantastic Four as I aged. I got them — along with a widow’s peak as sharp as a letter opener.
My hair was always wispy, even at its thickest. I buzz it all now. I like the feeling better, not so tussled by the wind or tickling on the scalp. It’s less to manage, less to restyle after being matted down in a beanie during the New England winters.
I’m fortunate to have a nice, round head. It made me a shoe-in for the lead in You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown when I was in college.
I also buzz it because my hair only wants to fall to one side. The follicles grow like a crew without sea legs, leaning too far starboard and leaving the boat feeling lopsided.
But I miss the white temples, which are translucent with my hair this short. I’m sorry, Mr. Fantastic.
I wonder if I was in a rush for white temples because the people around me seemed to need me to be old more than they needed to be young.
I felt like people needed me to be a Reed Richards. Not just smart but genius. Not just flexible but elastic. Not just durable but indestructible.
When I look in the mirror, I see a shorn head, and I think, ah, there he is. Not Reed Richards.
Me.
New Year’s Crab
Happy New Year! Just like everything turns into a crab eventually, I hope everything turns into opportunities and successes for you in 2024.