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An old she-wolf with a sky-blue mane named Ashina found the baby and nursed him, then the she-wolf gave birth to half-wolf, half-human cubs, from whom the Turkic people were born. Also in Turkic mythology it is believed that a gray wolf showed the Turks the way out of their legendary homeland Ergenekon , which allowed them to spread and conquer ...
Spiritualist art or spirit art or mediumistic art or psychic painting is a form of art, mainly painting, influenced by spiritualism. Spiritualism influenced art, having an influence on artistic consciousness, with spiritual art having a huge impact on what became modernism and therefore art today.
Look at Me (new Capitoline Wolf) by Paweł Wocial at the Kunstenfestival Watou 2011, curator: Jan Moeyaert. Look at Me (new Capitoline Wolf) is a 2011 art installation by Paweł Wocial. The installation is 210 centimetres (6 ft 11 in) tall and made of acrylic, polyester, fabric, jewelry, hair, plastic bottles and rubber teats.
A powerful wolf spirit that either takes a person's life or protects it, depending on the actions one takes in their life. Okiku The plate-counting ghost of a servant girl who met a tragic end. One of the three most famous onryō. Ōkubi The huge face of a woman which appears in the sky, either portending disaster or causing it. Ōkuninushi
Drawing by Gunnar Creutz. Odin and Fenris (1909) by Dorothy Hardy Fenrir ( Old Norse ' fen -dweller') [ 3 ] or Fenrisúlfr (Old Norse "Fenrir's wolf ", often translated "Fenris-wolf"), [ 4 ] also referred to as Hróðvitnir (Old Norse "fame-wolf") [ 5 ] and Vánagandr (Old Norse 'monster of the [River] Ván'), [ 6 ] is a monstrous wolf in Norse ...
In Egyptian art, Wepwawet was depicted as a black jackal, or as a man with the head of a jackal. In the temple of Seti I at Abydos, Wepwawet appears to have grey-colored fur, though this is likely due to loss of pigmentation, as elsewhere in the temple, black paint is almost entirely faded.
A Roggenwolf, a carnivorous spirit of the rye fields, with sheaves of harvested rye, on the coat of arms of the Bartensleben family . The Roggenwolf ("rye wolf"), Getreidewolf ("grain wolf") [1] or Kornwolf ("corn wolf") [6] is a field spirit shaped as a wolf. The Roggenwolf steals children and feeds on them. [7]
The wolf drawings were taken from a book illustrated by Yoshitoshi's teacher, Kuniyoshi. [59] Japanese wolf mounted in Ueno Zoo, Japan (Wakayama University possession) In the Shinto belief, the ōkami ("wolf") is regarded as a messenger of the kami spirits and also