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Pickman's Model

"Pickman's Model" is a short story by H. P. Lovecraft, written in September 1926 and first published in the October 1927 issue of Weird Tales.

"Pickman's Model"
by H. P. Lovecraft
Title page of "Pickman's Model" as it appeared in Weird Tales, October 1927. Illustration by Hugh Rankin.[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Horror short story
Published inWeird Tales
Publication typePeriodical
Media typePrint (magazine)
Publication dateOctober 1927
Full text
Pickman's Model at Wikisource

It has been adapted for television anthology series twice: in a 1971 episode of Night Gallery, starring Bradford Dillman, and in a 2022 episode of Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities, starring Crispin Glover and Ben Barnes.

Plot

 
Illustration by Lovecraft, 1934

The story revolves around a Bostonian painter named Richard Upton Pickman, who creates horrifying images. His works are brilliantly executed, yet are so graphic that they result in the revocation of his membership in the Boston Art Club and his ostracization from the city's artistic community. The narrator is a friend of Pickman, who, after the artist's mysterious disappearance, relates to another acquaintance how he was taken on a tour of Pickman's personal gallery, hidden away in a rundown backwater slum. As the two delved deeper into Pickman's mind and art, the rooms seemed to grow ever more evil and the paintings ever more horrific, ending with a final enormous painting of an unearthly, red-eyed, and vaguely canine humanoid balefully chewing on a human victim.

A noise sent Pickman running outside the room with a gun, while the narrator reached out to unfold what looked like a small piece of rolled paper attached to the monstrous painting. The narrator heard some shots, and Pickman walked back in with the smoking gun, telling a story of shooting some rats, and the two men departed. Afterwards, the narrator realized that he had nervously grabbed and put the rolled paper in his pocket when the shots were fired. He unrolled it, to reveal that it was a photograph not of the background of the painting, but of the subject. Pickman drew his inspirations not from a diseased imagination, but from monsters that were very much real.

Characters

Lovecraft scholar Robert M. Price writes, "Dream-Quest Of Unknown Kadath's Pickman surely bears little relationship to the character of the same name we met in 'Pickman's Model', though he is ostensibly the same person." He suggests that the portrayal of Pickman in Dream-Quest is influenced by the character of Tars Tarkas in Edgar Rice Burroughs' A Princess of Mars.[3]
  • Thurber: The narrator, who gets to know Pickman while working on "a monograph about weird art", describes himself as "fairly 'hard-boiled'", as well as "middle-aged and decently sophisticated". He is apparently a World War I veteran: "I guess you saw enough of me in France to know I'm not easily knocked out."
Given this description, An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia finds Thurber's horror at Pickman's paintings "implausible ... strained and hysterical".[4] Thurber is one of several Lovecraft characters to develop a phobia as a result of his horrific experiences;[2] his fear of subways and other underground spaces resembles that of the narrator of "The Lurking Fear", who "cannot see a well or a subway entrance without shuddering".
  • Eliot: The character that Thurber tells his story to, is effectively the story's audience surrogate. While none of his lines are printed, his questions and interjections are implied by Thurber's dialogue.

Setting

Like the Brooklyn neighborhood portrayed in Lovecraft's "The Horror at Red Hook", Boston's North End is depicted as a rundown section inhabited by immigrants and honeycombed by subterranean passageways. Pickman declares:

What do maps and records and guide-books really tell of the North End? Bah! At a guess I'll guarantee to lead you to thirty or forty alleys and networks of alleys north of Prince Street that aren't suspected by ten living beings outside of the foreigners that swarm them.

Prince Street, like Henchman Street, Charter Street, and Greenough Lane, are actual North End streets. Though the story is vague about the precise location of Pickman's studio, it was apparently inspired by an actual North End building. Lovecraft wrote that when he visited the neighborhood with Donald Wandrei, he found "the actual alley & house of the tale utterly demolished, a whole crooked line of buildings having been torn down".[5]

Inspiration

 
Hannes Bok's illustration for the printing of the story in the December 1951 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries

Pickman's aesthetic principles of horror resemble those in Lovecraft's essay "Supernatural Horror in Literature" (1925–1927), on which he was working at the time the short story was composed.[4] When Thurber, the story's narrator, notes that "only the real artist knows the actual anatomy of the terrible or the physiology of fear—the exact sort of lines and proportions that connect up with latent instincts or hereditary memories of fright, and the proper colour contrasts and lighting effects to stir the dormant sense of strangeness", he is echoing Lovecraft the literary critic on Poe, who "understood so perfectly the very mechanics and physiology of fear and strangeness".[6]

Thurber's description of Pickman as a "thorough, painstaking, and almost scientific realist" recalls Lovecraft's approach to horror in his post-Dunsanian phase.[4]

The story compares Pickman's work to that of a number of actual artists, including Henry Fuseli (1741–1825), Gustave Doré (1832–1883), Sidney Sime (1867–1941), Anthony Angarola (1893–1929), Francisco Goya (1746–1828), and Clark Ashton Smith (1893–1961).

Technique

The technique of the story is unusual for Lovecraft. The first-person narrative takes the form of a monologue directed at the reader in effect as a fictive listener, whose presumed interjections are implied via the narrator's responses to them. Tangential comments reveal that the conversation takes place in the narrator's Boston drawing room in the evening, where the two have just arrived via taxi. Pickman's narrative-within-the-narrative is also a monologue, directed in turn at the outer narrator as listener. Both narratives are colloquial, casual, and emotionally expressive, which is atypical of Lovecraft's protagonists and style.

Connections

Critical reaction

Fritz Leiber, in his essay "A Literary Copernicus", praised the story for the "supreme chill" of its final line.[8] Peter Cannon calls the tale "a well-nigh perfect example of Poe's unity of effect principle", though he cites as its "one weakness" the "contrived ending".[9] An H. P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia dismisses the story as "relatively conventional".[4]

Adaptations

  • In 1971, writer Roy Thomas and artist Tom Palmer adapted "Pickman's Model" for the Marvel Comics horror anthology Tower of Shadows (#9, Jan. 1971), reprinted in Marvel's Masters of Terror (#2, Sept. 1975).
  • In 1972, the television show Night Gallery adapted "Pickman's Model" as a segment. In the TV version, the character of the narrator in the short story becomes a woman (Louise Sorel) who has fallen in love with Pickman (Bradford Dillman).
  • In Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (Season 2, Episode 4) the short segment "Harvey" shows a possible future in which the character Harvey has a roommate who can see otherworldly creatures through a portal in his closet, the visages of which he replicates through paintings and sells for a tidy profit. Unfortunately, the interactions with the creatures come at a great price to his sanity, leading him to commit suicide by hanging.[10]
  • The story is adapted as an episode, directed by Keith Thomas and written by Lee Patterson, for Guillermo del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities.[11] Crispin Glover portrays Pickman and Ben Barnes plays Thurber. The plot is greatly expanded, using the events of the story as a jumping-off point for a broad Lovecraftian pastiche, including witches, cultists, and an implied apocalypse at the hands of a Great Old One, possibly Shub-Niggurath or Yog-Sothoth. Thurber and Pickman are depicted as old classmates at Miskatonic University, Thurber's family life is fleshed out with a wife and son, Pickman is shot by Thurber and eaten by his ghouls, and an exhibition of Pickman's paintings drives both Thurber's family and the Boston art intelligentsia to self-destructive madness.

Other media

  • R. U. Pickman is a prominent character in Lovecraftian: The Shipwright Circle by Steven Philip Jones. The Lovecraftian series reimagines the weird tales of H. P. Lovecraft into one single-universe modern epic.
  • In the 1994 Lovecraftian John Carpenter film In the Mouth of Madness, the Sam Neill and Julie Carmen characters stay at Pickman's Inn, whose innkeeper, Mrs. Pickman, is played by Frances Bay. ("Pickman's Motel" would have been nearly identical to the title of the Lovecraft story, but a motel would not be in keeping with the nature of the town of Hobb's End, New Hampshire, where the inn is located).
  • In Stephen King's novel It, an artist named Pickman takes part in the 1929 ambush of the Bradley Gang at the Derry city square.
  • In the 2015 video game Fallout 4, there is a man named Pickman who kills raiders, collects their heads, and uses their blood to make disturbing paintings, which are displayed in a building called "Pickman's Gallery", located in the North End of the video game's post-apocalyptic Boston.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Publication: Weird Tales, October 1927". ISFDB. Retrieved March 19, 2021.
  2. ^ a b Joshi and Cannon, p. 219.
  3. ^ Robert M. Price, "Randolph Carter, Warlord of Mars", Black Forbidden Things, pp. 66–67.
  4. ^ a b c d Joshi, S.T.; Schultz, David E. (2004). An H.P. Lovecraft Encyclopedia. Hippocampus Press. p. 205. ISBN 978-0974878911.
  5. ^ H. P. Lovecraft, letter to Lillian D. Clark, July 17, 1927; cited in Joshi and Schultz, p. 205. See also H. P. Lovecraft, Selected Letters Vol. IV pp. 385–386, cited in Joshi and Cannon, p. 218.
  6. ^ H. P. Lovecraft, "Supernatural Horror in Literature".
  7. ^ Joshi and Cannon, p. 237.
  8. ^ Lovecraft Remembered, p. 461; cited in Joshi and Cannon, p. 239.
  9. ^ Joshi and Cannon, p. 8.
  10. ^ "Chilling Adventures of Sabrina" Chapter Fifteen: Doctor Cerberus's House of Horror (TV Episode 2019) – IMDb, retrieved January 23, 2022
  11. ^ Rice, Lynette (August 15, 2022). "'Guillermo Del Toro's Cabinet of Curiosities' Gets Trailer and Premiere Date at Netflix". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 15, 2022.

Sources

  • Lovecraft, Howard P. (1984) [1927]. "Pickman's Model". In S. T. Joshi (ed.). The Dunwich Horror and Others (9th corrected printing ed.). Sauk City, WI: Arkham House. ISBN 0-87054-037-8. Definitive version.
  • Lovecraft, Howard P. (1999) [1927]. "Pickman's Model". In S. T. Joshi; Peter Cannon (eds.). More Annotated Lovecraft (1st ed.). New York: Dell. ISBN 0-440-50875-4. With explanatory footnotes.
  • Sederholm, Carl, "What Screams are Made Of: Representing Cosmic Fear in H.P. Lovecraft's "Pickman's Model"", Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, Vol. 16, No. 4 (64) (Winter 2006), pp. 335–349.

External links

pickman, model, short, story, lovecraft, written, september, 1926, first, published, october, 1927, issue, weird, tales, lovecrafttitle, page, appeared, weird, tales, october, 1927, illustration, hugh, rankin, countryunited, stateslanguageenglishgenre, horror,. Pickman s Model is a short story by H P Lovecraft written in September 1926 and first published in the October 1927 issue of Weird Tales Pickman s Model by H P LovecraftTitle page of Pickman s Model as it appeared in Weird Tales October 1927 Illustration by Hugh Rankin 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenre s Horror short storyPublished inWeird TalesPublication typePeriodicalMedia typePrint magazine Publication dateOctober 1927Full textPickman s Model at WikisourceIt has been adapted for television anthology series twice in a 1971 episode of Night Gallery starring Bradford Dillman and in a 2022 episode of Guillermo del Toro s Cabinet of Curiosities starring Crispin Glover and Ben Barnes Contents 1 Plot 2 Characters 3 Setting 4 Inspiration 5 Technique 6 Connections 7 Critical reaction 8 Adaptations 9 Other media 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksPlot Edit Illustration by Lovecraft 1934 The story revolves around a Bostonian painter named Richard Upton Pickman who creates horrifying images His works are brilliantly executed yet are so graphic that they result in the revocation of his membership in the Boston Art Club and his ostracization from the city s artistic community The narrator is a friend of Pickman who after the artist s mysterious disappearance relates to another acquaintance how he was taken on a tour of Pickman s personal gallery hidden away in a rundown backwater slum As the two delved deeper into Pickman s mind and art the rooms seemed to grow ever more evil and the paintings ever more horrific ending with a final enormous painting of an unearthly red eyed and vaguely canine humanoid balefully chewing on a human victim A noise sent Pickman running outside the room with a gun while the narrator reached out to unfold what looked like a small piece of rolled paper attached to the monstrous painting The narrator heard some shots and Pickman walked back in with the smoking gun telling a story of shooting some rats and the two men departed Afterwards the narrator realized that he had nervously grabbed and put the rolled paper in his pocket when the shots were fired He unrolled it to reveal that it was a photograph not of the background of the painting but of the subject Pickman drew his inspirations not from a diseased imagination but from monsters that were very much real Characters EditRichard Upton Pickman Pickman is depicted as a renowned Boston painter notorious for his ghoulish works His great great great great grandmother was hanged by Cotton Mather during the Salem witch trials of 1692 Pickman and Upton are in reality old Salem names 2 In 1926 Pickman vanished from his home a date only given in Lovecraft s History of the Necronomicon Pickman reappears as a ghoul in The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath 1926 and aids Randolph Carter in his journeys Lovecraft scholar Robert M Price writes Dream Quest Of Unknown Kadath s Pickman surely bears little relationship to the character of the same name we met in Pickman s Model though he is ostensibly the same person He suggests that the portrayal of Pickman in Dream Quest is influenced by the character of Tars Tarkas in Edgar Rice Burroughs A Princess of Mars 3 Thurber The narrator who gets to know Pickman while working on a monograph about weird art describes himself as fairly hard boiled as well as middle aged and decently sophisticated He is apparently a World War I veteran I guess you saw enough of me in France to know I m not easily knocked out Given this description An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia finds Thurber s horror at Pickman s paintings implausible strained and hysterical 4 Thurber is one of several Lovecraft characters to develop a phobia as a result of his horrific experiences 2 his fear of subways and other underground spaces resembles that of the narrator of The Lurking Fear who cannot see a well or a subway entrance without shuddering Eliot The character that Thurber tells his story to is effectively the story s audience surrogate While none of his lines are printed his questions and interjections are implied by Thurber s dialogue Setting EditLike the Brooklyn neighborhood portrayed in Lovecraft s The Horror at Red Hook Boston s North End is depicted as a rundown section inhabited by immigrants and honeycombed by subterranean passageways Pickman declares What do maps and records and guide books really tell of the North End Bah At a guess I ll guarantee to lead you to thirty or forty alleys and networks of alleys north of Prince Street that aren t suspected by ten living beings outside of the foreigners that swarm them Prince Street like Henchman Street Charter Street and Greenough Lane are actual North End streets Though the story is vague about the precise location of Pickman s studio it was apparently inspired by an actual North End building Lovecraft wrote that when he visited the neighborhood with Donald Wandrei he found the actual alley amp house of the tale utterly demolished a whole crooked line of buildings having been torn down 5 Inspiration Edit Hannes Bok s illustration for the printing of the story in the December 1951 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries Pickman s aesthetic principles of horror resemble those in Lovecraft s essay Supernatural Horror in Literature 1925 1927 on which he was working at the time the short story was composed 4 When Thurber the story s narrator notes that only the real artist knows the actual anatomy of the terrible or the physiology of fear the exact sort of lines and proportions that connect up with latent instincts or hereditary memories of fright and the proper colour contrasts and lighting effects to stir the dormant sense of strangeness he is echoing Lovecraft the literary critic on Poe who understood so perfectly the very mechanics and physiology of fear and strangeness 6 Thurber s description of Pickman as a thorough painstaking and almost scientific realist recalls Lovecraft s approach to horror in his post Dunsanian phase 4 The story compares Pickman s work to that of a number of actual artists including Henry Fuseli 1741 1825 Gustave Dore 1832 1883 Sidney Sime 1867 1941 Anthony Angarola 1893 1929 Francisco Goya 1746 1828 and Clark Ashton Smith 1893 1961 Technique EditThe technique of the story is unusual for Lovecraft The first person narrative takes the form of a monologue directed at the reader in effect as a fictive listener whose presumed interjections are implied via the narrator s responses to them Tangential comments reveal that the conversation takes place in the narrator s Boston drawing room in the evening where the two have just arrived via taxi Pickman s narrative within the narrative is also a monologue directed in turn at the outer narrator as listener Both narratives are colloquial casual and emotionally expressive which is atypical of Lovecraft s protagonists and style Connections EditThe motif of a character emptying all six bullets from a revolver also appears in the Lovecraft stories Herbert West Reanimator and The Thing on the Doorstep 7 Critical reaction EditFritz Leiber in his essay A Literary Copernicus praised the story for the supreme chill of its final line 8 Peter Cannon calls the tale a well nigh perfect example of Poe s unity of effect principle though he cites as its one weakness the contrived ending 9 An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia dismisses the story as relatively conventional 4 Adaptations EditIn 1971 writer Roy Thomas and artist Tom Palmer adapted Pickman s Model for the Marvel Comics horror anthology Tower of Shadows 9 Jan 1971 reprinted in Marvel s Masters of Terror 2 Sept 1975 In 1972 the television show Night Gallery adapted Pickman s Model as a segment In the TV version the character of the narrator in the short story becomes a woman Louise Sorel who has fallen in love with Pickman Bradford Dillman In Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Season 2 Episode 4 the short segment Harvey shows a possible future in which the character Harvey has a roommate who can see otherworldly creatures through a portal in his closet the visages of which he replicates through paintings and sells for a tidy profit Unfortunately the interactions with the creatures come at a great price to his sanity leading him to commit suicide by hanging 10 The story is adapted as an episode directed by Keith Thomas and written by Lee Patterson for Guillermo del Toro s Cabinet of Curiosities 11 Crispin Glover portrays Pickman and Ben Barnes plays Thurber The plot is greatly expanded using the events of the story as a jumping off point for a broad Lovecraftian pastiche including witches cultists and an implied apocalypse at the hands of a Great Old One possibly Shub Niggurath or Yog Sothoth Thurber and Pickman are depicted as old classmates at Miskatonic University Thurber s family life is fleshed out with a wife and son Pickman is shot by Thurber and eaten by his ghouls and an exhibition of Pickman s paintings drives both Thurber s family and the Boston art intelligentsia to self destructive madness Other media EditR U Pickman is a prominent character in Lovecraftian The Shipwright Circle by Steven Philip Jones The Lovecraftian series reimagines the weird tales of H P Lovecraft into one single universe modern epic In the 1994 Lovecraftian John Carpenter film In the Mouth of Madness the Sam Neill and Julie Carmen characters stay at Pickman s Inn whose innkeeper Mrs Pickman is played by Frances Bay Pickman s Motel would have been nearly identical to the title of the Lovecraft story but a motel would not be in keeping with the nature of the town of Hobb s End New Hampshire where the inn is located In Stephen King s novel It an artist named Pickman takes part in the 1929 ambush of the Bradley Gang at the Derry city square In the 2015 video game Fallout 4 there is a man named Pickman who kills raiders collects their heads and uses their blood to make disturbing paintings which are displayed in a building called Pickman s Gallery located in the North End of the video game s post apocalyptic Boston See also EditA Short Film About John Bolton a 2003 film by Neil Gaiman with a similar concept GhoulReferences Edit Publication Weird Tales October 1927 ISFDB Retrieved March 19 2021 a b Joshi and Cannon p 219 Robert M Price Randolph Carter Warlord of Mars Black Forbidden Things pp 66 67 a b c d Joshi S T Schultz David E 2004 An H P Lovecraft Encyclopedia Hippocampus Press p 205 ISBN 978 0974878911 H P Lovecraft letter to Lillian D Clark July 17 1927 cited in Joshi and Schultz p 205 See also H P Lovecraft Selected Letters Vol IV pp 385 386 cited in Joshi and Cannon p 218 H P Lovecraft Supernatural Horror in Literature Joshi and Cannon p 237 Lovecraft Remembered p 461 cited in Joshi and Cannon p 239 Joshi and Cannon p 8 Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Chapter Fifteen Doctor Cerberus s House of Horror TV Episode 2019 IMDb retrieved January 23 2022 Rice Lynette August 15 2022 Guillermo Del Toro s Cabinet of Curiosities Gets Trailer and Premiere Date at Netflix Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 15 2022 Sources EditLovecraft Howard P 1984 1927 Pickman s Model In S T Joshi ed The Dunwich Horror and Others 9th corrected printing ed Sauk City WI Arkham House ISBN 0 87054 037 8 Definitive version Lovecraft Howard P 1999 1927 Pickman s Model In S T Joshi Peter Cannon eds More Annotated Lovecraft 1st ed New York Dell ISBN 0 440 50875 4 With explanatory footnotes Sederholm Carl What Screams are Made Of Representing Cosmic Fear in H P Lovecraft s Pickman s Model Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts Vol 16 No 4 64 Winter 2006 pp 335 349 External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Pickman s Model Pickman s Model at Faded Page Canada Pickman s Model title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Full text at The H P Lovecraft Archive Pickman s Model public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pickman 27s Model amp oldid 1131869842, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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