LMAC #56: Halloween at Sleepy Hollow

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My collage for the fifty-sixth installment of @shaka's @LMAC contest is based on a classic horror story, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. The story was written by Washington Irving in 1819, and is rich in the culture of New England (USA)--especially the culture of the Hudson River Valley. Irving is the author of another well-known classic, Rip Van Winkle.

Rip Van Winkle Statue, Irvington, New York
Rip Van Winkle statue Irvington Daryl Samuel 3.0 near Tarrytown.jpg
Image credit: Daryl Samuel. Used under a CC 3.0 license. The statue, sculpted by Richard Masloski, is life-size and is in the center of Irvington, a town named after Washington Irving.

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When Irving penned The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, he was living in Europe. However, he had been born in New York City and eventually took up residence in the Hudson River community of Tarrytown.

Washington Irving's Headstone, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery
Washington Irving's_headstone_Sleepy_Hollow_Cemetery JamesPFisherIII 3.0.jpg
Image credit: James P. Fish III. CC 3.0 license

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The plot of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow: An ungainly schoolteacher, Ichabod Crane, hopes to marry the daughter of the town's wealthiest landowner. Ichabod has a sensitive temperament, and is superstitious.

One night, Ichabod attends a party where he hopes to finally seal the deal with the prosperous young lady. Unfortunately his hopes are dashed. Throughout the long night, revelers regale party goers with gruesome tales about local legends. One especially frightening story told of the headless horseman. The horseman, it was said, rode the dark lanes at night and stole the heads of hapless travelers.

The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane
Headless Horseman Ichabod_Crane john quidor 1858 public.jpg
Image credit: John Quidor, 1858. Google Art Project. Public domain.

Ichabod's journey home that night is filled with terror. He sees goblins and evil spirits all around. The ghost stories are alive for him. Then he spies a caped horseman. The horseman has no head! Ichabod flees, but the horseman pursues and tosses what appears to be a head. The object strikes Ichabod.

The next morning, Ichabod has disappeared. What townsfolk find is a smashed pumpkin on the bridge next to the town cemetery.

scarecrow.jpgWashington Irving and New England History

New England culture figures so prominently in Irving's story that it is almost another character. The Headless Horseman, for example, is rooted, possibly, in the life of a historic figure. During the American Revolution, a Hessian soldier was decapitated by a cannonball while he was fighting in the area.
Cotton Mather
Cotton_Mather Peter Pelham, artist public.jpg
Image credit" Peter Pelham. 1700. Public domain.

Irving refers several times to Cotton Mather. Mather had a hand in the prosecution and execution of 'witches' at the Salem Witch Trials. Mather authored a book, "History of New England Witchcraft", which is one of Ichabod's few possessions. Ichabod treasures this book, and is a "perfect master" of Mather's writing. As a matter of fact, Washington Irving writes, Ichabod believes in the book "most fervently and potently".

Twenty people were executed at the Salem Witch Trials. Nineteen of those who died were hanged. The twentieth was pressed to death with stones. He received this harsh sentence because he refused to plead innocent or guilty to the charge of sorcery.

Some who were charged with sorcery were not executed, but died in jail as they awaited trial.

Giles Corey Being Pressed to Death by Stones
salem pressed to death Giles_Corey_restored Published in Witchcraft Illustrated in 1892 public.jpg
Image credit: The oil drawing was published in Witchcraft Illustrated, 1892. The original artist "may be" Ridpath. Picture is in the public domain.

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My Collage

When I saw @shaka's template photo:
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I knew immediately that my theme would be The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.

Wow, @shaka, you are an amazing photographer.

As I thought about the collage I could envision the bridge (courtesy of Paint 3D), the background with a moon (Pixabay), and the Horseman (Pixabay.) In the Pixabay picture, the horseman was a statue. I had to take the cape off, and then his head. He also needed another foot, and a pumpkin (Pixabay.
shaka 56 horseman process.jpg

The ghoul hands came from Pixabay. I had to change the color and clean them up a bit. Then I had to paint over them repeatedly so they would change shape and look as though they were grasping (in a GIF).
shaka 56 ghoul hands process.jpg

Ichabod was hard. I can't draw, so I looked for a picture of someone who was running. This was the best I could do: (*Pixabay* )
shaka 56 running.jpg
I kept playing with this figure until I got Ichabod:
shaka 56 ichabod process.jpg
I gave him a hat and a scarf. Hat from Unsplash, scarf Pixabay.

The stream came from Pixabay:
shaka 56 process river.jpg

witch.jpg accent, from Pixabay

Finally, the floating scarecrow came from Pixabay.I put a little glint in the creature's eye.

I used Paint, Paint 3D, and GIMP to create the effects and the GIF.

I think that's everything. If the description is a little chaotic, that's because I made the collage once, started over and then kept reworking it. It's hard to trace the steps :)

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Thank you, @shaka, for the challenge and the entertainment. To everyone who reads this blog--join in. You don't need tio be an artist (look at me!). We have an LMAC school, taught by gracious @quantumg. There are prizes, and there is a welcoming, supportive community. Check out @shaka's blog to see the fun collages that have been submitted so far.

Thank you for reading my blog

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Hive on!

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