Saturday 31 January 2015

Effects of No Sunlight and Not Eating Enough

A Lack of Sunlight

Miss Havisham says to Pip, "You're not afraid of a woman who has never seen the sun since you were born?", which shows that she hasn't exposed herself to sunlight at all since Pip was born, and at the time she says this to him, he is around 10 years old. My portrayal of Miss Havisham is even later on than that, around 10 years later, meaning that Miss Havisham wouldn't have seen the sun in roughly 20 years! 

About 90 per cent of our vitamin D is produced when the sunlight hits out skin, so as you can imagine, Miss Havisham's vitamin D levels would have been very low. A lack of vitamin D can cause Osteomalacia, which is when the bones become soft. This causes severe bone pain and the muscles become weak. This would mean that you would get pain in your spine, legs or back and your muscles would feel weaker than usual. It is also thought that people with low vitamin D levels are more likely to become depressed, so this could be adding to Miss Havisham's down and panicky mood. A lack of vitamin D can interrupt your sleeping pattern, so it could cause insomnia, where you find it hard to get to sleep or to stay asleep for long enough. If Miss Havisham was getting a lack of sleep, this would result in her having dark bags, having a short temper and a lack of focus. A lack of sleep can also affect your mood, making you feel more down and depressed. The most obvious sign of not getting enough sun light on your skin is that your skin will look very pale and not glowy and healthy. 



https://thetruthbehindus.files.wordpress.
com/2012/09/20120907-160425.jpg

A Lack of Food

It is clear that Miss Havisham would have had to have eaton in the 20 years after her wedding day, otherwise she would probably not have survived as long as she did; however I don't think she would have eaten very much as Pip says he 'saw that the dress had been put upon the rounded figure of a young women, and that the figure upon which it now hung loose, had shrunk to skin and bone.' This gave me the impression that she was once a lot plumper and healthy and that she is not wasting away and doesn't fit the dress anymore. This suggests that she has stopped eating as much and is possibly only eating the minimum to stay alive. Pip also says that he 'began to understand that everything in the room had stopped, like the watch and the clock, a long time ago', which suggests to me that Miss Havisham doesn't want to do anything to change the situation she's in, like she doesn't want to eat or wash or get changed. Because of this, I decided to look into what would happen if someone stopped eating as much and the physical affects. 

One of the risks of malnutrition is heart attacks because the heart can stopped beating regularly or  it can start beating too quickly, resulting in the muscles becoming weak and thin. If someone if malnourished, their metabolic rate can slow down because the body is trying to reserve as much energy as possible. If you are not eating enough, you are probably not getting enough nutrients either, including folate, vitamin B-12 and iron; these all cause anaemia. The most common form of anaemia is iron deficiency anaemia; this is when there is a lack of iron in the body and therefore a lack of red blood cells to carry oxygen around the body. The main symptoms of this anaemia are a lack of energy and tiredness, shortness of breath, heart palpitations and a pale complexion. I think it would be highly likely that Miss Havisham would have have iron deficiency anaemia, so I will need to show the symptoms, like pale skin and tiredness, in my portrayal of her. A more obvious symptom of not eating enough would be that there will be a very low fat percentage in the body, so you will look very skinny and boney. This causes veins to show more clearly and bones and muscles to be more visible. I will show this in my Miss Havisham interpretation.


A Diagram showing more Symptoms of Anaemia.
http://www.medrevise.co.uk/images/thumb/b/b3/Sym
ptomsanaemia.jpg/300px-Symptomsanaemia.jpg

Resources:
http://www.arthritisresearchuk.org/arthritis-information/conditions/osteomalacia.aspx
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/05/28/vitamin-d-deficiency-signs-symptoms.aspx
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wjr40l6kPpE
http://www.nhs.uk/livewell/tiredness-and-fatigue/pages/lack-of-sleep-health-risks.aspx
http://www.livestrong.com/article/290452-side-effects-of-not-eating-enough-calories/
http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Anaemia-iron-deficiency-/Pages/Introduction.aspx

Friday 30 January 2015

Witches Inspiration

Here I am looking into modern witches because I want the 'witch-like' aspect of my Miss Havisham portrayal to translate to a modern audience. There are certain physical characteristics that people associate with witches and I think it would be really interesting and unique to incorporate some of these into my Miss Havisham design.

Snow White's Witch

Snow White's Witch, close-up
http://img4.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20140825001834/disn
ey/images/8/82/Snow-white-disneyscreencaps.com-7320.jpg
Snow White's Witch
http://goodfilmguide.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Snow-White-Queen.jpg
As soon as I think of a witch, this is what a witch looks like in my head. To me, there are specific characteristics that make an old woman a witch; the first being a very long, pointy nose with a bump in it. I also always imagine a witch to be very old and wrinkly, with a hunched back. I really like how they have made her eyes really stand out, with the whole circle of the eye ball showing and with the eye sockets being really dark and bruised looking. I also think that her toothless mouth is really effective in making her look scary and ill. However my favourite part of Snow White's witch would have to be the hands! They are so boney and worn away look, they look like hawks feet. I really like how long the fingers and nails are because they look really creepy and almost like spiders legs. I would love to include my model's hands in my Miss Havisham portrayal as I think they could add so much character to the look. 

Hawks feet
http://theiwrc.org/raptorID/redtail/rtha_fledge_feet2_062408.jpg

Wizard of Oz, Wicked Witch

Wizard Of Oz, Wicked Witch
http://img1.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb201206301
43955/villains/images/8/8f/Wicked_witch.jpg
This is another typical witch look, with the long and pointed nose and pointed chin. I like that this witch is green because I think many children associate this with being a witch. I think it would be fun to experiment with maybe adding a hint of green to my Miss Havisham portrayal to show the inner witch inside her and to emphasise the fact that Pip sees her as a witch at some points. This could be a really interesting twist on my interpretation.

If You Didn't Wash for 15 - 20 Years..

Skin and Hair

I did some research into what would have if you didn't wash for 15 to 20 years, but I found it difficult, because obviously no had ever not washed for exactly that amount of time. However, below, is a link an article from the DailyMail where a girl goes 6 months without washing and I found it interesting to hear what she thought.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-422837/Six-hairific-months-shampoo.html

I also found this YouTube video talking about 'the dirtiest man in the world' who claims to have not washed for 60 years! When you look at him you can clearly see the dirt and dust that has built up on his face, however the only part of him that is clear from dirt is under his eyes, this gives me the impression he has been crying. His beard looks thick with dirt and it looks very matted, almost in dread locks. His teeth look very painful, as they look like they have rotted away in places and they look very infected and dirty. The skin on his hands reminds me of an elephants skin, because it looks so thick and leathery. His nails also look very thick and strong, but completely discoloured with dirt and grime. I am very aware that Miss Havisham would not have looked anywhere near as bad as this, because she didn't go outside in the dirt and because she didn't not wash for as long as him, but I still found it interesting to see what would happen if someone didn't wash for this long, as I can use some of the aspects of his look in my portrayal.


Dirtiest Man in the World's Hands.
http://i.imgur.com/o99zYEW.jpg
I found an image of a doll that had dirty, matted hair. This is how I would imagine Miss Havisham's hair to look like, but obviously Miss Havisham's would be grey. My interpretation is that she did her hair perfectly in a Victorian style, but has left it ever since her wedding day. This would mean that a lot of dirt, dust and grime would have accumulated, making it look very thick and heavy, just like the image below. I don't think she would have brushed her hair at all either, making it look very matted and frizzy. 

http://s2.hubimg.com/u/7719589_f520.jpg


Teeth

The two most likely and biggest problems Miss Havisham would have been experiencing with her teeth, are gum disease and tooth decay.

Gum disease is when the gums become swollen, sore or infected. It can cause your gums to bleed when you brush your teeth and it can cause bad breath. If gum disease is not treated for a long time, the bone in your jaw can decay, which may result in your teeth falling out. You get gum disease when there is a build up of plague on your teeth which is formed when you eat or drink. Brushing your teeth helps prevent this, however I don't think MissHavisham would have brushed her teeth and therefore I think gum disease would have been a big problem for her. I would love to portray this in my interpretation as I think it would add more character and make her look more unwell and decaying.

An Example of Gum Disease
http://www.kmperio.co.uk/editor/assets/1720DF7D-1209-420D-963F-06F9BBEB658C.JPG

Tooth decay, also known as dental decay or dental caries, is when the acids in your mouth dissolves the outer layers of your teeth. Tooth decay isn't obvious at first, however as it develops you can get toothache and your teeth become a lot more sensitive. Grey, brown or black spots may start to form on your teeth and you may experience bad breath and a horrible taste in your mouth. If tooth decay is not treated then you may develop cavities, which are holes in your teeth, gum disease and dental abscesses, which is when pus forms at the end of your teeth or at the gums.

A Diagram showing Tooth Decay.
http://img.webmd.com/dtmcms/live/webmd/consumer_as
sets/site_images/media/medical/hw/h9991833_002.jpg
An Example of very Advanced Tooth Decay.
http://www.toothandteeth.com/meth-teeth--teeth-with-advanced-tooth-decay.jpg




Resources:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2335003/Seven-MILLION-Britons-dont-brush-teeth-regularly--going-DAYS-pick-toothbrush.html
http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/gum-disease/Pages/Introduction.aspx
http://www.nhs.uk/Conditions/Dental-decay/Pages/Introduction.aspx

Miss Havisham Moodboard


Thursday 29 January 2015

Miss Havisham: Initial Analysing of Quotes

I want to come up with a portrayal of Miss Havisham for film that is as close to the book and as realistic as possible. Here I will look at quotations from the Charles Dickens book and try and develop my ideas about Miss Havisham. I think it is important to look at what the book says about Miss Havisham before creating any of my own ideas so that I don't stray too much away from the original character Dickens tried to create.

Styling

'She was dressed in rich materials - satins, lace, and silks - all of white.' Miss Havisham was very well off so she would have been able to afford a grand and expensive dress and would have been able to afford these materials. 'Rich materials' makes me think that the clothing was made of great quality and that at the time of her wedding, the dress was beautifully fitted and brand new. Miss Havisham would have got married in the late Georgian era, towards the early Victorian era, and in both these eras, synched in corsets and big skirts were very popular so I think her wedding dress would have taken this shape. It says they were 'all of white' which shows that they would have been perfectly white on the say of the wedding.

'She had a long white veil dependant from her hair, and she had bridal flowers in her hair, but her hair was white'. This shows that she was wearing a veil that was secured in her hair and when I looked up Victorian veils, they were almost always full length and touching the floor. In my final image you will not be able to see the length of the veil or all of the wedding dress, however I still wanted to look into this as it gives me a better idea of what she would be wearing and her overall look. I am thinking of incorporating a veil and the top of a wedding dress in my final look as I think it would real add to the final image. The 'bridal flowers' in her hair would have died in her hair and shrivelled up so I would need to make sure the flowers looked dead and off colour.

Example of a Victorian wedding dress and veil that
Miss Havisham could have worn.

http://www.confetti.co.uk/blog/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/VictorianDress.jpg
It says that 'some bright jewels sparkled on her neck and on her hands' so if I want to incorporate this into my look, I would have to do some research into the type of jewels that a well off woman would have worn in the early Victorian era. 

In the book Pip notices that 'she had not quite finished dressing .. her veil was but half arranged'. This made me think that I could expand on this and make it so that other aspects of her look were not finished, like her hair or her makeup. For my final image, I will make it look like the veil was half way through being arranged but not finished, to keep accurate with the book. If I did want to develop the idea of Miss Havisham not being completely ready, then I would have to think about the aspects of the look that could not yet have been finished and add these to the look. 

'I saw that everything within my view which ought to be white, had been white long ago, and had lost its lustre, and was faded and yellow.' This shows that it must have been a very long time since her wedding day because everything that was once perfectly white has lost its colour. I will have to look into a way of making her wedding dress and veil look very old and slightly yellow to make this look realistic. I could do this by dying the dress and staining it to make it look old and dirty. 

Health/Appearance

Pip describes Miss Havisham as being ' the strangest lady I have ever seen, or shall ever see'. This makes me think that there must be something different or uncanny about her, and that she looks different to anyone else that Pip has ever seen. This could be shown through a burn on her face or scarring or rashes, anything that would make her stand out from a crowd.

'I saw that the bride within the bridal dress had withered like the dress, and like the flowers, and had no brightness left but that brightness of her sunken eyes. I saw that the dress had been put upon the rounded figure of a young women, and that the figure upon which it now hung loose, had shrunk to skin and bone.' When it says the bride had 'withered' it makes me think that she has lost weight and lost muscle and that she is getting a lot older. I looked up the definition of withered and it said it meant "to fall into a decay" which makes me think she is giving up on looking away herself and she is getting ill and tired. It says that she has 'sunken eyes' and that the dress now 'hung loose' which suggests that she used to be a fuller and healthier young girl but has now lost a lot of weight so that her dress doesn't fit anymore. In a lot of the Miss Havisham portrayals her dress fits her, whereas here it shows that the dress should be hanging off her and loose because it was supposed to fit her when she was plumper than she is now. 

Miss Havisham tells Pip that she has 'never seen the sun since you were born' and at that point in the book, he was about 10 or 11. There are many effects of not seeing the sun that I could touch on and show through my portrayal of her. If you don't see the sun in years then your body will have a lack of vitamin D. You need vitamin D to help absorb calcium from your diet which gives you healthy bones and so a lack of sun light, and therefore a lack of vitamin D, can cause weak and soft bones, called osteomalacia. Osteomalacia causes severe bone pain and muscle weakness and this could be reflected in her movement. A lack of sunlight would also obviously mean that she had very pale skin and this would make sense as Pip describes her as 'ghostly'. 


Pip describes her as 'a skeleton in the ashes of a rich dress' which puts the image in my head of a skeleton wearing a ripped up and eroded wedding dress. This again made me think that Miss Havisham had lost a lot of weight and was now very skinny. Describing her as a skeleton, makes me think that she has very hollowed out cheek bones and that a lot of her body is very sunken in and fragile looking. The word skeleton also gives me the impression that she has stopped eating or is just eating the minimum amount necessary to survive. I could really expand on this aspect of her look by looking into affects of not eating and anorexia. Pip says that he has 'never' seen Miss Havisham eat or drink, which also gives me another indication that Miss Havisham has stopped eating all together. 

Pip describes Miss Havisham's wedding dress as 'grave-clothes' and says he has never seen a 'veil so like a shroud'. This is another reference to her looking dead and skeleton like. This gives the impression that the veil looks heavy with dust and grime because shrouds are more heavy looking than the traditional lace veil. Pip also describes her as 'corpse-like' which is another reference to her looking like a dead body or skeleton. Pip says that 'the drillings and trimmings on her bridal dress' looked like 'earthy paper' which suggests the ends are fraying and looking really uneven and ripped. This also made me think of the material that is used to wrap up a mummy. I could go into further detail with this mummy aspect of her look to give a unique twist on my portrayal of Miss Havisham. 

Pip says 'she had a crutch-headed stick on which she leaned, and she looked like the Witch of the place.' I could include an old and dusty looking stick in my portrayal to add a witch-like feel to her look. I could do further research into witches and how they were portrayed in the Victorian era and incorporate that into her look. However I think I either need to focus more on my portrayal of Miss Havisham having a skeleton/mummy look or more of a witch look because I think if I do both, the message could get lost and look messy. 

There are many quotations in the book that suggest that Miss Havisham is very skinny and unhealthy such as 'She was not physically strong', "I am yellow skin and bone", "It and I have worn away together", 'her withered arms', 'thin arm'. All of these show how weak and skinny she has become. Her 'yellow skin' suggests she is very ill and run down. If her skin is very yellow this could also suggest that she had Jaundice which is when your skin and the whites of your eyes turn a yellow colour because of a build up of bilirubin in the blood and body tissue. The fact that she is so skinny, again has a reference to skeletons and how she could look skeletal in my portrayal. 

Age

In the Victorian era, people aged a lot more quickly than people do today. There was not as much medicine or knowledge about growing old and diseases, and even though anaesthesia and antiseptic was discovered around this time, people still didn't know how to treat or recognise certain illnesses. Women in the Victorian era were expected to get married at a younger age than today, the average age being around 21 years. Miss Havisham describes herself as a 'spinster' which means that she is an unmarried woman, that is past the usual age of getting married at that time. In the Victorian era that was not very old at all, however in today's society the average age of a woman to get married is 30. I want my portrayal of Miss Havisham to be when Pip has grown up and come back from London, just before Miss Havisham goes up in flames. I think that Miss Havisham would have planned to get married at around 21, as this was the average age at the time. From the day she got married, Miss Havisham has kept everything exactly the same, so I think this is when she stopped going out ingot he sun light. She says to Pip that she hasn't seen the sunlight since he was born, and at the time she said that, Pip was around 10 years old; this would make Miss Havisham about 31. After Pip has grown up and come back from London to visit her, I think that about 10 years had gone by, which would make her around 41, and this was very old in the Victorian era. The average age that that people died in the Victorian era was 25 to 30 in cities and around 41 years in more rural areas. This would have meant that Miss Havisham was near or past the average age of death and so would have looked very old and frail at this point. I have decided to use a model that represents 'old' more in today's society so that it translates well for a modern audience, as if I used a 41 year old, I don't think they would fit the decryption written by Charles Dickens. 

Miss Havisham was described to have 'old restless fingers' and a 'tremulous right hand' which could suggest that she has an essential tremor, where your a certain part of your body shakes uncontrollably. However the fact that her hand is 'tremulous' could also be a sign that she is very nervous and uneasy. Pip describes her hair as looking 'gray' and 'white' which suggests that she is old enough for this to have happened naturally. People's hair turns grey at all different ages, some people's hair turns grey in their 20s, whilst others don't start to see grey until they're in their 50s, however when I think of grey hair, I automatically think of an old person. I found quotes, that I have spoken about previously, that suggest Miss Havisham looks like a skeleton or a witch and, again, both of these things give me the impression that she would look old and frail. Pip describes Miss Havisham's face as looking 'haggard' which makes me think that she looks exhausted and unwell, but also in today's society people use the word hag to describe an old person, which again makes me think that she would have looked old. Pip also describes her face as looking 'worn', which makes me think it looks very tired and gaunt, and says her hands are 'wasting' which makes me think of very boney and veiny hands. Pip says she has an 'old ghastly bridal appearance'. The word 'ghastly' makes me think of being shocked and scared and horrified, which are all words that could be used to describe Pip's feeling when he first sees her. Then of course the word 'old' emphasises that Miss Havisham should look like she has been living for a very long time. 

Paused Time

Pip said that he 'began to understand that everything in the room had stopped, like the watch and the clock, a long time ago. I noticed that Miss Havisham put down the jewel exactly on the spot from which she had taken it up.' Ever since Miss Havisham's wedding day, she has kept everything exactly the same, so she has kept everything in its place and has stopped all the clocks round the house; this is an interesting concept to think about. This gives me the impression that however she looked on her wedding day, is how she left herself looking for the rest of her life. This would mean that she hadn't washed or changed out of her wedding dress in about 15 to 20 years! I thought of what would happen if I didn't wash for that many years and it's quite a scary thought! I think that my hair would get very greasy and dirty and smelly and also, because I don't think she would have brushed it in all those years, her hair would also be very matted and close to forming dreadlocks. I think her body would also be very smelly and dirty looking. I think it would be more noticeable on her hands because dirt would form around, and under, her nails and she would be touching dusty and grimy things so her hands would be full of bacteria and dirt. I think her hands would also be very dry and flakey and sore if she didn't wash them for that long. 

Resources: 
http://www.nhs.uk/livewell/summerhealth/pages/vitamin-d-sunlight.aspx
http://www.webmd.boots.com/a-to-z-guides/jaundice
http://www.schoolsliaison.org.uk/kids/aston/changingtimes/victorian/medicine.htm
http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/Tremor-(essential)/Pages/Introduction.aspx
http://www.angelpig.net/victorian/engagement.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/8415852/Average-age-for-women-to-marry-hits-30-for-first-time.html

Wednesday 28 January 2015

Gothic Horror and Great Expectations

-How is the Gothic depicted in Great Expectations?
Great Expectations is not a Gothic Horror; however it has many elements of Gothic in it. Below I have listed common elements of Gothic horrors and I have explained how these elements are portrayed in the film and book.

1. Strange places - Satis house was 'of old brick, and dismal, and has a great many iron bars to it. Some of the windows had been walled up; of those that remained, all the lower were rustily barred.' This makes it sounds like a prison, as if she is trying to lock someone/something in, or as if she is trying to lock everyone else out. The fact that it was barred up and boarded up gives the impression that the house has been abandoned, which may have been the impression Miss Havisham wanted to give so that no-one would visit or intrude. Pip says that he finds the house 'so strange, and so fine - and melancholy', which shows that Pip can sense the former glory and grandness, but also the current ruin and depressing atmosphere. Miss Havisham never let any fresh air into the house which would have meant the air would be very heavy, thick, damp and still, which added to the gloomy and dead feel of the house.

Another 'strange place' in Great Expectations was the church yard where Pip's family grave was. It says it was 'overgrown with nettles', which gives the impression that no-one is looking after it or that no-one visits it anymore, suggesting it may have been abandoned. The marshes surrounding the church were described as a 'dark flat wildness', which suggests it was either at night time or that the weather was 'dark' and grey; this adds pathetic fallacy because the melancholy mood of the scene is reflected in the dark and gloomy weather. The sea is described as a 'distant savage lair'. The fact that the sea was described as savage, suggests it was violent, wild and uncontrolled and that it has an animalistic nature. The sea is also described as a lair which suggests that an animal or person is hiding in there; this could be foreshadowing the escape of the fugitives from the sea.

2. Clashing time periods - Ever since Miss Havisham's wedding day, time in her house has stopped and it's clear Pip has noticed this when he says that he 'began to understand that everything in the room had stopped ... a long time ago'. This is a clashing time period with everything else outside her house, as time was still moving at a normal speed. Time is obviously still moving in Miss Havisham's house, because of the rotting cake and decaying of her and her house, but everything that she does and everything else surrounding her has been left in exactly the same place as it was on her wedding day.

3. Power and constraint - Many people have power over Pip at different times in the book. Pip's sister, Mrs Gargery, is a strict mother figure to Pip in the beginning as she tries to control what he can and cannot do. Magwich is another person that has power over Pip, from the beginning, where he threatens to 'cut your throat' to Pip, and also because he is Pip's benefactor, meaning he had power over changing Pip's life and constraint because without Magwich's money, Pip wouldn't be where he was anymore. Miss Havisham is another almost mother figure to Pip because she teaches him how to be more of a gentleman and she has taught and manipulated Estella to have control and power over Pip's heart; she also has power over Pip as he believes she is his benefactor.

4. Terror versus horror - Terror is when you anticipate something bad is about to happen and horror is the scared or shocked feeling you get after the incident has happened. At the very beginning of the book a scary and gloomy setting and atmosphere is created in the church yard and its surroundings which suggests all is not well, so this is the terrifying aspect of the scene and then when the fugitive suddenly jumps out at Pip, shouting 'Hold your noise!', this is when the horror sets in. There are other examples of this in the book, such as when Pip first meets Miss Havisham and when Miss Havisham goes up in flames.

5. Sexual power - Estella holds a lot of sexual power over Pip as even though she is horrible to him and humiliates him, he still wants her approval and love. The first thing that attracts Pip to Estella is her beauty and also her social superiority. After meeting Estella, all that Pip does is to impress her and win her over.

6. The uncanny - As soon as I think of strange or mysterious, I think of Miss Havisham. Pip describes her as 'the strangest lady I have ever seen, or shall ever see'. She is unlike any character I have ever come across. She has completely isolated herself from normality.

-How is the grotesque depicted in Great Expectations?
A repulsive, disgusting person in literature would generally be described as a villain, but if the reader also has empathy for the villain, this is termed as ‘grotesque’.  The term can also describe a style of writing where life is exaggerated and a fantasy, but, unlike in a fairytale, has dark overtones. 
In Great Expectations both Magwitch and Miss Havisham stand out as grotesque characters. Both are described from a child’s perspective (the young Pip’s) when they are first introduced, and with the terror they instilled in that child.
Magwitch is introduced in the first chapter when he suddenly appears in the graveyard.  He is in great contrast to the serenity of the first few paragraphs as he yells at Pip “Hold your noise! …… or I’ll cut your throat”. But he is also described as a pathetic character ‘A man who had been soaked in water, and smothered in mud, and lamed by stones, and cut by flints, and stung by nettles’ and who ‘glared and growled’ like an animal - the grotesque often mixes characteristics of animals with humans. Magwitch later refers to himself in animal terms as he comments ‘I wish I was a frog. Or an eel!’
Similarly Miss Havisham is introduced to the writer as described by the young Pip in quite frightening terms when he first sees ‘the strangest lady I have ever seen, or shall ever see.’ His description is full of white, but ‘everything which ought to be white, had been white long ago, and had lost its lustre, and was faded and yellow’ and ‘the figure upon which it now hung loose, had shrunk to skin and bone'. He ends the description with ‘Now waxwork and skeleton seemed to have dark eyes that moved and looked at me. I should have cried out, if I could.’ To him she almost looks like a skeleton. But she also is a pathetic figure, in that she has shut herself off from the world after being jilted on her wedding day.
The grotesque in literature can also mix up the lines between life and death and this is again particularly evident in the first chapter when Magwitch is introduced. Pip describes him as he ‘started up from among the graves’ and later as he seems to be ‘eluding the hands of the dead people’, suggesting that Magwitch is somehow mixed up with the dead bodies in the churchyard.

-What are specific elements of the uncanny?
‘The German word "unheimlich" is considered untranslatable; our rough English equivalent, "uncanny", is itself difficult to define. This indescribable quality is actually an integral part of our understanding of the uncanny experience, which is terrifying precisely because it can not be adequately explained. Rather than attempting a definition, most critics resort to describing the uncanny experience, usually by way of the dream-like visions of doubling and death that invariably seem to accompany it. These recurrent themes, which trigger our most primitive desires and fears, are the very hallmarks of Gothic fiction.’
This quote from website http://theliterarylink.com/uncanny.html is an interesting explanation of the word ‘uncanny’ and how it is relevant to Gothic fiction. Another website http://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/gothic-motifs#sthash.BV6BY7r8.dpuf explains the concept – ‘Sigmund Freud wrote a celebrated essay on ’The Uncanny’ (1919), which he defined as ‘that class of the frightening which leads back to what is known of old and long familiar’. Gothic novels are full of such uncanny effects – simultaneously frightening, unfamiliar and yet also strangely familiar.’ 
In Great Expectations there are numerous instances of the uncanny, with dream-like visions, in connection with death and with the use of doubles.
Pip has some uncanny dream-like visions, including when he was leaving Miss Havisham’s house in Chapter 49 ‘I fancied that I saw Miss Havisham hanging to the beam. So strange was the impression, that I stood under the beam shuddering from head to foot before I knew it was a fancy – though to be sure I was there in an instant.’ He was so concerned that he returned to Satis House to check on Miss Havisham and found that she really was in danger; he managed to save her from being killed by a fire. 
Both Magwitch and Miss Havisham are examples of how the characters are connected with death. When Magwitch first appeared in the graveyard he seemed to be emerging from a grave, coming back from the dead, as he ‘started up from among the graves at the side of the church porch’ while Pip was at his father’s graveside. When he first visits Pip in London he declares himself to be his ‘second father. You’re my son.’ He subsequently haunts Pip as a substitute father figure, as Jaggers and Pumblechook had done previously. 
Pip’s first description of Miss Havisham when he meets her at Satis House is uncanny in that it almost makes her seems like a skeleton – the living dead. For her time stopped with the death of her marriage. His long description of the haunting figure is almost an incantation; she seems to be something he won’t be able to get out of his mind. He finishes ‘I saw that the bride within the bridal dress had withered like the dress, and like the flowers, and had no brightness left but the brightness of her sunken eyes ... Once, I had been taken to see some ghastly waxwork at the Fair, representing I know not what impossible personage lying in state. Once, I had been taken to one of our old marsh churches to see a skeleton in the ashes of a rich dress that had been dug out of vault under the church pavement. Now, waxwork and skeleton seemed to have dark eyes that moved and looked at me’.
Live burials were a common feature of early Gothic fiction and Pip is describing Miss Havisham here as if she has volunteered herself to a premature burial, shutting herself away from daylight, 'buried' in Satis house and withering away.
 
-How does Dickens give the uncanny a unique twist within the novel in terms of characterisation?
In his novel, Dickens gives the uncanny a twist in terms of the characters he uses as doubles and how so many characters are unexpectedly and intricately linked in their lives. Miss Havisham and Magwitch are both benefactors, driven to bring up a child to suit their own needs – Miss Havisham wants Estella to break mens’ hearts to wreak her revenge on mankind and Magwitch wants to create a gentleman. Both are driven by Compeyson; he was the conman who deserted Miss Havisham on her wedding day and stole her money and Magwitch was incensed that Compeyson appeared to have been treated differently by the justice system purely due to his higher social standing. Additionally Magwitch and Compeyson are doubles, both being convicts trying to escape on the marshes.
Miss Havisham and Mrs Joe are also mirrored. Both are mother figures to Pip, both abuse him, and both become invalids imprisoned in their own homes. However, in contrast, Miss Havisham allows her house to fall into decay, while Mrs Joe is insistent on cleanliness within her own home.  Magwitch and Pip can be paired as secret benefactors, with Magwitch helping Pip and Pip helping Herbert in the Mercantile business.

There are numerous examples of doubling in the novel, with one character's life uncannily reflecting another's, and all these characters are linked in an intricate web of coincidences and human relationships.

Resources:
http://theliterarylink.com/uncanny.html
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/greatex/themes.html
http://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/gothic-motifs#sthash.BV6BY7r8.dpuf
https://litreactor.com/columns/storyville-writing-the-grotesque
http://oracle-reunion.pagesperso-orange.fr/documents/307.html
http://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-gothic-in-great-expectations
The Handbook to Gothic Literature, by Marie Mulvery-Roberts, 1998

Gothic Horror in Literature and Architecture

Gothic Fiction

Gothic horror, or gothic fiction, is a genre of literature that includes both horror and romance together. It is thought that Horace Walpole, an English author, created this genre in 1764 with his novel 'The Castle of Otranto'. This new genre became very popular throughout the 1800s and early 1900s with famous books like Frankenstein (1818), Dracula (1897) and The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890). Gothic fiction thrives off of people's fear of the unknown, feeding their want to be shocked and thrilled. It makes use of the unnatural, supernatural and uncanny to pleasure, but terrify, the audience.

The First Gothic Horror Book
http://images.contentreserve.com/ImageType-100/0887-1/%7BAB6
DB0A9-406A-4EAA-850A-4FF09BCC27C5%7DImg100.jpg

Motifs within the Gothic
- Strange places
- Clashing time periods
- Power and constraint
- A word of doubt
- Terror versus horror
- Sexual power
- The uncanny
- The sublime
- Crisis
- The supernatural and the real

Gothic Architecture 

Gothic architecture developed from Romanesque architecture. Romanesque architecture was a popular architectural design in the ancient world (i.e the Romans and the Greeks). At the end of the Roman Empire, when it was destroyed by large groups of Barbarians, including Goths and Franks, the invaders added their own unique twist to the unwanted architecture to make it their own. This is when Gothic architecture was first created.

Gothic architecture is very extreme and over the top, with all the intricate detailing and the vast scale of the buildings. Many of the great cathedrals, abbeys and churches of Europe are gothic as these were the buildings that made this style so famous and iconic.

Gothic architecture were and still are very tall because it was thought they they were reaching towards the heavens, many of these buildings were cathedrals. However there are three main elements of gothic architecture that distinguish them from the rest; the first one being their pointed arches. The pointed arches allowed the buildings to be taller than ever because their stress lines were much more vertical. Ribbed vaults are another element of Gothic architecture, they make the weight of the building direct downwards, allowing for the walls to not need to be as thick. Flying buttresses are another key element of Gothic architecture which again make sure that the weight is directing towards the ground, instead of pushing the walls outwards. 

Example of pointed arches.
https://classconnection.s3.amazonaws.com/280/flashcards/1900280/jpg/281351992449685.jpg
Example of ribbed vaults.
http://lookuparchitecture.com/historygothic/gothsal500.jpg
Example of flying buttresses.
https://blogs.commons.georgetown.edu/arth-101-spring2013/files/2013/04/image2.jpeg

Examples of famous Gothic Architecture
The interior of the western end of Reims Cathedral.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2d/Picardie_Amiens2_tango7174.jpg
Milan Cathedral in Italy.
http://smarthistory.edublogs.org/files/2013/03/Awesome-Gothic-Architecture-Characteristics-t9ewie.jpg



Resources:
https://www.princeton.edu/~achaney/tmve/wiki100k/docs/Gothic_fiction.html
http://education-portal.com/academy/lesson/gothic-art-and-architecture.html

Friday 23 January 2015

Practising with Theatrical Old Age Makeup

I found this YouTube video about how to create a theatrical old age makeup look and I loved her techniques so I tried to recreate the look on myself.


I am happy with how it came out, however I can see I need more practice to make it look exactly how I want it. I think I need to darken some parts of the wrinkles and shadows to make them more intense and so that they show up better on camera. I don't like how it looks like I have contoured to the end of the nose, the colour around the tip was supposed to be red, but unfortunately it came out as an extension of the contour. I think the bags under the eyes need to be a lot more intense and they I need to work to make them look more realistic with improved shading. I really like the contouring in-between the eyebrows and I am really pleased with how the sides of the nose came out.



Research into Skin Ageing

Facts to keep in mind:
-People with lighter skin and blue eyes show more obvious signs of ageing in their skin than people with darker skin.
-As you get older you're more prone to broken capillaries.
Example of broken capillaries.
-The outer layer of the skin starts to get thinner as you age, making the skin appear thinner.
-As you age your skin starts to look paler and slightly more translucent.
-Large dark spots may appear on areas of the skin that has been exposed to the sun.
-You can get bruising and bleeding under the skin, called senile purpura.
An example of Senile purpura.
http://www.globalskinatlas.com/upload/645_1.jpg
-There is less fat under the skin in your cheeks, temples, chin and nose and around the eyes, which makes the face look more sunken in and frail.
-The skin loses its elasticity as it gets older, resulting in wrinkles.
-As the skin looses its elasticity, gravity causes eyelids and eyebrows to droop. This also causes the lower part of the cheeks to sag, called jowls, to form and the earlobes get longer and more saggy looking.
This shows how jowls can change the shape the face.
http://castleknockcosmetics.ie/wp2/wp-content/gallery/sagging-jowls/sagging-jowls-2.jpg
Below are some images that I can refer to when making someone look old with makeup:

http://images.medicaldaily.com/sites/medicaldaily.com/files/styles
/large/public/2013/09/28/old-woman.jpg?itok=1ijxTd25
https://witnesswell.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/old-woman-happy-1007d-02.jpg


Resources:
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/004014.htm
http://www.webmd.com/beauty/aging/effects-of-aging-on-skin

How to: Ageing Hands

Equipment:
-Kryolan foam barrier (https://uk.kryolan.com/product/pro-shield-barrier-foam-50-ml)
-Sponge
-Old age stipple (https://uk.kryolan.com/product/old-age-stipple-50-ml)
-Mixing bowl

Step by step:
1. Shake the foam barrier and put some on the back of your hand. Then rub a small amount of this on the back of the model's hand.
2. Pour some old age stipple into a bowl.
3. Stretch out the area that you want to be wrinkled and keep it stretched out until the stipple is completely dry and enough coats have been added.
4. Using a sponge, pat the old age stipple onto the area you want.
5. Use a hair dryer, on the cool setting, to dry the old age stipple more quickly.
6. Add as many layers as desired.



I am really happy with the outcome of this as I think it looks a lot more natural than if I went to draw on the wrinkles. I would obviously need to cover up the colour with a base that matches the rest of the hand to make it blend in and look realistic. One of my friends did a much thinner layer of the old age stipple and her outcome didn't look as natural as mine, so I will therefore remember to use a decent amount of it and build it up to get my desired effect. This technique can also be used on the face, but you would have to be very gentle when stretching out the skin. 

How to: Theatrical Ageing

Equipment:
-Black stipple sponge
-Orange stipple sponge
-Supra colour palette
-Foundation brush
-Base palette
-White skin base
-Big fluffy brush
-Small angled brush
-Disposable mascara wand
-Kryolan Tooth Enamel (https://uk.kryolan.com/product/tooth-enamel#nicotine)
-Cotton bud

Step by step:
1. Add a moisturiser to the skin to make the grease based products easier to blend over the top.
2. Add a foundation colour that is slightly paler than the natural skin colour. Use a foundation brush to apply this. Also add this colour over the lips.
3. Use a big fluffy brush to buff this colour into the skin so it looks as natural as possible.
4. Mix the yellow, blue and red from the supra colour palette to get a brown shade. You can also make this colour slightly more grey if you wanted with a bit of white added.
4. Ask the model to make really exaggerated facial expressions so that lines begin to show.
5. Take some of the brown colour on a small angled brush and lightly trace these lines all over the face and blend, where needed, with your fingers.
6. Also contour with this colour to make the face look more hollowed out and blend it all over with your fingers.
7. Mix a tiny bit of yellow with the white colour to make an off white colour and brush it through the eyebrows with a mascara wand. Brush the hair backwards for a messy/bushy effect.
8. Add some of this off white colour to the eyelashes with the mascara wand.
9. Use a tissue to dry the tooth/teeth and then, with a cotton bud, add some of the Kryolan tooth enamel in nicotine where desired. Make sure the model doesn't close her mouth until this is dry.

Close-up

Front on comparison

I only did half of the face so that I could compare both sides and clearly see a before and after. I am really pleased with how it came out. I love the darkened eyes and exaggerated wrinkles and I think the nicotine coloured tooth works really well. However when I was experimenting with the makeup look, I felt like I needed to look more into how peoples faces change when they get older because I wasn't completely sure what I was trying to achieve. I think it will be beneficial to do some research into how old people look and what happens to their skin and features so that I can portray more realistic versions of ageing. Looking at this image alone, I think to improve it I should have added more lines around the mouth and emphasised the wrinkles around her eyes more. I am also not happy with the lines around her nose because they look really out of place. 

My Victorian Hair practice

When I practiced the early Victorian hair look, I was inspired by the portrait below of Queen Victoria on her wedding day. I was inspired by the golden accessory around her bun and wanted to create something similar with ribbon. 

Queen Victoria, Wedding Day Portrait, 1840.
http://www.history.com/news/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/queen-victoria.jpg
My Hair Design
Front view.
Back view.
Side, back view.
Side view.

I am happy with how the hair turned out and I think it looks very close to the portrait of Queen Victoria. I think that the royal blue ribbon and gold lace worked really well as it almost has a crown-like look and shape to it. I think I could have made the bunch at the back tighter as it is sagging slightly at the back. I think the whole look would have looked better if the bun at the back was bigger to make more of feature of it. I am really pleased with how smooth and defined the curls look, however I could have used gel or a hair pin to make the top half a lot more flat and smooth. I struggled to get the curls on either side even so I will have to work on that, it I chose to use this hair look in our of my final designs.

Thursday 22 January 2015

How to: Early Victorian Hair

Equipment:
-Tail comb
-Paddle brush
-Hair clips
-Hair grips
-Hair elastics
-Small curling tongs

Step by step:
1. Comb the hair on top of the head away from the face so that it is easier to make the parting straight.
2. Using the end of the tail comb, draw a straight line, from the nose backwards, to create a middle parting.
3. Starting from the top of the head, draw a straight line down to each ear so that the front half of hair is separated into two equal quarters.
4. I brush back the hair in the back section and tied it with a hair elastic.
5. I then split the ponytail into two sections and twisted them together into a bun.

Top view.

Side view.
One half of the head..
6. To create the look below, flatten the hair down until you reach the ear and then plait the hair flat to the side of the face.
7. Sweep the plait backwards and pin it to the bun at the back to secure it in place. Make sure you keep the plait untwisted and flat to the head.

Side view of the plait.
 Second half of the head..
8. I sectioned off a thin, long section from the front, clipped the ends into the curler tong and twisted it towards the head, making sure the curl goes towards the face.
Notes:
-Make sure you tuck the ends round the curling tong to get a smooth curl.
-Keep the curling wand facing up so that you can pull it out of the curl and bring the hair downwards.
-Start the curl further down the head so that the top part is flat and smooth.

Front view of how to hold the curling wand.
Side view of curls.
Front view of both sides done.
Side view of finished curls.
I am happy with how the plait along the side came out because the plait is very defined and neat, however to improve, I will next time make sure that the flat part of the hair is very flat against the head and that it is smooth and even. 
Half way through curling the hair I realised that I had curled a lot of the hair the wrong way, facing backwards. I therefore re-curled sections of the hair so that they were facing the right way. I will make sure to always double check which way I am curling the hair so I don't make this mistake again. I also noticed that the bottom of the curls looked messy and didn't follow the shape of the curl, I will therefore make sure that I tuck the very ends of the hair into the curling wand to finish the look of. When I first started curling, I was using short and thin sections, however I soon noticed that that was not the style that the Victorians went for, as they wanted thicker sausage curls instead. I also think that using a sneaky pin just above the curls would help flatten the top section down, so I may experiment with that next time.