>fav painter>fav authorEdward HopperFranz Kafka
Frederic Edwin ChurchChekhov
Anonymous 18th-century French painterMyself
>>24883223BasedCringe
Gustave MoreauRousseau
Paul RansonKazuo Ishiguro
M. C. EscherLudwig Wittgenstein
>>24883284>Gustave Moreaubased>Rousseaucringe
>>24883294>t. reads Rousseau for his philosophy
>>24883223Hitler for both
Giorgio de ChiricoFaulkner
>>24883379He sucked as both
>painterWilliam Holman Hunt>authorRaymond Chandler
This board has garbage taste in painting
monetkierkegaard
>>24883607As if their taste in literature is much better.
>>24883607>says this>doesn't post their own tastesyawn
>>24883607in music as well, lots of metal fans populate this cursed place
Ilya RepinThomas Pynchon
Francis BaconPessoa
>>24883223GasselMelville
William Morris William Morris
>>24883223>fav painterVincent Van Gogh>fav authorWell, I suppose David for his psalms, Solomon for his wisdom, or Isaiah or Jeremiah, even Ezekiel, for their metaphors and theology; and St. Luke for his gospel, perhaps the most dramatic and, as Dostoevsky pointed out in his novel, possessing the superlative parables; and St. John, not only for his gospel but also his first epistle. He has a great and singular style.
Before Van Gogh contracted his strange illness, the work he accomplished in Arles was so colourful and bright, teeming with movement and life, and none of it was by accident, nor was he a second-rate artist, as his talent for drafting and sketching show. He developed a wonderful style and painted so many masterpieces.
>>24883223BotticelliEmily Dickinson>>24883607Let's see your favorites so we can all have a good laugh. The contributions so far have punched way above the normie standard.
>>24883223>fav painterIlya Repin>fav authorDostoyevsky
>>24883858Based. I'm reading The Well at the World's End right now.