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SeptimusHeap MOD (Edited uphill both ways)
Mar 20th 2021 at 11:12:09 AM •••

Previous Trope Repair Shop thread: Duplicate Trope, started by Spark9 on Apr 21st 2013 at 6:50:15 PM

"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard Feynman
Prfnoff Since: Jan, 2001
May 20th 2013 at 10:40:04 AM •••

Here is a list of artistic works (mostly taken from the merged Picture Pastiche) are also supposed to be frequently imitated, but don't have any real examples, or not enough to have a page of their own yet:

  • James McNeil Whistler's Arrangement in Grey and Black: The Artist's Mother (a.k.a. Whistler's Mother)
  • Andrew Wyeth's Christina's World
  • Leonardo Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man.
  • Andy Warhol's soup cans in Solve the Soup Cans.
  • Botticelli's Birth of Venus, a.k.a "that naked lady standing on the seashell."
  • The Venus de Milo.
  • Salvador Dali's The Persistence of Memory ("Melting Clocks")
  • Vincent Van Gogh's The Starry Night
  • The Statue of Liberty and Mt. Rushmore.
  • The Eiffel Tower.
  • The Son of Man, also known as That Creepy Guy With An Apple Floating In Front Of His Face.
  • Dogs Playing Poker.
    • Fun fact: the artist actually did nine of these paintings (they were part of a cigar advertisement that ultimately encompassed sixteen pieces - all with anthropomorphized dogs, though the rest didn't have the dogs playing poker).
  • The Spirit of '76

Comic Books

Film

  • The cover of Scarface
  • Marilyn Monroe over the steam vent, from The Seven Year Itch. The male variant is such a common parody that it could probably classify as a trope on its own.
  • The American Beauty "apparently naked woman covered in rose petals" shot. Homaged by both genders with a variety of substances- most recently Sophie Ellis-Bextor with what Americans call sprinkles for The Children's Society, a British charity. This one is an example of the sexy-versus-squicky kind.
  • The poster for Jaws.
  • Riding the Bomb, from Dr Strangelove.

Music

  • The cover of The Beatles' Abbey Road is now its own trope.
    • Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band also has lots of pricey ripoffs (as it deals with several agreements from people unwilling to have their faces plastered over an LP filled with "stoner's music"). It now has its own trope as well.
    • The cover of With The Beatles, with the band's half-shaded faces, also gets copied often.
    • Annie Lebovitz's photo of John Lennon and Yoko Ono, taken hours before his assassination.
  • For a brief period of time, the album cover for Whipped Cream and Other Delights by Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass.
  • The cover of Elvis Presley's ... has an iconic font, which has been replicated or made fun of in several album covers, including Tom Waits's Rain Dogs, The Clash's London Calling and quite a few others.
  • Guns N' Roses Appetite for Destruction Cross and Skulls cover. Two great tastes that go together, and emulated by countless tattoo artists.

Tabletop Games

Politics

Events

Other

  • Those workers having lunch on a skyscraper (homaged by a CSI New York still, among others).
  • The Bigfoot walking by shot from the Patterson-Gimlin film. (Homaged in How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, Hellboy, Elf, Watchmen...)
  • Nessie, the Loch Ness creature. The most famous photo is the "Surgeon's photo" taken in 1934 (the one that looks just like a guy sticking his hand up out of the water).
  • Christine Keeler sitting backwards on that chair. It's not only been copied by all and sundry, it made the chair into a design icon too.
  • The BBC's iconic "Test Card F" is often parodied in British works, especially TV shows.
  • "Keep Calm and Carry On" posters, never actually used but saved in reserve for a Nazi invasion of the British Isles which never materialized. Once they were rediscovered and made their way to the Internet, parodies and recontextualizations ran rampant.

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