Lycanthrope Studios

Though popular culture seems to have breathed new life in to this beautiful word, it has also undermined the complexity of its very nature . The term comes from Greek Lykànthropos (Λυκάνθρωπος): λύκος, lykos ("wolf") + άνθρωπος, ànthrōpos ("human").[1] The word lycanthropy is sometimes used generically for any transformation of a human into animal form, though the precise term for that is technically "therianthropy". Sometimes, "zoanthropy" is used instead of "therianthropy".[2] The word has also been linked to Lycaon, a king of Arcadia who, according to Ovid's Metamorphoses, was turned into a ravenous wolf in retribution for attempting to serve human flesh (his own son) to visiting Zeus in an attempt to disprove the god's divinity.
A more modern use of the word is in reference to a mental illness called lycanthropy in which a patient believes he or she is, or has transformed into, an animal and behaves accordingly. This is sometimes referred to as clinical lycanthropy to distinguish it from its use in legends.

A perfect piece of the "Mad Forrest" puzzle - the obsessive need to shift, change, be other than. The content is the content, the prospective is always in flux...that is why i love photography.
Light bending from gold to black on a blue canvas

Light bending from gold to black on a blue canvas

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