When Was The Hands Resist Him Created And Published?

2025-08-27 00:58:24 170

5 Answers

Peter
Peter
2025-08-29 02:20:41
I’ve read a few gallery notes and fan posts about this piece, and the timeline people agree on is clear: Bill Stoneham painted 'The Hands Resist Him' in 1972. For a long time it existed within the usual art world channels, but the moment that changed was an online listing in 2000 that framed the work as haunted — the eBay listing and the surrounding forum discussions are what launched the modern myth.

After 2000, magazines and websites reprinted the photos and stories, and interviews with Stoneham offered more sober reminiscences on his intent and process. So if you’re cataloguing dates, list 1972 as creation and 2000 as the point it was publicly disseminated online and popularized. For collectors or curious readers, it’s worth reading both the initial eBay text (archived in many places) and Stoneham’s later remarks to see how folklore and fact diverge.
Emma
Emma
2025-08-30 14:18:30
I came across this painting while digging through old creepy internet posts, and the timeline stuck with me: 'The Hands Resist Him' was painted by Bill Stoneham in 1972. That’s the creation year cited by galleries and the artist himself.

What people usually mean by when it was ‘published’ is the famous eBay listing in 2000 — someone photographed the canvas, added a spooky story, and uploaded it, which made the painting an early viral horror meme. After that listing, the image and tale spread to blogs, message boards, and articles; later interviews with Stoneham filled in more conventional art-historical info. If you want to separate myth from fact, read those interviews alongside archived posts from around 2000 — they paint a fascinating picture of how a painting’s public life can be reshaped decades after it was made.
Felix
Felix
2025-08-30 20:59:34
I still get a little thrill thinking about weird internet lore, and 'The Hands Resist Him' is one of those pieces that haunted early web forums. The painting itself was painted by Bill Stoneham in 1972 — that’s the creation date everyone cites, and the style and materials line up with his early work from that period.

What made it explode into internet infamy was when the original canvas popped up on eBay in 2000. The seller included a spooky backstory and photos, and the listing spread across message boards and creepypasta threads, turning a 1970s gallery painting into an online ghost story. Since then, the painting’s been reproduced in articles, blogs, and interviews with Stoneham, who’s discussed its origins and meaning in later years.

If you’re digging into the timeline: created in 1972 and then thrust into viral fame in 2000 thanks to that eBay posting. For deeper context, reading later interviews with Stoneham or gallery notes helps separate the artist’s intent from the folklore that grew around the sale.
Zander
Zander
2025-09-01 06:44:37
I got hooked on the story because I love how art and internet culture collide. The factual backbone is pretty straightforward: Bill Stoneham painted 'The Hands Resist Him' in 1972. That’s when the work was created, reflecting the era’s eerie, symbolic figurative style.

The thing that people often mean by “published” is the moment it went public in the online era — the painting was listed on eBay in 2000, and that listing included a creepy narrative that made the piece a viral sensation. After the eBay splash, magazines, websites, and later interviews with Stoneham spread the tale further, so you’ll see later publications (articles and reproductions) referencing both the 1972 creation and the 2000 online sale.

If you want to trace how the myth formed, look at contemporary 2000 forum threads and the subsequent interviews with Stoneham where he clarifies his inspiration. It’s a neat example of how a single online post can rewrite the public life of an older work.
Faith
Faith
2025-09-02 19:53:19
If you’re asking about dates: Bill Stoneham created 'The Hands Resist Him' in 1972. It stayed a gallery/collector piece for decades, but it was thrust into popular consciousness when it was posted for sale on eBay in 2000 with a spooky backstory. That eBay listing is what most people mean by its ‘publication’ online — after that it showed up in articles, forums, and the odd documentary about creepy artworks. If you want primary sources, tracking down interviews with Stoneham from the 2000s helps separate the art history from the ghost-story embellishments.
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