In 1995, Negovan formed a rock band, Three Years Ghost, which released one album,
Sidhe (1995), and performed infrequently in the
Chicago area until 2003. He recorded and performed under the ensemble name Ver Sacrum, releasing one CD single,
The Ballrooms of Mars. In 2011, Negovan gave a
TEDx talk titled
By Popular Demand on his experience recording with archaic technologies, and both recorded and released a single on the early recording medium of wax cylinder, the first such release in nearly a century. A full album by the same name was recorded without electricity, mastered to tape, and then pressed to vinyl, making this a fully analog release. In 1999, Negovan founded Century Guild, a private art gallery specializing in Art Nouveau, Symbolist Art, and
German Expressionism. The gallery presented rare ceramics, and early art posters by artists like
Alphonse Mucha, and focused on rare opera, cabaret, and silent film posters by Italian, German, and Austrian poster artists including
Adolfo Hohenstein, Josef Fenneker, and
Gustav Klimt. Century Guild also represented contemporary artists including
Gail Potocki,
Steve Kilbey,
Dave McKean, and
Jeremy Bastian. The gallery opened a large physical location to the public in Chicago in 2010 and hosted exhibitions centered on the
Grand-Guignol theater and Silent Cinema, offering period works alongside contemporary interpretations by artists including
Olivia De Berardinis,
Bill Sienkiewicz,
David Mack, Yoann Lossel, Dean Karr,
Steve Diet Goedde,
Chris Mars, and
Christopher Ulrich, and featured exhibition posters by Malleus Rock Art Lab. The gallery closed this location in 2012, moving to Culver City, California. In 2006, Negovan wrote and curated
The Union of Hope and Sadness: The Art of Gail Potocki, with an introduction by Jim Rose of The
Jim Rose Circus. The book was an analysis of the
Symbolist paintings of
Gail Potocki, and also included essays from
Richard Metzger and
Marina Korsakova-Kreyn, and portraits of Jim and Bébé Rose,
Joe Coleman,
Grant Morrison, and Claudio Carniero of
Cirque du Soleil. In 2010, he released the catalog
Grand Guignol: An Exhibition of Artworks Celebrating the Legendary Theater of Terror, which featured rare historical images (1895–1962) from the
Théâtre du Grand-Guignol, the Parisian theater which gained notoriety for lurid exhibitions of violence, death, and debauchery. The book also featured works by
Gustav Klimt and
Alphonse Mucha, as well as works by contemporary artists
Chris Mars,
Dave McKean,
Gail Potocki,
Michael Zulli, and Malleus Rock Art Lab, some of them being published for the first time. Negovan has also edited a number of publications, including:
Chamber of Mystery: Witchcraft (2007), which featured various artists and authors, and an introduction by
Dan Brereton featuring characters from the
Nocturnals, and reprints thirteen stories from 1950s
horror comics, selected by Negovan; and
Nocturnals Volume One: Black Planet and Other Stories (2007), reprints of the earliest of the
Nocturnals comic stories, written and painted by
Dan Brereton with an introduction by Negovan. In 2016, after twenty years of research and three years of writing, Negovan wrote ''Le Pater: Alphonse Mucha's Symbolist Masterpiece and the Lineage of Mysticism'', receiving praise from numerous artists including Roger Dean and Alex Grey. A 2023 expanded softcover included an introduction by fantasy author Michael Moorcock, who called the book "profound and beautiful" and "a source of beauty and intellectual inspiration." The 1980 film
Caligula, starring
Malcolm McDowell and
Helen Mirren, was notorious for being overtaken by producer and
Penthouse magazine founder
Bob Guccione, who fired the director, and inserted adult content without the knowledge of the writer, director, or cast; by the time of the film's release, the writer had sued to have his name removed from the film, and the director refused credit. McDowell called the 1980 release of the film a "terrible betrayal of... the actors." In 2019 Negovan was hired to utilize the original camera negatives and reconstruct a version closer to the original vision of the creators, leading to an invitation to premiere at the 2023
Cannes Film Festival. McDowell responded positively to this version, writing on
Instagram: "Because of the brilliant work of Thomas Negovan – one of my best performances has finally come to light after 47 years!" == References ==