Circe Invidiosa (Red edit), 1892 - oil on canvas — John William Waterhouse (English, 1849-1917)
Sweet Seals For You, Always
$LAYYYTER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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todays bird
Mike Driver
Xuebing Du
d e v o n
trying on a metaphor
noise dept.
Cosmic Funnies
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Andulka

tannertan36

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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@andersian
Circe Invidiosa (Red edit), 1892 - oil on canvas — John William Waterhouse (English, 1849-1917)
Fabienne Dali as Ruth Kill, Baby... Kill! (1966) dir. Mario Bava
Jeanne Gourseau as Thusnelda & Laurence Rupp as Arminius
BARBARIANS ( 2020-)
↳ Episode One : New Legions
In the hour of our death (Vanitas)
“Vanitas, (from Latin vanitas, “vanity”), in art, a genre of still-life painting that flourished in the Netherlands in the early 17th century. A vanitas painting contains collections of objects symbolic of the inevitability of death and the transience and vanity of earthly achievements and pleasures; it exhorts the viewer to consider mortality and to repent. The vanitas evolved from simple pictures of skulls and other symbols of death and transience frequently painted on the reverse sides of portraits during the late Renaissance. It had acquired an independent status by c. 1550 and by 1620 had become a popular genre. Its development until its decline about 1650 was centred in Leiden, in the United Provinces of the Netherlands, an important seat of Calvinism, which emphasized humanity’s total depravity and advanced a rigid moral code.
Although a few vanitas pictures include figures, the vast majority are pure still lifes, containing certain standard elements: symbols of arts and sciences (books, maps, and musical instruments), wealth and power (purses, jewelry, gold objects), and earthly pleasures (goblets, pipes, and playing cards); symbols of death or transience (skulls, clocks, burning candles, soap bubbles, and flowers); and, sometimes, symbols of resurrection and eternal life (usually ears of corn or sprigs of ivy or laurel). The earliest vanitas pictures were sombre, somewhat monochromatic compositions of great power, containing only a few objects (usually books and a skull) executed with elegance and precision. As the century progressed, other elements were included, the mood lightened, and the palette became diversified. Objects were often tumbled together in disarray, suggesting the eventual overthrow of the achievements they represent. Somewhat ironically, the later vanitas paintings became largely a pretext for meticulous virtuosity in the rendering of varied textures and surfaces, but the artistic quality of the genre in no sense declined. Several of the greatest Dutch still-life painters, including David Bailly, Jan Davidsz de Heem, Willem Claesz Heda, Pieter Potter, and Harmen and Pieter van Steenwyck, were masters of the vanitas still life, and the influence of the genre can be seen in the iconography and technique of other contemporary painters, including Rembrandt.”
Depictions in Art:
1. A Vanitas Still Life, Pieter Claesz
2. A Vanitas Still Life with a Skull, a Book and Roses, c.1630, Jan Davidsz de Heem
3. Still-Life with a Skull, vanitas painting, Philippe de Champaigne
4. The Gentleman’s Dream, Antonio Pereda
5. Still Life (Vanitas), c.1637, Hendrick Andriessen
6. Vanitas Still Life with Skulls, Flowers, a pearl mussel shell, a bubble and straw, Nicolaes van Veerendael
7. Vanitas, (an allegorical still life)
8. Allegory of Vanity, 1650-60, Antonio Pereda
9. Vanitas Still Life with Flowers, J.H. Elers
10. NL Peschier, Memento Mori
photography by Erinthul
Victor Gabriel Gilbert - Sleeping Beauty
Art by Welder Wings.
the intimacy of reading together..
Zérkalo / The Mirror (1975) - Andrei Tarkovsky
“Death descends upon the city—!” METROPOLIS ― 1927, dir. Fritz Lang
Isabelle Adjani for Vogue Italia, August 1, 2004.
Faust (1926) directed by F.W. Murnau.
I like violence, she’d shrieked at me. I blame my mother. A child weaned on poison considers harm a comfort.
Sharp Objects (2018) Falling / Milk