Beth Carter

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Beth Carter
Wooden Horse Head Frame (possibly a bridle making form), 19th. Century.
laurent le denuff…
Francis Bacon, Blood on the Floor, 1986 Oil and pastel on canvas
Tooth Trade Sign Artist unidentified Probably New England c. 1850–1880
Last Self-Portrait, Photo by Saul Steinberg, 1999
Inge Morath. The painter Hedda Sterne (from the series ‘Saul Steinberg Masks’). New York. 1959
Follow my new AI-related project «Collective memories»
Slavic Pagan Masks in Russia -
Svyatka Masks From Ancient Novgorod
Hurvin Anderson
‘Back’ by Hurvin Anderson
Hurvin Anderson, ‘Afrosheen’, oil on canvas, 2009
Plaster statue depicting a cadaver escorting the cardinal, representing the Dance of Death, probably English, early to mid 19th century
Representing the dance in which death summons reluctant mortal revellers to join his dance. The story of Death Calling the Dance is reputedly of German origin. The imagery arose in the 1400s when Europe was ravaged by the Black Death and other outbreaks of plague. It was made famous throughout Europe by copperplate engravings, particularly during the 1600s when plague returned in force.
Science Museum
Quentin Crisp as Queen Elizabeth I in Orlando, 1993
Kiki Smith | Mother, 2013, bronzo|bronze, 15,2 x 50,8 x 7,6 cm, Courtesy the artist and Galleria Continua, San Gimignano / Beijing / Les Moulins
Ken Domon, Left Hand of the Sitting Image of Buddha Shakyamuini in the Hall of Miroku, Muro-Ji, Nara, 1942–43, gelatin silver print, 32.7 × 24.2 cm. © The Estate of Ken Domon (photo courtesy of Ken Domon Foundation).