Poor little mermaid by contemporary Japanese artist, character designer, illustrator, and a theatre and film scenic costume designer: Yoshitaka Amano ~ https://www.yoshitakaamano.com

Kaledo Art

Origami Around

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Today's Document
Stranger Things
will byers stan first human second
Cosimo Galluzzi

roma★
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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

shark vs the universe
DEAR READER
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Misplaced Lens Cap

PR's Tumblrdome
taylor price
styofa doing anything

Discoholic 🪩

izzy's playlists!
Acquired Stardust
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@chthonicdivinebard
Poor little mermaid by contemporary Japanese artist, character designer, illustrator, and a theatre and film scenic costume designer: Yoshitaka Amano ~ https://www.yoshitakaamano.com
Hera and Ares, based on the painting by Sophie Koner - Maria Wilhelmine Klemperer with her son Otto Ernst Heinrich Klemperer
Ovid, Fasti 5. 229 ff (trans.Boyle) (Roman poetry C1st B.C. to C1st A.D.) :
"[Flora tells the story of the birth of Mars-Ares :] Mars [Ares] also, you may not know, was formed by my [Flora's] arts. I pray that Jove [Zeus] stays ignorant of this. Holy Juno [Hera], when Minerva [Athene] sprang unmothered, was hurt that Jove did not need her service. She went to complain to Oceanus of her husband's deeds. She stopped at our door, tired from the journey. As soon as I saw her, I asked, ‘What's brought you here, Saturnia [Hera]?’ She reports where she's going, and cites the cause. I consoled her with friendly words : ‘Words,’ she declares, ‘cannot relieve my pain. If Jove became a father without using a spouse and possesses both titles by himself, why should I not expect a spouseless motherhood, chaste parturition, untouched by a man? I'll try every drug on the broad earth and empty Oceanus and the hollows of Tartarus.’
Her speech was mid-course; my face was hesitant. ‘You look, Nympha, as thou you can help,’ she says. Three times I wanted to help, three times my tongue stuck : Jupiter's anger caused massive fear. ‘Please help me,’ she said, ‘my source will be concealed;’ and the divine Styx testifies to this.
‘A flower,’ I said, ‘from the fields of Olenus [in the Peloponnesos] will grant your wish. It's unique to my gardens. I was told : "Touch a barren cow; she'll be a mother." I touched. No delay : she was a mother.’
I quickly plucked the clinging flower with my thumb. Juno feels its touch and at the touch conceives. She bulges, and enters Thrace and west Propontis, and fulfils her wish : Mars [Ares] was created. Recalling my role in his birth, Mars said : ‘You, too, should have a place in Romulus' city.’"
[N.B. The fact that Ovid mentions the Greek city of Olenos in this myth, strongly suggests it was derived it from a Greek source.]
More black princesses, more black fairies, more black mermaids, more black girls doing all the things, for fucks sake
My Greek Gods series ☆
Aphrodite, Athena, Hades, Artemis, Gaia, Hecate, Persephone
✧ Greek mythology ✧ the Moirai, Hades and Persephone, Aphrodite and Dionysos.
♥♥♥ All the prints are now available on my shop ♥♥♥ : https://www.etsy.com/fr/shop/Yliade
Thanks for viewing !
All rights reserved. Please don’t use or edit my work in any way without my permission, thank you.
I stole @ultravioletness’s idea and made some painting collages (click for better quality. or not)
1. The lady in Evelyn De Morgan’s The Crown of Glory (1896) admires Waterhouse’s Siren (c.1900)
2. Godward’s Athenaïs (1908) and An Offering To Venus (1912)
3. Waterhouse’s Isabella (1907) holds Stanhope’s Morgan Le Fay (c.1880)
4. La Belle Dame Sans Merci (1893) seduces a nymph from Nymphs Finding the Head of Orpheus (1900), both paintings by Waterhouse
5. Waterhouse’s Ophelia (1910) finds Collier’s Sleeping Beauty (1921)
please reblog if you save!
Mama Isis with her newborn Horus. The most sincere and pure love
Syro-Hittite terracotta idol, Levant,
Circa: 2000 to 1600 BCE,
Handmade statuette of a female goddess (Astarte) with laterally protruding pointy stump arms and a bird’s head face. The large eyes are circularly applied and deeply pierced.
Behind the face trapezoidally towering hair with four holes, which possibly once held jewelry. The flat plank idol has a laterally far protruding pelvis as a symbol for fertility.
Around the neck a necklace, which is depicted as a smooth indentation. The navel is also circularly applied and deeply pierced. The idol is adorned around the hip with a double-row chain, accentuated by incisions.
The downwards tapering legs are separated by an indentation in the middle.
Terracotta, 14.2 cm high,
Courtesy: Christoph Bacher
The Bacchae
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One more art for the 24h city Dionysia thing on lofter but bro got banned for nude so I put it here.
Inanna, Queen of Heaven and Earth
Four love goddesses from different cultures.
Aphrodite & Adonis
This illustration was inspired by a mirror at the MFA in Boston depicting Aphrodite shielding Adonis with her veil. The scene in the mirror has more urgency to it, but I wanted to convey something a little more playful and romantic.
There are many versions of this myth, particularly in the manner in which Adonis is killed. He is usually killed by a boar during a hunt, but who sends the boar and (in some cases) who that boar is, is up for debate. In some versions, it is Artemis sending a boar to take revenge on Aphrodite for killing one of her favorite mortals Hippolytus. Sometimes, Artemis tells Ares of Aphrodite’s affair and he turns into a boar and kills Adonis himself. Sometimes the messenger is Persephone, jealous that Adonis is spending his time with Aphrodite. After his death, Aphrodite created the anemone in his memory. In Ancient Greece, women would celebrate the Adonia in honor of his death. They would create small gardens which they would place on the roofs of their houses where the gardens would soon wither and die. Women would then publicly engage in ritual lamentation at the passing of Adonis on behalf of Aphrodite.
Waldnymphe und Hirte (Forest Nymph and Shepherd) ~ 1905 ~ Ferdinand Leeke (1859-1925)
Francois Chauveau (1613–1676), “Lucifer and his commanders in Hell”
etching, engraving on paper, 1654
source
Psyche before the Throne of Venus (1894) by Henrietta Rae (British, 1856 – 1928), oil on canvas, 76.5 in (194.3 cm) x 120 in (304.8 cm), Private Collection
More Greek mythology! Scylla with her dogs was pretty challenging ┌( ಠ_ಠ)┘
Rest of the originals will be for sale in June ✨