by Judith Yaws
YOU ARE THE REASON

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by Judith Yaws
I Wish I Was Like Me by artist Andy Renard
Florence Lindon ‘Linden’ Travers (1913–2001)
“The Death of a Gentleman”
oil on canvas, 1939 — source
Storm rising, Franz Sedlacek
Storm rising, Franz Sedlacek
Columbia by Fernando Avella Montejo
Patsy Cline with her new Oldsmobile, 1956
Ingordigia
Happy 74th, Carol Kane.
Happy 74th, Isabella Rossellini.
Photo by Zhong Lin.
Succubi, a divine work by Iranian-born and now French-based artist Bahman Pezeshkzad, depicting an ample beautiful woman well worthy of adoration! Per Wikipedia, in modern representations, a succubus (succubi denotes plural women) is often depicted as a beautiful woman seductress or charming, rather than as demonic or frightening, to attract people instead of repulsing them. The male counterpart of the succubus is the incubus. Historically, folkloric belief in succubi was motivated by distressing nighttime phenomena, chiefly wet dreams and sleep paralysis.
This was recommended by a wonderful anonymous source to whom I’m eternally grateful!
Virginia Lounging by Olivier Duhamel
Jungle Fever - Charlie Feathers
1958
A wild rockabilly fever dream
Charlie Feathers was one of rockabilly's true originals, delivering songs with a loose, unpredictable edge that few could match.
"Jungle Fever" is all swagger, echoing guitar, and restless rhythm.
This is the B-side of Why Don't You.
Summer (1968), dir. Marcel Hanoun
August Malmström, Dancing Fairies.
La televiviente by Argentine artist Diego Gabotto