25 amazing color photos of St. Louis, Missouri in the late 1940s and early ’50s.
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@holyhipbones
25 amazing color photos of St. Louis, Missouri in the late 1940s and early ’50s.
“My fear of being real, of being seen, paralyzes me into silence. I crave the touch and the connection, but I’m not always brave enough to open my hand and reach out. This is the great challenge: to be seen, accepted, and loved, I must first reveal, offer, and surrender.”
— Anna White
#deh
“I do not slice his tires. I do not burn the photos. I do not write the letter. I do not beg. I do not ask for forgiveness. I do not hold my breath while he finishes. The man tells me he does not love me, and he does not love me. The man tells me who he is, and I listen. I have so much beautiful time.”
— Olivia Gatwood, New American Best Friend
A double wedding in Harlem, 1940s.
Newest Teen-Age Singing Group versus Latest Teen-Age Idol
Eartha Kitt photographed by Carl Van Vechten on October 19, 1952.
Street portraits of Parisians in the 1960s through amazing black and white photos.
The blank signature, 1965, Rene Magritte
Size: 65x81 cm Medium: oil, canvas
Roma Interiors. Photography project by Carlo Gianferro.
“The images of Roma Interiors allow us to enter into the intimacy of the Roma houses in Moldova and Romania, where interiors are represented with its inhabitants in order to solder the connection between the life and the lived. The people, the inhabitants and the owners were photographed quickly, without prior preparation, aesthetic tricks or any special choice of clothes: what you see is what there is, what there was at the time of the shooting, what there is every day.
Women with sumptuous traditional costumes and hairstyles that have remained unchanged over time; men who owing to their dealings outside of their community wear Western clothing; youths wearing the universal fashions of today’s youth everywhere, yet all of these sharing a common background characterized by creativity, color, splendour, and cultural tradition.
Roma Interiors is above all a real and accurate portrait of current Romani society, which is still, as it has always been, based on the family, and the house is the backdrop against which the family is represented. Money and the home are the two main parameters which show the other members of the community the importance and power of the family. In this the Roma don’t deviate from universal motivations, but they articulate it in their homes with an innate and personal expression, with the concepts of luxury, prosperity, and especially power represented by decorative overabundance.
Colours are essential to the Roma people and, as with the women’s costumes, colour covers everything, both the inside and the outside of the houses, making fantastic, unreal buildings - as fantastic and unreal as the dream, the desire of having a house, a stable place for a people that for hundreds of years has roamed far from its place of origin.
Freedom, and the intelligent use of it, has allowed the Roma community to redeem itself in the most obvious and confrontational way possible, using rocks, concrete, iron, wood, plaster, and metal to build these monuments to their desires, and into which they then move to live in a joyous, colourful, world of their own.”
Silver steel flexible double bladed snake rapier, made during the 19th century in Toledo, Spain.
| Bigitte Bardot |
Beautiful tea cups that I just had to post. From here