Priestess of Yemaya/Iemanjá, of Candomblé in Bahia, Brazil by Phyllis Galembo
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Priestess of Yemaya/Iemanjá, of Candomblé in Bahia, Brazil by Phyllis Galembo
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Alexander Liberman, Mark Rothko in his studio with chapel paintings, 1965
From: Norman H. Pritchard, (1970), The Matrix. Poems 1960-1970, Ugly Duckling Presse and Primary Information, Brooklyn, NY, 2021
André Kertész The Swimmer 1919
Brothers of Mercy, Pisa & Florence, Italy, 1860s
“He asked her politely where she was going.” Peter Newell, artist. Favorite fairy tales. 1907.
Internet Archive
Caduceus. The Caduceus is the staff carried by Hermes in Greek mythology and Hermes Trismegistus in Greco-Egyptian mythology. The same staff was also borne by heralds in general, for example by Iris, the messenger of Hera. It is a short staff entwined by two serpents, sometimes surmounted by wings. In Roman iconography, it was often depicted being carried in the left hand of Mercury, the messenger of the gods and guide of the dead. H. P. Blavatsky wrote: That the Serpents were ever the emblems of wisdom and prudence is again shown by the caduceus of Mercury, one with Thot, the god of wisdom, with Hermes, and so on. The two serpents, entwined around the rod, are phallic symbols of Jupiter and other gods who transformed themselves into snakes for purposes of seducing goddesses - but only in the unclean fancies of profane symbologists. The serpent has ever been the symbol of the adept, and of his powers of immortality and divine knowledge. Mercury in his psychopompic character, conducting and guiding with the caduceus the souls of the dead to Hades and even raising the dead to life with it, is simply a very transparent allegory. It shows the dual power of the Secret Wisdom: the black and the white magic. It shows this personified Wisdom guiding the Soul after death, and its power to call to life that which is dead - a very deep metaphor if one thinks over its meaning.
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The Night Escorted by the Geniuses of Study and Love, 1883
Pedro Américo (1843 – 1905)
Triumph of Darkness, 1896
Sascha Schneider (1870 - 1927)
El Arbol de Yalalag, Mexico, Photo by Flor Garduño, 1983
Various pages and illustrations from a 1905 Spanish edition of the Book of Saint Cyprian.
xander zhou ss21
Gary Oldman for L'Uomo Vogue, early 1990s ph. Michel Comte
Budapest, 1937. Hungarian photographer, Ferenc Berko (1916-2000).