Love every scene with these two in it
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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@inspireaton
Love every scene with these two in it
Ralph Brown (British, 1928-2013, b. Leeds, Yorkshire, England, d. Chalford, Cotswolds, Gloucestershire, England) - La Spoza (The Wife), 1999, Sculpture: Marble
Sevin, 21
“i’m wearing an utility belt made from my room mate’s old cargo pants, donkey cart license plate on a necklace chain, old Albany Times Union newsboy satchel I dyed and striped, New Rocks that I refuse to give up on, lacy socks I cut into fingerless gloves. Otherwise everything’s always second hand or diy. My inspiration comes from a lot of places but I’d say creepy dolls, the zombie apocalypse, and things I collect from the ground.”
Nov 16, 2025 ∙ SoHo
Aleksandr Moravov - At the Collective Farm Office (ca. 1936)
Fangirls Through the Ages by Lid Thom
cats 🌸
Paul Rog (Russian, 1995) - Female Portrait (2024)
by iiisan333
Jarosław Kawiorski
Sculpture of a Woman with Four Children, from Mali, c.1100-1450 CE: this sculpture was created in the ancient city of Djenné-Djenno
Created during the 12th-15th centuries CE, this sculpture depicts a woman sitting cross-legged on the ground, with two children on her lap and two more clinging to her back. Scarification patterns are visible on the woman's temples, and there is a thick, undulating line running from her forehead to the nape of her neck, likely representing a serpent.
As this article explains:
Snakes on Inner Niger Delta sculptures are a common element and should be seen as a positive iconographic component. They represent control of a potentially dangerous benevolent power that must be tamed, domesticated, nourished, and satisfied so it will continue to provide protection.
This is one of the many terracotta sculptures that were produced in Djenné-Djenno, located in the Niger River Valley of Mali, in West Africa; Djenné-Djenno sits just to the south of the Medieval city of Djenné, which is still a major center of Islamic scholarship.
The ancient city of Djenné-Djenno dates back to at least 250 BCE, making it one of the oldest cities in West Africa. For centuries, it also served as one of the largest urban centers/trading hubs in the region, with a peak population of about 20,000 people. The city began to decline in the 9th century CE, when residents (and trade) began moving northward to the nearby city of Djenné, which had just recently been founded by Muslim traders. Djenné-Djenno was ultimately abandoned by the end of the 15th century.
Unfortunately (and unsurprisingly), most of the artifacts from Djenné-Djenno were looted or destroyed by colonizing forces during the 19th-20th centuries. Some of those artifacts have been repatriated in recent years, and there are ongoing efforts to return more of them.
Why Western museums should return African artifacts.
Sources & More Info:
Yale University Art Gallery: Female Figure with Four Children
World History Encyclopedia: Djenné-Djenno
Tribal Art: Scrofulous Sogolon (PDF)
ArtNews: Museum of Fine Arts Boston to Return Terra-Cotta Figures from Mali in Latest Restitution Efforts
CBS: African Nations Want their Stolen History Back, and Experts Say it's Time to Speed up the Process
Fair Observer: It is Now Time for the West to Return African Art
VIVIENNE WESTWOOD Fall/Winter RTW 2026 if you want to support this blog consider donating to: ko-fi.com/fashionrunways
Urban Resets Prints | Ko-fi | Patreon | Bluesky ⭐
Jamaican anthro 4/4: Jamaican Iguana
Of course one of them had to be rasta themed
Lea O'Connell
Le Grand Hôtel Campo del Fiori abandonné à Varèse, en Italie, construit en 1912.
Days go by.
Night watch, Ben Sledsens
Eagle Seoul Bar Poster
Artist: @sozzzjun