Transition - Abiodun Olaku , 2011
Nigerian, b. 1958-
Oil on canvas, 76 x 91 cm. (29.9 x 35.8 in.)
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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KIROKAZE
Not today Justin
Show & Tell
Misplaced Lens Cap
sheepfilms
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Mike Driver
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Andulka
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wallacepolsom
taylor price

blake kathryn

PR's Tumblrdome
Cosmic Funnies

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
occasionally subtle

shark vs the universe

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seen from Malaysia
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seen from Malaysia
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@m-void
Transition - Abiodun Olaku , 2011
Nigerian, b. 1958-
Oil on canvas, 76 x 91 cm. (29.9 x 35.8 in.)
Various landscapes by the Austrian painter Gustav Klimt.
Farmhouse in Upper Austria (1911 - 1912)
Houses At Unterach On The Attersee (1916)
Schlosskammer on the Attersee (1910)
Country House By The Attersee (1914)
Church in Cassone (1913)
The House Of Guardaboschi (1912)
???
Church In Unterach On The Attersee (1916)
Untitled (unknown year)
Ada girl, 1882, Ilya Repin. technique: pencil Dimensions: 19 x 11.5 cm Gallery: Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow, Russia.
Marek Okrassa
Trevor Young, Diamond, 2016, Addison/Ripley Fine Art
Diamond, 2016 Oil on canvas 38 × 44 in GALLERYAddison/Ripley Fine Art, Washington
René Magritte, ‘Le Coup au Coeur’
John Singer Sargent, American (1856 - 1925)
Sketches of Emilio Bassi
Charcoal on off-white laid paper, 1934
John Brosio (American, b. 1968, Pasadena, CA, USA) - Dinosaurs Eating CEO, 2013 Paintings: Oil on Canvas
John Berger / Ways of Seeing , Episode 1 (1972)
A Gustave Coubert portrait of a trout has more death in it than Rubens could get in a whole Crucifixion.
Robert S. Hughes
#savage
(via mesonoxianvoid)
What any true painting touches is an absence- an absence of which without the painting, we might be unaware. And that would be our loss.
John Berger, The Shape of a Pocket (via mesonoxianvoid)
Sophie Calle Prenez Soin de Vous (Take Care of Yourself)
In this piece, Calle takes an e-mail by which her former lover dumped her (ending the note, “Take care of yourself”), and has it analyzed by 107 women according to their respective professional expertise, including a proofreader, a judge, an expert in women’s rights at the UN, a French intelligence officer, translators, linguists, a chess pro, a family mediator, a clown, a puppet, and a psychoanalyst. It’s translated from French into English, barcode, a crossword puzzle, oragami, and the music of Feist.
Franz Bohumil Doubek (1865-1952) - Allegory of Summer
Depictions of Lesbianism by Henri Toulouse Lautrec
During his life, Lautrec spent a lot of time in Montmarte, the bohemian centre of 19th century Paris and home to artists, philosophers, writers, performers, and prostitutes. He spent a lot of time with the sex workers there, and discovered that many of them had intimate relationships with one another.
Lautrec’s depiction of lesbianism is particularly notable because it doesn’t fetishise sexual intimacy between women or present it as spectacle for the male gaze. Lautrec was trying to capture small, tender moments in the lives of the women he met, and he did so with humanity and sensitivity. In a world of constructed sexuality and fantasy, he finds the real relationships, and reveals to us the hidden lives of queer women in the 19th century.
Fin-de-siècle Paris was the capital of lesbianism. However, until the mid century, and despite the acknowledgment of male homosexuality, female homosexuality had been considered absurd. This scepticism was grounded in the fact that many nineteenth-century psychologists and medical professionals did not believe in female sexual impulse. Thus, when instances of lesbianism were reported in Alexandre Parent-Duchâtelet’s 1836 study of prostitution in Paris, lesbianism came to be understood as an activity associated with the Montmartre counterculture and, in particular, with prostitution. Indeed, deluxe houses of tolerance often functioned as specialty brothels that catered for a clientele with particular fetishes, such as tableaux vivants where ‘inmates, entirely naked, abandon themselves to homosexual practices on a large black velvet carpet or in rooms hung with black satin to bring out the whiteness of their bodies’. This was lesbianism as commercial spectacle, performed within a closed environment for male consumption.
Lesbianism in the public realm was a sexual preference that, while common, was negatively judged by French conservative society and for this reason was conducted with subtlety and partially obscured. In fact, many of the biggest stars of the Parisian circuses, dance halls and café-concerts were lesbian or bisexual, including Jane Avril and May Milton (whom, it is generally agreed, had a short-lived love affair), Sarah Bernhardt, Cha-u-ka-o and La Goulue. Whilst these Montmartre celebrities were depicted on multiple occasions by Lautrec, the artist chose to represent them as skilled professionals, never exploiting their sexual preference as the main focus of his compositions. So subtle was Lautrec in his treatment of these themes that art historians such as David Sweetman have gone so far as to argue that ‘It comes as something of a shock to realise that most of the women … were in fact lesbians and that quite a few were lovers. So many, in fact, that it is possible to argue that lesbianism is the hidden subtext of much of the art of Henri’s mature years.’
- from nga.gov.au
Images shown:
1. At the Moulin Rouge: The Women Dancing
2. In Bed
3. The Kiss
4. Two Friends
5. Les Deux Amies
Edwin Austin Abbey, La reine dans Hamlet, 1895
Edwin Austin Abbey
Born: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1852 Died: London, England 1911 Pastel on paperboard (70.8 x 55.6 cm)
Altarpiece of the Virgin of Guadalupe with St. John the Baptist, Miguel Cabrera. 18th century.
art does not reproduce what is visible, it makes things visible.
paul klee