"Fire and Wine"
Charcoal on paper.
winekisses
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
hello vonnie

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art blog(derogatory)
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
occasionally subtle
RMH
wallacepolsom

roma★
Not today Justin
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

JBB: An Artblog!

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sheepfilms

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@morecontraband
"Fire and Wine"
Charcoal on paper.
winekisses
"Moschino Jaymie"
Charcoal on paper.
"Robin Williams Candid"
Charcoal on paper.
RIP, Legend.
Sketch of a Casey Baugh painting.
Pencil & Charcoal on notebook paper.
"Anakin Skywalker"
Charcoal on paper.
"Young Anakin Skywalker"
Charcoal on paper.
Hello June 🐝
Pictures that stick
@contrabandre #sticker steez /// hit me up for prints … Full color & multiple images for low $ /// #stickers #joker #heathledger
In Bert Stern:Original Madman, Shannah Laumeister’s 2011 documentary about the photographer, Stern discusses his infamous ‘last sitting’ with Marilyn. He spoke to Time magazine recently, and you can watch a clip from the film at Nowness.
“After I set up the studio [at the Bel-Air] the front desk rang ‘Miss Monroe is here’ I decided to go down and meet her. I met her [for the first time] on the pathway to the suite. She was alone wearing a scarf and green slacks and a sweater. She had no make up on. I said ‘You’re beautiful,’ and she said, ‘What a nice thing to say.’
[In the suite] she looked at what was there and asked about makeup. I said I didn’t think we needed any makeup, but how about a little eyeliner? She picked up one of the scarves, which was chiffon, you could see through it. She looked [at it] and said, ‘Do you want to do nudes?’ So it was her idea.”
However, in his 1982 book, The Last Sitting, Stern detailed a more complex version of events:
“She lowered the scarf, looked at me and said, ‘You want to do nudes?’
She’d seen right through it.
‘Uh, well I – I guess so!’ Who, me? ‘It’d probably be a nice idea, wouldn’t it? But it wouldn’t be exactly nude. You’d have the scarf.’
‘Well, how much would you see through it?’
‘That depends on how I light it,’ I said.
‘What do you mean?’ she said. And then, ‘Just a second. George?’
George Masters [hairdresser] came in. She said, ‘George, what do you think about these scarves and doing nudes?’
I held my breath.
‘Oh…what a divine idea!’ said George.
Thank God. If he had said, ‘Oh, no, how gauche,’ the whole thing would have been off in a second. Gone.
She was that vulnerable.”
As the shoot began, Marilyn made it clear exactly how much she wanted to reveal:
“Marilyn walked onto the set in her bare feet, a glass of champagne in one hand and an orange striped scarf tied around her bare bosom. She still had her green slacks on.
‘I’m not going to take off my pants,’ she declared.
‘Just roll them down, then,’ I said.”
It was not until late in the evening that Marilyn finally stripped:
"It was late, close to dawn, when I finally got all her clothes off…’You know, for this one you’ve really got to take your pants off,’ I said. I expected her to call for George, who by now was falling asleep in the other room. But she just said, ‘Okay.’ We’d already gone so far in the pictures; what was there to be shy about? She stepped into the archway between the rooms and, holding the scarf around her like a towel, wriggled out of her slacks. And then she walked back out onto the white paper. I started to shoot. This was the way I’d wanted her all along. Her beautiful body shone through the harlequin scarf in a tantalising, abstract hide-and-seek. Until she dropped it. And I shot it. Just for myself. One glimpse, one stolen frame. We were finished.”
The same text has been used in all subsequent editions of the book.[x]
Faded.
Charcoal sketch on paper, 9x12"
I Hate Real Fur
Charcoal sketch on paper, 9x12"
Jesse Pinkman / Aaron Paul
Charcoal sketch on paper, 9x12"
Luke Ditella
Charcoal sketch on paper 9x12"
"Harley's Clown" close up.
Acrylic on canvas, 24x30"
First Smoke
Charcoal sketch on paper, 9x12"
First Cigarette
Charcoal sketch on paper, 9x12"