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Natalia Leonova (b.1983) - Breakfast in Bed. 2017. Pastel on paper.
Lothar Parschauer - Jane Birkin looking into a handheld mirror in a boutique in Schwabing, Munich, Germany (May 1970) This portrait of the French actress by the little-known German photographer Lothar Parschauer became very famous. The second portrait from the same series is much less known (I actually like it more):
promqueenvintage
Robert Hainard (1906 - 1999). Sanglier. February 10th, 1929.
Hainard Foundation
resting on the grass with mama
Photo by Dallas Penner.
“how do you get stuff done?” with tears in my eyes.
I had an epiphany or something today. But hear me out. Grief can be beautiful. I think we’re lucky to some extent to be able to feel something so incredibly painful all because we allowed joy and love to root deep enough to leave an ache when it’s gone. Love existed first, grief is just its echo, and while it really fucking hurts, no matter what it is, I can’t stop thinking it’s partly beautiful because even in it’s ache, it still holds meaning you won’t ever be able to regret feeling or be able to un-know what it meant to you. We can grieve a lot of different things, people, pets, moments, jobs, opportunities, but the one thing it all has in common is that it mattered to you so much that even losing it couldn’t make it meaningless.
From Creative Computer Graphics (1984)
Cat Clock. Glen Entis, Pacific Data Image, 1983.
Liv Tyler as Arwen. Promo shot from the deleted scenes of Arwen at Helm’s Deep.
Nature morte du bon vivant. Stilleben mit Kaffeegeschirr, Cognacflasche und Zigaretten by Charles Monginot (French, 1825–1900)
Abandoned Tudor-style Mansion in Ohio
Gothic tower of the Monastery of Poblet, Spain.