Jean-Michel Folon: The Return of the Two Snails, 1979.
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Jean-Michel Folon: The Return of the Two Snails, 1979.
Manasie Akpaliapik
Skeleton of an older man who lived more than 25,000 years ago is one of the nine burials excavated at the Upper Paleolithic site of Sungir’ near Moscow. More than 3,000 ivory beads were sewn into his burial garments. (© Musée de l’Homme, O. Bader)
Willem Dafoe by Szilveszter Makó
Elle Fanning (ph: Szilveszter Makó)
Cocteau Twins: AEeëdoObeapeljaOOahO
Me:
Remedios Varo (Catalan/Spanish, 1908-1963), Caballero encantado [Enchanted Knight], 1961. Gouache, watercolour and pen and black and white inks on heavy paper, 19 5⁄8 x 6 ¼ in.
Oskar Zwintscher (German, 1870-1916) - Autumn landscape: Landscape with fir forest and deer
Oskar Zwintscher (1870–1916), “Grief”, 1898
source
Cocteau Twins: AEeëdoObeapeljaOOahO
Me:
Cocteau Twins at Metropol Theater (Nollendorfplatz, Berlin) Jan 31, 1985
📷 Petra Gall Teilbestand
Cocteau Twins
Royal Festival Hall May 6th 1984
Álmos Jaschik (Hungarian, 1885-1950) - A virágos kertben (In the Flower Garden), Aquarelle on paper, 25 x 23,5 cm (1939)
Unknown, Olmec. Pendant. 1200 BCE-400 CE. Image and data from Justin Kerr.
Covers for Der Orchideengarten
First published in 1919 under the editorship of Karl Hans Strobl (1877 - 1946), an Austrian writer of dark and unusual horror tales who also was the publisher together with Alfons von Czibulka, it ran until 1921. Der Orchideengarten was more than a magazine devoted to the fantastic; appropriately founded in the year that across the ocean, Charles Fort would publish his Book of the Damned, the magazine too, devoted space to anomalous phenomena: “…we no longer dismiss as nonsense all things that are not explicable in terms of the known laws of physics. Mysterious connections between human beings, independent of spatial and temporal separation, spooks, the appearance of ghosts, all are again in the realm of the possible…” as the editorial in the second issue of Der Orchideengarten explained.
scanned by Will Schofield. on or before 2006/ via dieschwarzesonne
Tantric Rug with Two Flayed Male Figures, 18th - 19th century, Tibet, wool cotton and dye.
janet nungnik, "best friends," 2005, wool felt, embroidery floss & caribou hide on wool duffel