
★
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

No title available
Cosmic Funnies
Jules of Nature

Product Placement

oozey mess
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Three Goblin Art
h
$LAYYYTER
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

Andulka
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Peter Solarz
taylor price
tumblr dot com
will byers stan first human second
RMH

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from France

seen from Sri Lanka

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Singapore

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
@phobiant
send me your name and i'll tell you about someone i knew with that name
“I am tired of myself tonight. I should like to be somebody else.”
— Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (via luthienleithian)
zoras_daughter
I water you, you water me; we grow together.
#BBC Sound Effects department, 1927
Noise Night with the boys
love the guy just straight up holding a gun
he’s there to kill anyone who tries making any of the forbidden sound effects
I aspire to be an elegant woman who is well read, fluent in many languages, who takes frequent trips to the ballet and opera, knowledgeable in art, dances the night away at galas and balls, who always smells exquisite and dresses magnificently. I can’t wait to be this woman.
-soieange
A hoodie with your favorite person’s smell>>>
Gustave Courbet, Le Sommeil,1866.
Le Sommeil [The Sleepers], which depicts two women entwined in a post-coital embrace, caused a stir when it was first shown in the 1870s. The police were called in, and the painting was not shown again until the 1980s. But its brief showing had an influence on a number of contemporary artists, and helped challenge the taboos associated with lesbian relationships. For modern audiences it’s a good reminder that people in the 19th century were not ignorant of lesbian relationships, as we tend to believe. And it’s pretty damn sexy, don’t you think?
They called the police on this lesbian painting.
The best part is, the lesbian embrace isn’t even the biggest thing that made the painting so controversial, it was the art style. People in the artistic community at the time were wholly familiar with sapphic relationships being portrayed in art, but were used to these scenes being portrayed in the ‘academic art’ style, which consisted of smooth, simplistic, idealised versions of the nude female form. This often went hand in hand with the depiction of Roman & Greek allegories to illustrate certain ideals (think Cabanel’s Birth of Venus). Courbet’s journey into realism was met by heavy critique from the academic movement, as the women he painted were, well, more realistic. Leaving in details such as the rolls of fat around the ribs acted as a blunt reminder to the audience that these were not euphoric goddesses caressing in ecstasy, but ordinary women having a nap together after making love. Other realist paintings suffered the same controversy, Manet’s Olympia is a perfect example, where the problem was not that the painting depicted a nude woman in an erotic pose, but the fact that she was just an ordinary courtesan, given an identity & portrayed in a place of power & control. Realism humanized the female form in art, & removed it from its previous role as a representation of the ideal.
So what disgusted people about the painting wasn’t so much that Le Sommeil depicted two women, but rather that it depicted two ‘real’ women.
Artist: So I painted a couple of lesbians in bed.
Men: Niiiiiiiiiice
Artist: They have cellulite
Men: I AM CALLING THE POLICE
Palace of Versailles in France
Ballroom at Schaezlerpalais in Augsburg | Germany