Cloudsnvrgetold
noise dept.
we're not kids anymore.
Not today Justin
RMH
Misplaced Lens Cap
will byers stan first human second
YOU ARE THE REASON
wallacepolsom
Show & Tell

JBB: An Artblog!
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Jules of Nature
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art blog(derogatory)
Sade Olutola
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
cherry valley forever
styofa doing anything

Origami Around
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@picassoscousin
Cloudsnvrgetold
Back again.
She was called Phillis, because that was the name of the ship that brought her, and Wheatley, which was the name of the merchant who bought her. She was born in Senegal.
In Boston, the slave traders put her up for sale: “She's 7 years old! She will be a good mare!”
At thirteen, she was already writing poems in a language that was not her own. No one believed that she was the author. At the age of twenty, Phillis was questioned by a court of eighteen enlightened men in robes and wigs.
She had to recite passages from Virgil and Milton and some verses from the Bible, and she also had to vow that the poems she had composed were not copied. From a chair, she underwent her lengthy examination, until the court approved her: she was a woman, she was Black, she was enslaved, but she was a poet.
Phillis Wheatley was the first African-American writer to publish a book in the United States.
✍🏾: Black History Studies
nobody better be posting about the met gala without mentioning the giant pro-palestine demonstration going on outside
African dance from Cartagena in the parade of the great parade of the Barranquilla carnival. February 14, 2010, Jairo Castilla/REUTERS Barranquilla Carnival - Colombia
Karel Otto Hrubý - Praga, 1951
Dalibor Levicek
Hama-rikyu gardens, Tokyo, 2020 - by Vesa Pihanurmi (1967), Finnish
Shy Montana
Fahd Belaid, Francia
COLMAN
www.beau-gar.tumblr.com
Isaac Yu
Chicago, Photo by Wayne Sorce, 1966-71
Antoni P.
Untitled