Marchesa Luisa Casati by Man Ray, 1922
© 2003 Man Ray Trust

seen from Myanmar (Burma)

seen from Spain

seen from Myanmar (Burma)
seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from T1
seen from United Kingdom
Marchesa Luisa Casati by Man Ray, 1922
© 2003 Man Ray Trust
Hello uhm I need an explanation on the shark costume thing lmfao I’m dying 😭🙏
This is for you and for @sunflower-nebula bc they asked a related question in the tags, but the shark and prime minister bits were mentioned in Altered. We never actually get to read a story about these events happening. Natsume mentions them when he's reminiscing about the summer of friendship he spent with the eccentrics during one of his monologues. (Of Heaven or Hell Chap 18)
what IS a floating artistic moon exactly
For why.
😔
Postcard showing the plant corridor, one of a series of underground tunnels at Welbeck Abbey, Nottinghamshire
“They’re a little eccentric” is a phrase I suspect most of us have heard used to describe a certain kind of memorable person. For me, it evokes my childhood dentist — an elderly man who favored colorful bow ties and humming loudly as he worked, and who once wagged his finger in my face and […]
But what do we really mean when we call someone eccentric? The word renders a verdict of harmlessness: A person’s style, conduct, or mannerisms may be memorable, but not concerning. And truthfully, we need people who are a bit of a character (to use an equally common euphemism). Their difference reinforces our sense of stability, their peculiarity a necessary splash of color in a landscape of conformity. We love to hear about them, to speculate why they are as they are — the odder, the better. Whether in documentaries like Grey Gardens or the five stories collected here, well-reported tales of quirkiness always invoke a small thrill, vaulting their subjects out of the realm of local gossip and into a wider imagination.
However, it’s no accident that every entry here concerns individuals who are, to varying degrees, rich or famous. The sad truth is that the lives of the everyday working class are seldom celebrated, and least of all those whose habits and personalities fall outside of the bounds of “normal.” To quote a character in Ellen Raskin’s novel The Westing Game, “the poor are crazy, the rich just eccentric.” Wealth affords many privileges in life, among them the indulgence of oddity, and such indulgence is only magnified in the face of celebrity. Behavior that would be considered problematic becomes acceptable, even admired as a natural by-product of genius.
Check out “Pawns, Puppet Heads, and Paranoia,” Chris Wheatley’s quirky new reading list on eccentrics!
Today I attended a Tiki Community Holiday Bazaar, which is exactly what it sounds like: a subgroup of vintage afficionados with an interest in midcentury Tiki Culture, buying and selling tiki-themed stuff (clothes, art, barware, a mug shaped like a female tit; the usual stuff you find at these places). Much like the people who attend the Art Deco Society's Great Gatsby Summer Picnic, these people go hard. Like, dial it up to 12 hard. While the latter event is like walking onto a film set for Out of Africa or Downton Abbey, the former is like living in an episode of Mrs. Maisel; I've been to some of their homes and they are, simply put, a live-in Enchanted Tiki Room.
So I stick out like a '30s goth librarian with an interest in archaeology and Egyptomania. As you do.
Anyway, today I went to this bazaar (held at a local tiki bar, of course) wearing what for me is a normal outfit: black trousers, floral blouse (a nod to the occasion) and this really fun black crepe '20s-style coat that I found recently. I met up with the group of folks I'm...not friends with, exactly, but friendly with...and of course they were all dressed to the nines in true vintage Hawaiian wear, looking fabulous as always. (The work these people put into their looks, my god. You think I'm fancy...!) They all complimented my outfit, because they are decent people.
And then this one gal looks closely and goes,
"Is that a Crow pin?"
Because I was wearing this lapel pin:
Because it's cool.
Me: "Yes."
Her: "Oh that's right, you're completely obsessed with that movie."
Now I have mentioned that I love The Crow maybe...three times to this group of people? Because they're not that kind of nerd. This gal always brings it up when I'm around, for some reason.
Me: "That's right."
Her: "It's so funny that you're so obsessed with it that you wear the jewelry."
What I wanted to say: "It's funny that you're so obsessed with the tiki aesthetic that you've built your entire identity around it."
What I actually said: "Darling, if you think that this is obsessive, you ain't seen nothing yet."
You don't get to tease me for liking something when you've built your entire identity around another. You stay in your fandom, I'll stay in mine.
Lord.