June 27, 2023
"there are twice as many stars as usual" From Two-Headed Calf, by Gilpin

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June 27, 2023
"there are twice as many stars as usual" From Two-Headed Calf, by Gilpin
“It’s kind of the opposite, where when someone makes you feel like a gargoyle you're like ‘I'm a flower’, but when someone is like ‘you're a flower’ you're like ‘I am trash’ ”
Betty Gilpin on Off Camera with Sam Jones talking about the balance between confidence and self-loathing
Tomorrow when the farm boys find this freak of nature, they will wrap his body in newspaper and carry him to the museum. But tonight he is alive and in the north field with his mother. It is a perfect summer evening: the moon rising over the orchard, the wind in the grass. And as he stares into the sky, there are twice as many stars as usual.
Laura Gilpin ~ The Two-Headed Calf
Vaganova Ballet Academy student Sophie Gilpin in Professor Ludmila Kovaleva’s class at Diana Vishneva’s newly opened St Petersburg dance studio Context Pro.
Title: Two Tigers in a Rocky Landscape Artist: William Hodges, Sawrey Gilpin Date: c. 1785 Medium: oil on panel Size: 940 x 1093 mm Description: “While this was originally attributed to William Hodges and George Stubbs (1724-1806), it has since been suggested that the tigers were painted by Sawrey Gilpin and the landscape by Hodges. The latter had spent some time in India, and continued to explore Indian themes for some time, apparently convincing Gilpin to work on several canvasses with him. The tiger in the foreground is certainly taken from a work by Stubbs, The Tiger, painted between 1763 and 1768, which shows a single beast sitting in an identical position in a rocky lair. Stubbs often painted wild animals in exotic scenes, and indeed the present work could fairly be described as a compilation of several of his paintings, the beast entering the cave appearing first in A Lion and Lioness in a Cave, c1770. To complicate matters, Stubbs himself combined images of animals from several of his earlier works; his engraving of A Tiger and a Sleeping Leopard, 1788, shows the tiger in reverse, but with a sleeping leopard placed directly behind it. (In the eighteenth century the term 'tiger' was applied by some writers and artists to all big cats, but Hodges, Stubbs and Gilpin were more specific.) The landscape in the present painting is, however, significantly more detailed than the block-like rock forms favoured by Stubbs.” Source: Auckland Art Museum
people on tumblr really love that two headed calf poem huh
#gilpin @sircumsizzion on shuffle