Bela Lugosi and Greta Gynt in Dark Eyes Of London 1939 aka The Human Monster
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Bela Lugosi and Greta Gynt in Dark Eyes Of London 1939 aka The Human Monster
"Portrait du Graveur Emile Laboureur" sculpture de Chana Orloff en bois (1921) au sein de “La Piscine” de Roubaix - Musée d'Art et d'Industrie André Diligent - de l'architecte Albert Baert (1927-32), octobre 2024.
This sculpture by Chana Orloff playfully recalls Auguste Rodin’s “The Kiss.” The frank depiction of sexuality in Rodin’s nudes scandalized Victorian-era viewers. Four decades later, “The Dancers” is equally provocative: Orloff uses the heavy angular style of modern architecture to depict a scene of everyday sexuality, rarely a subject of monumental sculpture. See both artworks now at the Rodin Museum in "Rethinking the Modern Monument" through January 2.
"The Dancers (Sailor and Sweetheart)," 1923 (cast 1929), by Chana Orloff © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris
Orloff (1989)
Gregory Orloff, Richard Norton Gallery, LLC.
The Grapes Of Death
If Tumblr dies and you are looking for me...
I’ll be all around in the dark. I’ll be everywhere - wherever you look.
Wherever there’s a fight for hungry Cannibals to eat,
I’ll be there.
Wherever there’s an Omega Cop beatin’ up a guy,
I’ll be there.
Wherever there’s a movie with Zombie in the title,
I’ll be there.
Wherever Jess Franco Zooms,
I’ll be there.
Wherever a kind person is rewinding a tape,
I’ll be there.
Wherever a Kaiju is stomping on a Model city,
I’ll be there.
Wherever you see nipple tassels twirling around,
I’ll be there.
Wherever you see Godfrey Ho Ninjas fight to the death,
I’ll be there.
Wherever you see a Les Yeux Sans Visage rip-off,
Look in their eyes, Ma,
And you’ll see me.
Visite-conférence des "Ateliers-Musée Chana Orloff" par la petite-fille de l'artiste, dans son atelier-maison conçu par l'architecte Auguste Perret (1926), Villa Seurat, quartier de Montsouris, Paris, mars 2024.
Visite-conférence des "Ateliers-Musée Chana Orloff" par la petite-fille de l'artiste, dans son atelier-maison conçu par l'architecte Auguste Perret (1926), Villa Seurat, quartier de Montsouris, Paris, mars 2024.