Mike Worrall, “Sculling the Forest” 1991-1996, oil on panel. B. 1942, Matlock Derbyshire, UK.

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Mike Worrall, “Sculling the Forest” 1991-1996, oil on panel. B. 1942, Matlock Derbyshire, UK.
the blue dawn by minyoung kim, 2023, jacquard woven soft tapestry, 158 × 137 × 3 centimeters
trans rights critter
in light of the uk’s recent supreme court ruling.
trans women are women. trans men are men. trans people exist regardless of your laws.
we have always existed.
stickers available on my redbubble!
Tracce II (2007) by Walter Valentini
Tonbridge Castle, Tonbridge, Kent. The gatehouse was finished in 1260 although there's been a castle on the site since the 11th century. Today only the gatehouse, motte and portions of the wall remain. The flag is the arms of the de Clare family that built the original motte and bailey.
Some castles aren't grand, iconic or even fully intact, but they're still old friends
Georg Wilson is a British painter. She received her BA in Art History at the University of Oxford, UK in 2020 and MA in Painting at the Royal College of Art, London, UK in 2022. She is a twice-recipient of the Elizabeth Greenshields award (2021 – 2022), as well as being shortlisted for the Ingram Prize (2022) and New Contemporaries (2023). Wilson’s practice explores ecology and history, translated through personal experience and folklore. Her paintings follow the seasons, so that her subject and palette changes with the turn of the year. Wilson aims to confront the historical painterly narrative of England, and she tells strange stories of an imagined landscape in which humanity is absent. Her scenes are populated with creatures, more ‘animal’ than any particular gender. Defying classification, they exist outside a human hierarchy of domination or exploitation. Wilson conjures a world of entangled, strange narratives in which we can suspend our disbelief to eventually emerge out of the undergrowth, somehow changed. source: hauserwirth . com
Edd and Yuki