I'm in quite a depressive state. If anyone wants to talk, I would appreciate it
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Jennifer Armentrout getting fed up with all the Poppy discourse and using Crown of Gilded Bones to officially & explicitly state that Poppy is fat has me LIVING on this Sunny Tuesday morning. @ all of you I don’t ever want to see a skinny Poppy on my dash again, this is a threat.
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i have a question: are we all just rewatching twilight while in quarantine? is that what we're all doing now?
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Eleanor Hardiman
eleanorhardiman.co.uk
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Leia Organa died doing what she loved most: inconveniencing Palpatine.
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Maxfield Parrish, Daybreak, 1922.
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Godesses of night in paintings part 2.
Jules Louis Machard (French, 1839-1900)
Pierre-Narcisse Guérin (French, 1774-1833)
Carl Schweninger, Jr. (Austrian, 1854-1903)
[part 1.]
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L'étreinte (The Embrace)
Jean Frédéric Schall
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Charles Amable Lenoir
French, 1860-1926
“Death of Sappho” (detail)
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To Paint while Listening to the Song of the Fairies
John Duncan (1866-1945), Scottish painter and illustrator.
Coming from a rather modest background, this artist will, according to the sensibilities, be described as simply mystical or, more roughly, as "crazy", admitting to listen to music created by the fairies while painting.
In fact, although anchored in Pre-Raphaelism, John Duncan is associated with Art Nouveau or even with the Celtic Renaissance, while many critics associate it with Symbolism.
(Embroideries and Oil paintings details. The pictures show, in order: St. Bride, 1913 ; Tristan & Isolde, 1912 ; The farewell of Heptu to the city of Obb, unknown date ; Joan of Arc and her Scottish Guard, unknown date ; Hymn to the Rose, 1907 ; unknown, unknown date ; The taking of Excalibur, unknown date ; The Riders of the Sidhe, 1911 ; Aoife, unknown date, and finally, Baba and Billy, unknown date)
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i love when professors try to use modern slang to relate to students. my professor referred to the theater of pompey as “the place where caesar got vibe checked by a bunch of senators” and i lost it.
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Obelisk of Hatshepsut
Hatshepsut’s obelisk, sculpted from a single block of granite, soars a hundred feet above the ruins of Karnak. Defying the attempts to erase her from history, it now stands magnificently as the tallest such monument in Egypt.
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Nude, 1930, Zinaida Serebriakova
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(by YOLANDA DORDA)
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Wallace Polsom, Nature vs. Nurture (2019), paper collage, 20.8 x 24 cm.
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“Romeo and Juliet” by Sergio Cupido
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