Fra Carnevale (Bartolomeo di Giovanni Corradini), The Birth of the Virgin, 1467. Tempera and oil on wood, 44.8 x 96.2 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
hello vonnie
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Mike Driver
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
h

Love Begins

shark vs the universe
d e v o n
Today's Document

if i look back, i am lost

ellievsbear

Origami Around
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Peter Solarz

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home
seen from Russia

seen from United States

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@deeperinfurtherout
Fra Carnevale (Bartolomeo di Giovanni Corradini), The Birth of the Virgin, 1467. Tempera and oil on wood, 44.8 x 96.2 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

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Orthodox Church of Holy Spirit in Chłopiatyn, POLAND
Martine Sitbon - Spring 1994 RTW
When I was younger and more abled, I was so fucking on board with the fantasy genre’s subversion of traditional femininity. We weren’t just fainting maidens locked up in towers; we could do anything men could do, be as strong or as physical or as violent. I got into western martial arts and learned to fight with a rapier, fell in love with the longsword.
But since I’ve gotten too disabled to fight anymore, I… find myself coming back to that maiden in a tower. It’s that funny thing, where subverting femininity is powerful for the people who have always been forced into it… but for the people who have always been excluded, the powerful thing can be embracing it.
As I’m disabled, as I say to groups of friends, “I can’t walk that far,” as I’m in too much pain to keep partying, I find myself worrying: I’m boring, too quiet, too stationary, irrelevant. The message sent to the disabled is: You’re out of the narrative, you’re secondary, you’re a burden.
The remarkable thing about the maiden in her tower is not her immobility; it’s common for disabled people to be abandoned, set adrift, waiting at bus stops or watching out the windows, forgotten in institutions or stranded in our houses. The remarkable thing is that she’s like a beacon, turning her tower into a lighthouse; people want to come to her, she’s important, she inspires through her appearance and words and craftwork. In medieval romances she gives gifts, write letters, sends messengers, and summons lovers; she plays chess, commissions ballads, composes music, commands knights. She is her household’s moral centre in a castle under siege. She is a castle unto herself, and the integrity of her body matters.
That can be so revolutionary to those of us stuck in our towers who fall prey to thinking: Nobody would want to visit; nobody would want to listen; nobody would want to stay.
#it’s so so important to remember that representation is not one-size-fits-all#what is empowering to one person might be exhausting and oppressive to someone else#some people need stories about having the strength to save themselves#some people need stories about being considered worthy of being saved#some people need inspiration for their independence while others need validation that they don’t have to be able to do everything themselves#before you lash out against something PLEASE stop to consider:#is this inadequate and/or damaging representation?#or is it just something I don’t personally relate to? [X]
It’s been half a decade and I still haven’t found an articulation of the complexity of “representation” as concisely and precisely mindblowing as @hungrylikethewolfie’s here.
Frank Horvat. Anna Karina in evening gown by Nina Ricci. Paris. 1959
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The morning after the festival by Ludwig Knaus
Sólheimajökull, Iceland - Vladimir Jankijevic, 2018
Lucretia by Rembrandt van Rijn
Dutch, 1664
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
‘Galatée’ by Charles Jalabert (French, 1819-1901)

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1. Detail : Sternschnuppen, 1912, by Franz von Stuck | 2. Detail : Ophelia, 1872, by Jean-Baptiste Bertrand.
Evelyn Keyes-Larry Parks
I´m happy just to dance with you
Evelyn Keyes in THE FACE BEHIND THE MASK (1941, dir. Robert Florey)
Grigoriy Myasoyedov - We are deserted (1899)

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annie steg gerard
Herten in een bos - Adolphe Mouilleron, after Karl Bodmer - 1859 - via Rijksmuseum