Mimi Plumb
Life in California, 1970s

noise dept.

if i look back, i am lost
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
trying on a metaphor
Noah Kahan
Sade Olutola
occasionally subtle

Kiana Khansmith
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Mike Driver

d e v o n
KIROKAZE
🪼
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

pixel skylines
RMH

#extradirty
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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@goodbye-toallthat
Mimi Plumb
Life in California, 1970s

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Nan and Brian by Nan Goldin
I used to think that I could never lose anyone if I photographed them enough. In fact, my pictures show me how much I’ve lost.
Nan Goldin (via thequotejournals)
Nan Goldin - Self-Portrait in Blue Bathroom, London (1980)
Empty Beds by Nan Goldin (1979)

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Nobuyoshi Araki From “My Wife Yoko” series 1968 - 1976
Photo by Nobuyoshi Araki
______Nobuyoshi Araki. *
Cristina Nuñez on self portraiture as a healing practice
Je Tu Il Elle - Chantal Akerman - 1974

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Haitian migrant workers. Belle Glade, Florida, USA. 1988. - Alex Webb
© Alessandra Sanguinetti
found a new love. Herbert List (photographer) Vittorio de Sica (director)
Bruno Barbey 1986
“Every song needs an epiphany. A beginning and an end, and something changes on the way"

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May I present to you a fantastic gender-neutral surrealist photographer that history sidelined and we need to bring back called Claude Cahun (born Lucy Schwob), who said:
Shuffle the cards. Masculine? Feminine? It depends on the situation. Neuter is the only gender that always suits me.
André Breton called her “one of the most curious spirits of our time”. She exhibited alongside surrealist artists like Dalí and Man Ray.
Her work is mostly self-photography where she questions the limits of sexuality and gender, and anticipates Simone de Beauvoir’s Second Sex theory in that gender is a social construct. For example, in this work, titled Under this Mask, Another Mask. I Will Never Be Finished Removing All These Faces
She very clearly explores gender as a social mask, in which these ‘masks’ accumulate according to social context.
She explores gender in a way that isn’t bothered with defining it all. All her life, Cahun presented herself as androgynous and explored the spectrum of gender in a way that was way ahead of her time.
She lived in what would become occupied France in 1940 with her partner Suzanne Malherbe and began antifascist activity. She was arrested and sentenced to death but was liberated in 1945 by the allies. Her health never really recovered.
David Bowie was a huge fan of her, and she served as perhaps his greatest inspiration. Cahun remained unknown for most of her life until 1980, when Bowie himself commissioned an exhibition of her. About her, he said:
You could call her transgressive or you could call her a cross dressing Man Ray with surrealist tendencies. I find this work really quite mad, in the nicest way. Outside of France and now the UK she has not had the kind of recognition that, as a founding follower, friend and worker of the original surrealist movement, she surely deserves. Meret Oppenheim was not the only one with a short haircut.
Here are some of her absolutely spectacular photos for your pleasure:
Self Portrait, 1928.
Self Portrait (in Cupboard), 1932.
What do You Want From Me?, 1928
Untitled, 1939
Plate no.1 from Aveux non Avenus, 1930
[Image in header is: I’m Training, Don’t Kiss Me (unknown date)]
Claude Cahun, self portraits
Donna-Lee Phillips
- December 3, 1977, from Fragments From a Visual Journal
1977