Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
Cosimo Galluzzi
styofa doing anything
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

Kaledo Art
todays bird

if i look back, i am lost

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
taylor price
Peter Solarz
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Today's Document

ā

Origami Around
Stranger Things
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
dirt enthusiast

pixel skylines

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia

seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from T1
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from T1

seen from Japan

seen from Australia

seen from Mexico
seen from Greece
@moonly-moon

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Blonde hair is so romanticized and sought after and brown hair is considered plain but consider: weāve actually got eyebrows.
I think the only way to defeat Emo sparrow Ben in season three is for the umbrella academy to dress EVEN MORE EMO. Give Diego excessive eyeliner. Give Vanya side bangs. GIVE LUTHER A COLLECTION OF CHOKERS COWARDS
in my defence it was a bit i was doing your honor
Jester for the court
now look what you've done. because your joke was funnier than mine they're gonna execute me. i hope it was worth it.
god i can never stop thinking about certain sculptures used in modern art and how they can be used to elicit the beautiful and terrible feeling of true and genuine horror in ways that a lot of horror movies can never do
like when you ask peopleĀ āwhat is horror?ā theyāll tend to give examples of monsters, of killers, of dark places, of sharp teeth and too many legs and lots and lots of blood. which is true, that can be used as horror! but iād like to call that āthe horror of being eaten/hurt/killedā or more succinctly āthe horror of vulnerabilityā. itās a horror that something, whether itās a killer or a monster or some phenomenon, has the ability to cause us harm. we see large amounts of teeth and we thinkĀ āthat thing is going to tear us to pieces with those teethā or we see spilled blood and we thinkĀ āsomeone has been hurt, thereās a chance we can be hurt too by whatever spilled this bloodā.
but what certain modern sculptures can do is elicit a very physical visceral reaction of a completely different kind of horror.Ā
itās āthe horror that something is a thing that SHOULD not exist, and you are absolutely powerless to understand what it is, but it is existing in your space, right now, it is real and you cannot make it unreal no matter what you doā
or perhaps, in a shorter fashion, itāsĀ āthe horror of wrongnessā
like one of the sculptures that made me feel this way is this sculpture here, named āMonekanaā located in the American Art Museum in Washington D.C:
āokay,ā you say, with a shrug.Ā āitās a horse made of wood? whatās so scary about that?ā. but this is the lie of the photograph! a photograph of a sculpture rarely grasps the experience of standing next to a sculpture. you have to picture yourself walking into this room, practically devoid of people, and coming face to face with this sculpture that is very large and very real.
and your brain screams thatĀ āTHIS IS WRONG. MAKE IT GO AWAY. THIS IS WRONGā, like at any moment you expect it to move, to twist its head, to follow you with eyes that arenāt simply there. it looks like a horse but it is no horse. you could almost argue that maybe it isnāt even an art piece at all, but it wandered in from god knows what kind of world and itās blending in with everything else. maybe itās fooling you. maybe it isnāt.
anyways, iām not trying to say that this sculpture in particular is SUPPOSED to be scary, it may make other people feel nothing at all (or even positive feelings!), but what iām trying to say is that feeling i had that day, when i saw this thing, when i felt this fearful instinct to stay away and not stare, itās THAT feeling that i feel so many writers and makers of horror donāt completely understand. you donāt need teeth. you donāt need blood. you donāt need to make Spooky Scary Skeletons or chainsaw-wielding villains. all you need is to create something wrong in its existence, something to make parts of us fear the fact that we canāt entirely rationalize what weāre seeing.
thatās horror, to me.
@admiraloblivious
This is amazing
This post makes me think of Klaus Pinterās work:
The experience of sculpture absolutely gets lost in images. Iāve walked into museums and been like WOW THE FUCK even when I knew it was coming.
I love this subject, though. I love āimplication horror.ā You see something, and the realization of what it means, which often comes a few moments later, is where the real horror liesānot in how splattery or gratuitously shocking it is. The wrongness of a thing in fiction, when done well, is the best. I was watching Melancholia the other day, and what a terrifying example of wrongness horror.
Anyway this is such a great post thanks for putting the whole idea into words so well. <3
This is how I feel about wind turbines (I tried to walk up to one once and felt the most inexplicable terror Iāve ever felt in my life), or most things that are ridiculously large, for that matter. Ships fascinate me but make me feel very uneasy. Certain buildings, especially if they look old-timey in any way kind of freak me out.Ā
Examples: The Halifax shipyard building made me feel almost nauseous, and I have to drive past this cold storage building in Winnipeg every time I go to visit my boyfriendās parents. I do not like it one bit. Also, I got to see that sculpture of a giant newborn baby last year. That was very surreal in the way that is described here.
WHAT AMAZING ADDITIONS TO THIS POST, thank you! I didnāt know of Kalus Pinterās work and now I REALLY want to see it for myself, goodness.
Honestly, Iām so glad so many people have responded and reblogged this post with examples and stories of their own!! Itās so cool to see just what people think and perceive as this horror ofĀ āwrongnessā. I also see some people saying that this is essentially the uncanny valley effect, which is only an aspect of this kind of horror - the uncanny valley primarily deals with something we perceive that looks close to human and yet doesnāt quite make it there. Itās just one subset of a really uneasy sort of horror that can be found in so many forms, which may really honestly differ from person to person.
Overall, THIS HORROR IS WIDELY UNDERUSED IN FICTION and Iām so glad to see so many examples of it posted here!!
I feel this way about kangaroos. If you really look at a kangaroo for a minute itās deeply unsettling, theyāre bipedal and they have insane abs and they move wrong, itās too human and I get that creeping horror that this thing exists. If I look at kangaroos too long I feel like Iām going insane
Louise Bourgeoisās spider sculptures did this to me, a bit. It was less the shape than the formāthe lumpiness, the uneven shineābut mostly it was the scale. Most of these examples of horror donāt feel quite so wrong when theyāre at a scale we can look ādownā on. But when they overshadow us, or at least when they overshadow our general certainty of control, even for just a moment, the disorientation can slip suddenly into horror.
consider the Gelitin collectiveās enormous pink rabbit left to rot in the Italian alps for the next 10 years
Eoin Mc Hugh - The Ground Itself is Kind, Ā Black Butter, 2014
Kiki Smithās lilith sculpture is more humanoid but i feel like it belongs on this post because walking into the stairwell in the met and seeing this fucking thing was one of the most unnerving experiences in my life
If āthe horror of wrongnessā makes your soul sing as it does mine, read literally anything by Robert Aickman. My favorite is āThe Hospiceā.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Amputees continue to be the funniest people on the planet why are the rest of us even trying
messy thing just to get my thoughts down
And then we also have to take into account that autism can show up differently in women and is often not detected or takes years to be detected since its pattern is not as 'traditional' as the pattern men show with autism.
Got this vid on my FYP and couldnt not share it here
It feels weird when art tutorials approach āhow to draw boys!ā/āhow to draw girls!ā as if theyāre different species. Certainly study why something looks feminine/masculine to you, but donāt let it limit you!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Unhinged!Five in season 2 of TUA
i have to tell you something that will lower your entire opinion of me
when i was 12 i made flyers for my fanfiction and handed them out a train station
im blown away by the sheer confidence this act required. if anything my opinion has been raised. the poise. the fearlessness. the laughing in the face of death. iām speechless
#same energy
Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures
Star Wars: Galaxy of Adventures | āPrincess Leia - The Rescueā
PERFECT SPACE TWINS CHARACTERIZATION

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
i wonder how old iāll be when i stop throwing up peace signs when i make eye contact with people