Lilith
Her Story
Lilith
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i12bent:

Edward Steichen: The Little Round Mirror, 1901, printed 1905 - Gum bichromate over platinum print (The Met) & In Memoriam (Musée d’Orsay)
Met text:
“Seductive and sinister, The Little Round Mirror and In Memoriam were made in Paris in 1901 as part of a series of nudes that combine classical artistic tropes with the moody, attenuated style of the contemporary Symbolist movement. The creation of these prints required diligent, time-consuming darkroom work and multiple photographic printing processes—a fact somewhat at odds with their seemingly spontaneous, gestural appearance. In both pictures, Steichen applied layers of dark pigment, obscuring and masking the identity of his model and transforming her into an aesthetic element in harmony with the rest of the picture.
Even though Steichen suppressed any semblance of individuality here, the woman who stood for these pictures was probably the enigmatic “Rosa,” Steichen’s lover, who followed him to Paris in 1901. Their relationship deteriorated, and sometime after Steichen’s engagement to Clara Smith, Rosa committed suicide. Although this backstory had no bearing on what Steichen hoped to convey in his pictures, The Little Round Mirror, with its admonition of narcissistic tendencies, and the presciently elegiac In Memoriam tell a tale that is almost as dark as the tragedy of the young model.”
i12bent:

Edward Steichen: The Little Round Mirror, 1901, printed 1905 - Gum bichromate over platinum print (The Met) & In Memoriam (Musée d’Orsay)
Met text:
“Seductive and sinister, The Little Round Mirror and In Memoriam were made in Paris in 1901 as part of a series of nudes that combine classical artistic tropes with the moody, attenuated style of the contemporary Symbolist movement. The creation of these prints required diligent, time-consuming darkroom work and multiple photographic printing processes—a fact somewhat at odds with their seemingly spontaneous, gestural appearance. In both pictures, Steichen applied layers of dark pigment, obscuring and masking the identity of his model and transforming her into an aesthetic element in harmony with the rest of the picture.
Even though Steichen suppressed any semblance of individuality here, the woman who stood for these pictures was probably the enigmatic “Rosa,” Steichen’s lover, who followed him to Paris in 1901. Their relationship deteriorated, and sometime after Steichen’s engagement to Clara Smith, Rosa committed suicide. Although this backstory had no bearing on what Steichen hoped to convey in his pictures, The Little Round Mirror, with its admonition of narcissistic tendencies, and the presciently elegiac In Memoriam tell a tale that is almost as dark as the tragedy of the young model.”
paintasyoulike:

Minoan Snake Goddess
thememoryofacolor:

Emmet Gowin
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thelivingwiccan:

Words cannot express how much I adore pomegranates.
nestoftheredbird:

John Christopher Borrero’s Lilith (2007)
"          you are
like a bird in my hands
          vulnerable
as only desire could make you vulnerable
that exquisite pain with which we touch one another
that surrender in which we know
the abandon of victims

pleasure like a tongue
licks us           devours us
and our eyes burn out
          are lost"
Veronica Volkow; from “The Beginning” (translated by Martha Christina)
colourthysoul:

Nikolai Kalmakov - Woman with Serpents
undr:

Peter Henry Emerson
British, East Anglia, England, 1886 (Gathering Water-Lilies)
redlilith:

ready, but so so so so tired of fighting
101 by ~isawthebirdstoday
Eefje Schuurkes

Diana F+Lomography X-Pro Slide 200120 filmcross processedcolour splashdouble exposure
"Medusa’s story tells how the powerful female, whimsical and destructive and incomprehensible and unpurged from matriarchal origin, having her own gaze, was subjected as a repulsive image of castration and embodiment of the lack. The impossibility of explaining and understanding her led Poseidon to rape her and Perseus to murder her. Elimination of the powerful female and the possibility of her subjectivity is justified as the hero constructs her differentiated and unclaimable nature as horrific and monstrous in order to destroy her."
Susan Bowers, from Medusa and the Female Gaze (via fuckyeahfeministartandliterature)
funandfandom:

by Svetlin Vassilev
farewellophelia:

Lillah McCarthy as Jocasta in ‘Oedipus Rex