pretty-weasel
pretty-weasel
fine arts & books lover
259 posts
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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The Little Mermaid by Australian artist artybel on DeviantArt, aka Belinda Morris
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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“I have been and still am a seeker, but I have ceased to question stars and books; I have begun to listen to the teaching my blood whispers to me.” ~ Hermann Hesse
♡♡♡ François-Maurice Roganeau (French painter, 1883-1973) ♡♡♡
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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John William Godward (English, 1861-1922)
A priestess of Bacchus
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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William-Adolphe Bouguereau (French, 1825-1905)
Jeune fille se dĂ©fendant contre l’Amour
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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John William Godward (English, 1861-1922)
Dolce Far Niente
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Elisabeth Finley Thomas
The Japanese Fan
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Tochinoki Hot Springs, ć·ç€Źć·Žæ°Ž Hasui Kawase, 1922
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Jean-François Portaels (Belgian, 1818-1897)
Femme orientale
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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from the book “Storms At Sea” by Mark Schultz, an American writer and illustrator of books and comics, born 1955
“Storms at Sea” is Mark Schultz’s new, heavily illustrated novella that explores the border between what we want to believe is true and the reality that we’d prefer to keep concealed. From a crime-fiction framework, it opens up into a breathtaking journey through cryptic history, cautionary science-fiction and a speculative vision of the deep future. The story is told through 31 pages of prose and 31 full-page illustrations. ~ https://www.fleskpublications.com/mark-schultz
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Agnes Noyes Goodsir
A letter from the Front / Girl on couch, 1915
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Edgar Degas
L’etoile, 1876-1877
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Henri Gervex - Rolla (1878)
Taking as his inspiration the eponymous poem of 1833 by Alfred de Musset, Gervex transposes the narrative into fashionable contemporary Paris, signalled by the wrought iron railings and view of the Haussmannised cityscape beyond, the grand boulevard backdrop recognised by some viewers as the fashionable Boulevard des Italiens. Jacques Rolla, a well-born bourgeois, has decided to spend his final night with the prostitute Marion, having squandered his fortune on a life of debauchery. The scene depicts the morning after: while Marion lies asleep, Rolla broods on his fate and contemplates suicide by jumping from the window. The model for Marion is based on several women – the actress Ellen AndrĂ©e, a favourite of Renoir, Manet and Degas (she is the sitter in Degas’ L’Absinthe of 1876) posed for the body, but demanded that a different model be used for the face.
While Musset’s poem evoked a squalid and untidy interior, ‘rideaux honteux de ce hideux rĂ©paire’, Gervex’s interpretation is altogether more chic, with a Louis XVI bed and luxurious fittings. It is both the striking modernity, and in particular the hastily-removed accoutrements piled up in the still life to the lower right, which captivated viewers at the time – in fact Degas had suggested to Gervex that these elements be included in the composition. The combination of the luxurious dress and hastily removed red corset – pulled open from the front, rather than untied carefully by Rolla from the back, the upside-down top hat, and suggestively protruding cane, appeared to tell viewers all they needed to know about the encounter and specifically Marion – suggesting she was an independent and powerful ‘fille insoumise’ in a rich district of Paris, rather than working in one of the maison closes brothels elsewhere, regulated by the state.
Although Rolla can be seen as the heir to Manet’s self-possessed Olympia of 1865, in this way the depiction of Marion herself was relatively uncontroversial – being an academically painted nude, comparable to Gervex’s other Salon paintings of the 1870s, or indeed to the nude in his tutor Alexandre Cabanel’s Naissance de VĂ©nus (fig. 1), a favourite of Napoleon III. As the critic in Le Petit Parisien noted of Rolla: ‘the young girl is nude, that’s for sure. But
 there are some nudes every year which are more nude than others’. (source)
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Sculpture by Auguste ClĂ©singer, “Woman Bitten by a Snake” (1847), and the painting by Edouard Manet, “Olympia” (1863), at the MusĂ©e d'Orsay in Paris, in September 2015. Nicolas Krief
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pretty-weasel · 3 years ago
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Edouard Manet - Olympia (1863)
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