Do you make mini rollo pins? Or stickers I would put those suckers all over my art desk
Ah, it would be fun to make tbh :') Unfortunately I don't have any-
But ! I do have a bunch of twst stickers !!
My friends and I got refused as exhibitors for a convention this december 😔 (sent this pic to showcase my merch) I was planning to put the rest of my stock to sell online after that con but yeah... I might do that earlier, I just have to figure out how all of this works... 🫠 But I could put a mini rollo in the mail w/ the stickers or any mini guy shitpost style !
(Yea ruggie is massive compared to the other guys lmao)
There are two main characteristics that distinguish the robe l'anglaise or "tight-back" gown from the robe à la Française. First, while both have a silhouette focused on expansion at the hips, it was achieved with the use of delicate gathers, not panniers. As a result, the English gown has a less extreme silhouette.
The second attribute that differentiates the robe à la Française from its English counterpart is that the robe l'anglaise had a fitted bodice and back, rather than the 'sack back' of the robe à la Française with its box pleats, sometimes referred to as "Watteau pleats" .
Both styles featured skirts that opened in front to reveal a petticoat. Both also featured a funnel-shaped bodice. The English gown sometimes showed variations of the bodice as shown in the yellow and green gown below.
And speaking of "Watteau pleats", below is a painting detail from a work by the Rococo master himself, featuring a pink robe à la française. See my post on the robe à la française here.
L' Enseigne de Gersaint (The Shop Sign of Gersaint) • detail • 1720-1721
Robe à la française • Brocaded silk and linen • 1765-1770 • Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Robe l'anglaise with a same fabric pettycoat (with funnel-shaped bodice)
Robe à l’anglaise with a solid jacquard-woven petticoat in a complimentary color (without the funnel-shaped bodice) • c. 1775
Picasso Masterpiece 'Femme à la montre' Sells for $139 Million at Auction
A Picasso masterpiece entitled “Femme à la montre” fetched more than $139 million on Wednesday, becoming the second most valuable work by the artist ever sold at auction.
The 1932 oil painting took center-stage at a two-day event at Sotheby’s in New York, at the sale of late philanthropist Emily Fisher Landau’s private collection.
The piece, which measures 51¼ x 38 inches (130 x 96.5 centimeters), depicts Picasso’s lover and “golden muse” Marie-Thérèse Walter, who featured in many of his portraits.
According to the auction house, the portrait is from one of the most prolific years of the Spanish artist’s career, which was the subject of an entire exhibition organized by the Musée Picasso in Paris and London’s Tate Modern in 2018.
In a statement announcing the sale in September, Julian Dawes, Sotheby’s head of Impressionist & Modern Art for the Americas, said: “Picasso’s ‘Femme à la Montre’ is a masterpiece by every measure. Painted in 1932 — Picasso’s ‘annus mirabilis’ — it is full of joyful, passionate abandon yet at the same time it is utterly considered and resolved. Its bold primary colors sing from the five-foot-tall-canvas.”
Picasso first met Walter in Paris in 1927 when she was 17 years old and he was still married to his first wife, Olga Khokhlova, a Russian-Ukrainian ballet dancer. Walter would become the inspiration for some of his most sought-after canvases, drawings and sculptures.
As time went on, Picasso found it increasingly difficult to hide his feelings for Walter from his work — something that became clear during his first large-scale retrospective and finally ended his marriage.
The artist painted “Femme à la montre” in August 1932, soon after the retrospective at the Galerie Georges Petit in Paris ended.
According to Sotheby’s, “the sense of release from keeping secrets about his affair seem to have spilled out onto this extraordinary canvas, in which he gives full painterly rein to new-found freedoms, drenching the painting in strong primary colors and beautiful forms, while at the same time paying careful attention to every small detail, creating a composition that is both intensely complex and deeply harmonious.”
Picasso died in 1973, and Walter in 1977.
The painting is one of about 120 from the collection of Fisher Landau, a world renowned contemporary art collector who died earlier this year aged 102, according to The Art Newspaper.
The two-part sale, which concludes Thursday, also includes works by Mark Rothko, Andy Warhol, Willem de Kooning and Georgia O’Keeffe. The collection is expected to sell for over $400 million overall. Other big-ticket items auctioned on Wednesday included one of Jasper Johns’ iconic American flag paintings, which went for $41 million, and an Ed Ruscha artwork — an oil painting emblazoned with the word “Boss” — that fetched more than $39.4 million.
Fisher Landau began seriously collecting after receiving an insurance payout following an armed robbery of her jewelry at her New York home in 1969.
In an interview for an exhibition catalog, quoted in the Sotheby’s statement, she said of the episode: “Even though Lloyds of London paid up, there was no way to replace that collection. It was so beautiful. And they got it in one fell swoop…. I was devastated. But I decided that I didn’t want the jewelry any more. I now had seed money for a collection.”
Last year, Picasso’s most curious painting of Walter, in which she appears as a tentacled sea creature, sold for $67.5 million at Sotheby’s in New York.
Picasso’s portraits of Walter have become highly sought-after, with his other 1932 works “Femme assise près d’une fenêtre (Marie-Thérèse),” selling for $103.41 million in 2021, and “Nude, Green Leaves and Bust,” selling for $106.5 million in 2010.
In May 2015, Picasso’s “Les femmes d’Alger (Version “O”) sold at Christie’s in New York for $179.4 million — at that time, the highest price ever paid for a work of art at auction.
By Lianne Kolirin.
Pablo Picasso
Femme à la montre
Signed Picasso (upper left); inscribed Boisgeloup and dated 17 Août XXXII. (on the stretcher).
oil on canvas.
Executed on 17 August 1932.
51 ⅛ by 38 ⅛ in. 130 by 97 cm.
I just want one of the D&D campaigns I was part of, to play just once; please let me see a campain, past brainstorming and character creation.
Regarless of my woes, this is Calypso, a drow wizard because no one stopped me. She would have joined the adventuring party after they borrowed one of her books, to “ensure its safety” (she wants to watch them fight monsters, but she’s not going to tell them that).
There are Lunar Chronicles artists active here so I was wondering if any if you was selling TLC-inspired stickers ? On etsy or any platform that ships internationally maybe ?