Night in a small town, New Mexico, Joel-Peter Witkin, 2007
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BJÖRK | JUERGEN TELLER, 2007
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William Mortensen - A Family Xmas, 1914
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L.O.V.E by Evelyn Bencicova
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Stone sculptures you see on buildings are called grotesques, or if they have water coming out, gargoyles. The word gargoyle is derived from the French for throat or gullet and named after the dragon legend Gargouille (Hargreaves, 1990).
Hargreaves, J. (1990). Hargreaves New Illustrated Bestiary. Gothic Image Publications. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-906362-12-9
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Silent Screams—Notre Dame, Paris, France 2014
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The very grotesque Mr Sam Moanella!! He lives in my intestines <33
Photo credits to @ mcephotographs on insta!
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Jesse Draxler & Jen Whitaker: Beauty and the grotesque (2014)
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Cupid and Centaur in a Museum of Love, Marseille, Joel-Peter Witkin, 1992
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“LA POUPÉE (THE DOLL)”
HANS BELLMER // 1935-37
[gelatin silver print | 24.1 × 23.5 cm.]
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Grotesques of the Amiens Cathedral, Picardy region of France
French vintage postcard
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