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  • omgthatdress:

Hat
Elsa Schiaparelli, 1937
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
    145 notes
    cavetocanvas:

Maxfield Parrish, Figure, 1897
    413 notes
    collageartbyjesse:

wafa a+b zine #11
in collaboration with wafa collective http://wearefuckingawesome.org/main/current-activity/wafajesse-treece/
    30 notes
    fuckyeah-arthistory:

The Garden of Earthly Delights, Hieronymus Bosch, 1503-1504
(Submitted by mushaboooom)
    860 notes
    lustik:

Tree restorations,  Landart biennale Valkenswaard (NL) 2010 With yarn and stitches repaired tree  - Hannah Streefkerk via Cuarto derecha
    95 notes
    fuckyeah-arthistory:

Assuming Nuded Appearance - Henry Darger
    89 notes
    cavetocanvas:

David Hockney, Man Taking Shower in Beverly Hills, 1964
    179 notes
    cavetocanvas:

David Hockney, Portrait Surrounded by Artistic Devices, 1965
    73 notes
    -cannibals:

Paintings by Jean-François Lauda. Montreal.
    9 notes
    fuckyeah-arthistory:

T.B. Harlem - Alice Neel, 1940
From the National Museum of Women in the Arts:

The subject of this painting is Carlos Negrón, the brother of Alice Neel’s lover, José Santiago. He was twenty-four years old at the time and had come to live in New York’s Spanish Harlem from his native Puerto Rico two years earlier. Tuberculosis runs rampant in poor, overcrowded urban neighborhoods, and in 1940 the available treatments were few and drastic. The bandage on Negrón’s chest covers the wound where surgeons removed eleven ribs in an attempt to drain fluid.
Like the German expressionist painters whom she admired, Neel has deliberately distorted the figure, elongating Negrón’s neck and arms and using heavy, dark outlines to emphasize and flatten the forms. The sick man’s face expresses both suffering and a kind of sensuality, while his pose and the gesture of his right hand call to mind traditional images of the martyred Christ.
Although it is certainly empathetic, Neel’s painting is not sentimental. Like so many of her portraits of neighbors from this period, it makes a political point about the underclass without sacrificing the subject’s individuality.
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