Themes by Eris
5:40pm December 16, 2018

normal-horoscopes:

STAND OUTSIDE AT NIGHT FEEL THE COOL WIND ON YOUR SKIN AS YOUR ANCESTORS DID, COMMUNION

8:20pm December 15, 2018

violentwavesofemotion:

“It feels like I’ve got all the flames in hell burning in my head.”

Maurice Maeterlinck, from Complete Poems & Plays; “Princess Maleine,

5:40pm December 15, 2018

lifeinpoetry:

“I am not a creature that was born. I am a fire that was set.”

Moss Angel The Undying, from Sea-Witch Vol. 2: Girldirt Angelfog

12:00am December 15, 2018

pitbullmabari:

alextheraven:

cannibalcoalition:

durnesque-esque:

dupionianddamask:

lord-kitschener:

I mean the whole damn point of the Nativity story is that the supposed son of God (interpret Jesus how you fucking want, of course) was born to a couple of poor, exhausted peasants in the stable for the inn, and his first bed was a feeding trough for animals. That would nowadays be like a poor couple where the mother gives birth in a parking garage behind the motel because they couldn’t find a better place and nobody else would take them in. It’s a pretty gritty setting, and the idea is that God was reborn in some of the rock-bottom lowest circumstances. The only thing majestic was all the angels and shit, and of course motherly love

I get that a lot of the art portraying Madonna and Child as fabulously wealthy europeans in splendid robes and golden light was meant to glorify God + whichever nobility was sponsoring the artist, and while of course it’s genuinely beautiful art, it just always struck me as horribly missing the point, which is that the supposed son of God started in incredibly humble circumstances, among the kind of people that everyone else looks down on

image

‘Massacre des Innocents’ by Leon Cogniét, 1824. Although the Feast of the Holy Innocents is in a couple of days time, this painting is still really relevant in that it portrays Mary as how She really was: a scared refugee mum, so fearful that Her son was going to be one of the Innocents killed by King Herod.

My new favorite mordern interpretation is this work, José y Maria by Everett Patterson (http://www.everettpatterson.com)

image

I had to look at this like FIVE TIMES to register all the layers of symbolism going into the piece by Patterson. 

The hoodie as a veil. 

Weisman cigarettes

Each of them is haloed by an advertisement sticker. 

No Vacancy sign on the motel. 

Dove sticker over Maria’s head. 

Neon sign with a star symbol also over Maria’s head. 

The crown over the ‘Dave’s City Motel’ sign. “New Manger.”

The sign behind Jose’s elbow likely says ‘Herod.’

The wee little plant growing through the cracks at their feet. 

It’s like a New Testament ‘I Spy.’ I love it!


Ugh.

New favorite interpretation of the nativity. 

Ezekiel 34 15-16 on the phone

I looked up that verse and


15
I myself will tend my sheep and have them lie down, declares the Sovereign Lord.16 I will search for the lost and bring back the strays. I will bind up the injured and strengthen the weak, but the sleek and the strong I will destroy. I will shepherd the flock with justice.

Wow. The amount of detail that’s put into this piece is amazing.

8:20pm December 14, 2018

lesfressange:

                                    Atelier de Lesfressange  (Series XXII)

1. Alfred Emile Stevens - The Reader, C.1860 

2. Alfred Émile Léopold Stevens (Belgian painter, 1823- 1906 

3. František Dvořák  Lady with a book in the garden (1892)

4. Daydreaming. Fernand Toussaint (Belgian, 1873-1955)

5.  La partition (c.1910). Herman Richir (Belgian, 1866–1942)

6. Woman Reading (Laura Muntz Lyall)

7. A Gotthelf reader, 1884, Albert Anker. Swiss, (1831–1910) 

8. George Romney  Lady Hamilton as Serena Reading (ca. 1780-85) 

9. Lady Stirling Maxwell James Guthrie (1859-1930)

10. James Sant, Ida, c.1863-1941 and Ethel, c.1863-1888

8:20pm December 13, 2018

lilpieceofmyworld:

“Everyone is healing from things they don’t speak about.”

8:20pm December 12, 2018

in-case-of-snow:

❄ snowy stuff ❄

5:40pm December 12, 2018
by-grace-of-god:
“  St. Nicholas
“So many miracles were attributed to him both during his lifetime and afterwards that he became known as “Nicholas the Wonder-worker”. One early story tells how a nobleman who had three daughters had fallen on such...

by-grace-of-god:

St. Nicholas

“So many miracles were attributed to him both during his lifetime and afterwards that he became known as “Nicholas the Wonder-worker”. One early story tells how a nobleman who had three daughters had fallen on such hard times that he was unable to afford even food for himself. Unable to provide a dowry for his daughters and thereby provide for their futures, he determined to sell them in prostitution so they would at least be able to afford food. Nicholas, when he heard of the man’s plight, went to his house secretly and threw in three bags of gold, enough for each daughter’s dowry".

- Icon by Theophilia