My beautiful death

motherboxing:

watercolourstorm:

motherboxing:

bogleech:

strangebiology:

>Industrial waste pollutes water
>Filter feeders process waste and store toxins in their bodies
>People harvest shells for art
>Artist suffers from exposure to toxic materials, suffers for years with debilitating mental and physical symptoms. 

She will NEVER recover.

People act like environmental pollution is always something happening “somewhere else” but we’re all breathing and eating and drinking it and it should really put some shit into perspective that just having a hobby around seashells turned this woman’s household dust into a death trap.

“Hobby” ?????

oh wow i didn’t even catch that (wasn’t reading the reblogs as carefully as i should have been). 

Gillian Genser’s art is incredibly intricate, time consuming (she spent 15 years on these sculptures, often working on them up to 12 hours a day) and evocative. She gave years of her life and sacrificed her health to make these sculptures, working on them even after she became ill. It’s not a hobby around seashells, and characterizing it that way is a disservice to the incredible work this artist has put into her craft.

She writes, I’ve experienced the suffering of so many creatures trapped in their polluted habitats. I now hope their voices can be heard—that my art might create a sense of awe, a sense of connectivity and reverence for the natural world.

 I often think of Beethoven, who suffered from lead poisoning; he lost his hearing and producing his work became an angry struggle. In the end, he had to create his music from the memory of sound. I was creating my art from the memory of joy. When I look at Adam, I feel grief—both for myself and our planet. But I also feel satisfaction because he is magnificent. That’s how I find my hope. I call him my beautiful death.

This is a really good clarification and I’m glad you wrote it!

I’d also like to add that the dust produced by grinding down shells is not “household dust”. There are many artistic practices/fields that involve working with hazardous dust (for example, ceramicists need to take precautions against silicosis, an incurable, potentially fatal condition caused by inhaling ceramic dust which contains tiny tiny glass shards). Artists like Genser are aware of this; this woman is someone who went to work aware of these risks, took the workplace precautions she believed were necessary according to the accepted standards of her field, and is dying because those standard precautions (which countless artists in numerous fields rely on! Seashells are just one material artists use that comes from the earth!) are no longer adequate due to environmental degradation. Framing this as a “hobby around seashells” that produced toxic “household dust” not only is a condescending, minimizing, and frankly misogynistic way of talking about an extremely accomplished creative professional, it undersells the nature of this problem on a larger scale; this is a workplace hazard for many, many people, and it is directly tied to workers rights and safety.

My beautiful death

hrefnatheravenqueen:

hrefnatheravenqueen:

hrefnatheravenqueen:

bowiebarbie:

inediblemadness:

tinyhousedarling:

musingsofanawkwardblackgirl:

wes-eskimo:

Venus, bussin that pussy open since the renaissance

BUST IT WIDE OPEN GIRL

Let us appreciate that this is made of marble! I couldn’t make that out of clay.

I see tiny lil dicks all over the place but this is the first time I have ever seen a statue figure with a vagina. I need more of this in my life

i have NEVER seen a statue with an actual vagina. the most i’ve seen is your standard nude woman statue with her legs clamped shut. this is boss.

That’s the vulva, not the vagina, though. Also this is not from the renaissance.

I’m reblogging this again because art – not Renaissance art but still art.

NO WAIT I’LL REBLOG THIS AGAIN BECAUSE PEOPLE ALWAYS FORGET TO CREDIT THE ARTIST – WHO’S VERY MUCH ALIVE, AND SHE LIVES IN CALIFORNIA.
This piece isn’t depicting VENUS by the way, it’s depicting a contortionist, and this is a nude study. The piece is simply called “Swan”.
The artist is Jami Young. She’s proud to fly the colours of the Pride flag on her website alongside her own art.
Her website is at http://www.jyoung-studio.com .

Her Etsy page is at https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/VolupticArt . 

wetwareproblem:

captainlordauditor:

ivyadrena:

ivyadrena:

#yikes

Tumblr doubling down on Truth being “sensitive content” might just be the gold star on this dumpster fire.

they said art was allowed.

Hilariously, this now marks a pattern of “take thing that even tumblr has to admit has artistic merit, make it more political (and thus more protected under their guidelines), tumblr rejects it.”

To me, the real crown jewel of this dumpster fire is the one thing that they have in common at first glance: The phrase “female-presenting nipples.”

If I weren’t so lazy I’d make a blog and fill its queue with copies of tumblr’s own page on the change, wait for it to get flagged, and dispute each one.

(This one is absolutely funnier in every conceivable way than mine, in case it needs to be on the record. I’m not equating the two.)

ajax-daughter-of-telamon:

squiddity3:

ajax-daughter-of-telamon:

This line drawing was flagged, but not the painting it became. Weird.

New game, squint at flagged drawings and try to guess what bits the bot thought was naughty

I’ve been doing that when I can! Like, one was a moth with eyespots on its wings, so I figured it must have mistook those for areolae, but I’m stumped on this one LOL.

libutron:

Fish of Baltic Sea

While the Baltic Sea might seem boring and mundane compared to tropical oceans, it has a fairly diverse and very odd assemblage of fish. It’s the world’s largest pool of brackish water, but it’s geologically so young, there are no specialized brackish water species.

So it’s a confusing mix. There are resilient ocean species, often smaller than their oceanic counterparts and unable to breed in some parts of the sea, and just as resilient freshwater fish venturing into the salty parts. Arctic fish mixed with temperate species coming from south. Oceanic fish that once invaded fresh waters and then returned here, now unable to tolerate full ocean salinity.

Fish that give birth, fish whose males get pregnant, fish whose eyes migrate over their heads during their lifetimes, fish that build nests, fish that smell like fresh cucumber. We have everything.

Made for Sieppo, a children’s magazine published by The Finnish Association for Nature Conservation.

Black markers and Photoshop imitating watercolor.

Text and illustration: Maija Karala