Bathroom Styles, 1995
y tu mamá también (2001) dir. alfonso cuarón
Gustav Klimt, The Kiss // Robert Winthrop Chanler, Leopard and Deer
some of my favourite vídeo essays about art history:
whose migrant mother was this? the story of the native american woman who became the face of the 1930s depression (and got almost nothing for it)
bauhaus design is everywhere, but its roots are political how even a simple choice between what font to use can be a political act
edvard munch: what a cigarette means munch + tobacco = art? (yes we’re still on the topic of art as a political weapon)
art that was never finished how great masters sometimes even didn’t finish stuff. also! the history behind the colour aquamarine
fka twigs on mary magdalene (if you like asmr you’re gonna love this)
having a coke with frank ohara (technically not art history but this video is too good for me not to mention)
video postcard: woman at her toilette a quick dive into my favourite painting of woman impressionist berthe morisot
this documentary about georgia o´keeffe (that ive seen about 10 times)
david hockney on vincent van gogh on love of nature, beauty, attention, and the art of looking (essentially a mary oliver poem in interview format!!!!)
Pudding à la Mode / Fruit Cup
Kimsooja, To Breathe - A Mirror Woman, 2006 - 2009 Palacio de Cristal Madrid Kewenig Gallery
Late Meiji-era perfume and toiletries bottles
1910s
where is my mind
joan steiner in art to wear - julie schafler dale (1986)
Giant Skeletons by Jocelin Carmes
This artist on Instagram
"Studies of sedentary flesh, painted by men who'd never been there. These pictures were supposed to be erotic, and I thought they were, at the time; but I see now what they were really about. They were paintings about suspended animation; about waiting, about objects not in use. They were paintings about boredom. But maybe boredom is erotic, when women do it, for men."
Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale
Frank Dicksee, Leila (1892) / John William Godward, The Favourite (1901) / Thomas Couture, The Romans in their Decadence (1847) / Frederic Leighton, Flaming June (1895)