STOP FEELING PAIN

ART PUNK. STRONG WILLED NIHILIST STRICKEN WITH MELANCHOLY % PRETENTIOUS

the-milk-eyed-mender:

mooglemisbehaving:

tyndall-blue:

riskycuriosity:

artemisiumabsinthia:

Josephine Baker, later known as ‘Bronze Venus’, ‘Black Pearl’ and ‘Créole Goddess’ was born in America in 1906 and later moved to France to become a singer, dancer, and actress. She was the first African-American woman to star in a major motion picture, and became famous worldwide.

Though she grew up as a maid in wealthy white households she eventually became an exotic dancer in France, famously appearing in next to no clothing, and became a French citizen in 1937. 

Ernest Hemingway referred to Baker as ‘the most sensational woman anyone ever saw’ and she received approximately 1500 marriage proposals in her life time. She became a muse for Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Pablo Picasso, and Christian Dior. She had a variety of exotic pets including a cheetah named Chiquita, a chimpanzee named Ethel, a pig named Albert, a snake named Kiki, a goat, a parrot, parakeets, fish, three cats, and seven dogs. 

When WWII broke out, Baker became a volunteer spy for France, and assisted the French Resistance by smuggling messages written in invisible ink on sheet music. She made great efforts to aid those in danger of enemy attack, sent Christmas presents to French soldiers, and smuggled information she gathered in Spain back to France by pinning notes containing the information on the inside of her underwear. She was awarded the Medal of Resistance with Rosette and later named a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour. 

Baker also aided many civil rights movements by refusing to perform to segregated audiences and storming out of a club in Manhattan with actress Grace Kelly after she was refused service. She worked with the NAACP and spoke at a Washington march alongside Martin Luther King Jr. as the only official female speaker. Baker was actually asked by Martin Luther King Jr.’s widow to take his place as leader of the American Civil Rights Movement, but Baker declined on the grounds her twelve adopted children ‘were too young to lose their mother’. 

Baker died in 1975, four days after her final show, attended by such names as Mick Jagger, Shirley Bassey, and Liza Minnelli. 

Oh and she was queer and had a relationship with Frida Kahlo. All around badass.

I’d like a movie about her life too, please.

wasn’t she doing it with frida AH YES THANK YOU RISKYCURIOSITY

(via blackmagicsugarshrooms)

museumuesum:

Damian Ortega
Modulo de construccion de tortillas, 1998
corn tortillas, 6 x 14.2 x 14.5 in inches

museumuesum:

Damian Ortega

Modulo de construccion de tortillas, 1998

corn tortillas, 6 x 14.2 x 14.5 in inches

(via novemberpark89)

A special message for my followers.

lacigreen:

ducksmith:

999999996699666699669999999999699999999996699999999
996666996699666699666666996666666669966666996666666
996669966699666699666666996666666669966666996666666
996699666699666699666666996666666669966666999999999
996666996699666699666666996666666669966666666666699
996666699699666699666666996666666669966666666666699
999999996699999999666666996666666669966666999999999

Press Ctrl and F, type in 99 and then press “Highlight all”.

image

(via ddaniell)

skeptikhaleesi:

Some interesting info: This is very reminiscent of the Baby X experiments, in which it was discovered that people reacted differently to a baby’s behavior depending on whether or not they believed the baby to be male or female.  People were asked to watch a video of a baby reacting to a startling image (a Jack-in-the-box popping up), and describe the baby’s emotional state.  When people believed the baby to be female, they described the baby as being scared and upset; when they thought the baby was male, they perceived the baby to be angry.  This was very telling, as it showed that literally identical behavior could be construed differently based on the perceived gender of the subject.

skeptikhaleesi:

Some interesting info: This is very reminiscent of the Baby X experiments, in which it was discovered that people reacted differently to a baby’s behavior depending on whether or not they believed the baby to be male or female.  People were asked to watch a video of a baby reacting to a startling image (a Jack-in-the-box popping up), and describe the baby’s emotional state.  When people believed the baby to be female, they described the baby as being scared and upset; when they thought the baby was male, they perceived the baby to be angry.  This was very telling, as it showed that literally identical behavior could be construed differently based on the perceived gender of the subject.

(via jeggifer)

cartoonsandshitt:

jerkin in an hd city HUAGALUAGHALUG (preview from a new jerk city hd I’m working on)

cartoonsandshitt:

jerkin in an hd city HUAGALUAGHALUG
(preview from a new jerk city hd I’m working on)