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J5COWBOY.eth

J5COWBOY.eth

@J5C17

Educator, Artist, Author, Super-Collaborator. 🤠 Water-person and photographer J5cowboy.eth/tez

Central Coast, California Katılım Haziran 2021
4.8K Takip Edilen1.9K Takipçiler
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J5COWBOY.eth
J5COWBOY.eth@J5C17·
Still a favorite of mine and gets offers every day. #NewHere
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Claire Silver 🌸
Claire Silver 🌸@ClaireSilver·
🍿CONTEST UPDATE🍿 Working hard! Nearly 800 entries, many 3+ min videos, & I do several passes before writing the thread. Give me til after the weekend and I should have the final winners! Built a bot with Claude that scrapes every entry so I make sure I don’t miss any :)
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Portrait of an unidentified man that was placed over the face and upper torso of his mummy. Dated to 150–170 AD, it is painted in encaustic on a panel of linden wood, and it was originated in Roman Egypt. This remarkable portrait belongs to a group of artworks known as the Fayum mummy portraits, a tradition that flourished in Roman Egypt between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD. Unlike the stylized depictions of faces seen in earlier Egyptian funerary art, these portraits were painted in a strikingly naturalistic style, giving us lifelike glimpses of people who lived nearly 2,000 years ago. Painted in encaustic, a technique using hot wax mixed with pigment, the colors remain vivid even after centuries. The medium gave artists the ability to capture depth, texture, and warmth, preserving the humanity of their subjects with astonishing realism. In this particular piece, the curly hair, sharp eyebrows, and direct gaze make the man seem almost alive, as though he could step out of history and into the present. The portrait was originally placed over the face and chest of the deceased’s mummified body, merging Egyptian burial practices with Roman artistic sensibilities. These works represent more than individual likenesses—they reflect the cultural blending of Greek, Roman, and Egyptian traditions in a society at the crossroads of the ancient Mediterranean world. What makes the Fayum portraits so moving is the intimacy they provide. Unlike statues of emperors or gods, these images show ordinary people: merchants, soldiers, mothers, and children. Each one is a reminder that behind the ruins and relics of antiquity were lives full of stories, emotions, and identities. This man’s name may be lost to time, but his face survives as one of history’s most hauntingly personal echoes. #archaeohistories
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DeltaSauce
DeltaSauce@deltasauce·
Been one hell of a journey but currently at my lowest weight in 10 years and feeling amazing. Still have a ways to go for my overall goals. Slow and steady. 💪
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A͓̽K͓̽A͓̽ ͓̽C͓̽h͓̽A͓̽m͓̽B͓̽o͓̽™
I'm getting my main guy from my merch line tattooed on right my arm and I can't wait to show you...This will be the third brand tattoo that i will now have on my body. Got my 2 logos and now this sick robot from my work machine clothing line...
A͓̽K͓̽A͓̽ ͓̽C͓̽h͓̽A͓̽m͓̽B͓̽o͓̽™ tweet media
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tustoned
tustoned@tustont·
Test
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