Christy

16.1K posts

Christy

Christy

@mswickedtwitty

Nothing to add here, just lurking untill XShitter will implode indefinitely.

Katılım Eylül 2010
2K Takip Edilen926 Takipçiler
Christy retweetledi
Fatih Kıral
Fatih Kıral@fatih_kiral·
'Raskolnikov in his room' Illustration (1985) by Mikhail Shemyakin for Dostoevsky's ''Crime and Punishment''
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mercurian archives
mercurian archives@pearlusconi·
East of the Sun and West of the Moon: Old Tales from the North, illustrated by Kay Nielsen, 1922
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Studio Ghibli
Studio Ghibli@PhotoGhibli·
Soothing vibes of My Neighbour Totoro 🌿
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Studio Ghibli
Studio Ghibli@PhotoGhibli·
Jiji
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Titania
Titania@TitaniasRealm·
The wonderful witchy cats of Léa Chaillaud
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Birds Colour 🕊️
Birds Colour 🕊️@birdscolour56·
Some hooters to make your day…
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Titania
Titania@TitaniasRealm·
"Can you explain this gap in your resume?" Me:
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Retro Anime
Retro Anime@retro_anime·
Akira (1988)
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Nostalgia
Nostalgia@nostalgiaa·
Sailor Moon (1994)
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Nature Unedited
Nature Unedited@NatureUnedited·
Just a couple of foxes harmonizing in a duet
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Nostalgia
Nostalgia@nostalgiaa·
The Scarecrow is a Soviet Union short film directed by Rozaliya Zelma in 1990
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Jon Carling
Jon Carling@JonCarling·
moon gravity
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Jon Carling
Jon Carling@JonCarling·
The legend is true
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
A Disney artist demonstrates how animations were once created entirely by hand.
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haruka no yume【はるかのゆめ】
🇯🇵 Many people think that the 90s had the best Japanese anime. Looking at something like 1995's Ghost In The Shell, I think they might be right.
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cats with jobs 🛠
cats with jobs 🛠@CatWorkers·
I would listen to their podcast.
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Studio Ghibli
Studio Ghibli@PhotoGhibli·
Jiji from the Kiki's Delivery Service 🐈‍⬛
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Mordecai
Mordecai@MenschOhneMusil·
Han Meilin (born 1936) Deer.
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Archaeology & Art
Archaeology & Art@archaeologyart·
Comic Bats (Yatsuatari dōke kōmori). Artist: Utagawa Kuniyoshi, circa 1846. Medium: Polychrome woodblock print. Source / Collection: Richard Kruml - JapanesePrints-London. In the early 1840s, the Tokugawa shogunate passed strict censorship laws known as the Tenpō Reforms to stop luxury spending in society. The government banned ukiyo-e artists from drawing popular kabuki theater actors. Artists who broke these rules faced heavy penalties, including the destruction of their woodblocks. To get around the censorship, Kuniyoshi found a solution in humor. He began drawing the banned actors as cats, frogs, and bats. The people of Edo instantly recognized their favorite actors from the clothes and specific patterns these human-like animals wore. The artwork I'm sharing is a parody of Sukeroku Yukari no Edo Zakura, one of the most famous kabuki plays of its time. The cherry blossoms in the background serve as a visual nod to the phrase "Edo Cherry Blossoms" in the play's title. The bat on the left, with its purple headband and black appearance, plays the main character, Sukeroku. The white-bearded figure on the right takes on the role of the story's main villain, the old samurai Ikyu. In the original play, Sukeroku tries to provoke Ikyu into drawing his sword, hoping to find his stolen family heirloom sword. To anger him, he deliberately holds his pipe between his toes and offers it to him. In Japanese culture, it's an unacceptable insult to offer someone an object with your foot. The bat presenting the smoking accessory with its foot captures that iconic moment of provocation from the stage. The artist used his artistic cleverness to bypass the government bans and continued sharing the era's beloved theater scenes with the public.
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