Emiliana Torrini 2008
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British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) has been described as one of the Finest portraitists of the nineteenth century-in any medium. Raised in a well-connected and creative family, Cameron led an unconventional life for a woman of the Victorian age. After devoting herself to an artistic and literary salon at her home on the Isle of Wight and raising eleven children, Cameron took up photography in her late forties. Over the next fourteen years, she produced more than a thousand strikingly original and often controversial images. Her searching portraits of her friends and acquaintances, including Alfred Tennyson and Charles Darwin, have been called the world’s first close-ups.
Photo 1: The Parting of Sir Lancelot and Queen Guinevere, 1874
Photo 2: Kate Dore, 1862
Photo 3: The Passing of Authur, 1875
Photo 4: Summer Days, 1866
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you have become so delicate and vulnerable, as if you’re living without a skin
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A crab I illustrated and animated. Inspired by the Cancer zodiac~ Website | Instagram | Shop
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(via mothercain)
Madronas in the mist