assa myriam by harley weir for vogue italia jan 2018
Miles Davis by Irving Penn
The bagh naka is a claw-like weapon from India designed to fit over the knuckles or be concealed under and against the palm. It consists of four or five curved blades affixed to a crossbar or glove, and is designed to slash through skin and muscle. It is believed to have been inspired by the armament of big cats, and the term bagh naka itself means tiger’s claw in Hindi. (Source)
Candy-eating French Bees - Bees in France eating sugar from a nearby M&M factory began producing blue honey
hand/lighting practice
hands tell stories
Frank Ocean for Boys Don’t Cry Magazine, Issue 1.
Τοπίο στην ομίχλη landscape in the mist (1988), theo angelopoulos
Annette Lemieux’s Left Right Left Right consists of thirty photographs of raised fists—ten different images, each printed three times—nailed to wooden poles like poster placards. Some of the fists belong to famous political and cultural figures, including Martin Luther King Jr., Richard Nixon, and Jane Fonda. Others are anonymous: the fist of a sailor, a preacher, a concertgoer at Woodstock. Together they suggest the united front of a political demonstration whose cause remains unspecified. Taken out of context, the individual fists could be raised in celebration, anger, or solidarity.
Annette Lemieux (b. 1957), Left Right Left Right, 1995. Photo lithographs and pine poles, dimensions variable. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Print Committee 2001.176a–dd
“How to Never Look Tired Again” photographed by Donna Trope for Glamour February 2014
Fashion Editor: Maggie Mann