Somebody once engaged in a so intimate relationship with that stone that it seems to be more alive in its eternal stillness than are people in their well-known fading daily gestures.
Fragments of a photoset by Vasilisablue on t.
It’s called whimsy, bitch….look it up
A piece of the abundance of graffiti on the walls of my favourite place.
Spinning In A Stand Still World
GOLDEN SKULLS Hope you like skulls… by Art Director and Creative 3D Designer BILLY BOGIATZOGLOU
“In the 1930′s, Carl Jung became interested in the ancient art of alchemy. While alchemy’s outward agenda was transmuting base metal into gold, Jung thought the alchemists’ work was also a projection of inner workings reflecting a process of maturation and development within the human psyche. Mermaids appear in alchemical texts and engravings as guides leading the alchemist on his way. An engraving in one alchemical text shows two mermaids leading the alchemist. One leads him in the direction of the baby; the other leads him to the city of God. In alchemy, the mermaid is a guide to the nature of the human mind, representing both what is human and what is animal and the necessity of reconciling the two into a coherent and lasting whole. The main difference the alchemists and others is that the alchemists saw, believed in, and followed their mermaids - even when they led in two different directions. One alchemical text contains this motto: “Let nature be your guide; follow her with your art willingly, like a footman, For you will err if she is not your companion on your way.” Jung’s wife, Emma, wrote that as a symbol the mermaid wants to ‘entangle’ us in “real relationships.” She drags a man underwater not always to drown him, but sometimes to bathe him in the waters of life.
Mermaids are symbols - and who knows, maybe actual beings - that have been with us throughout history, reminding us of our relationship to the objective world, the rhythms of nature, the sound of water crashing on a beach, the way light moves across the surface of a wide bay, and the corresponding ripples of feeling they create within us.” ~Theodore Gachot from “Mermaids: Nymphs of the Sea”
The Maiden’s Lament by Émile Vernon (French painter, 1872-1919)
And all the powers of Hell.Doodler in the NW. #draws #music #babes
300 posts