Build a cheap car bed for your VW Caddy yourself. With our instructions you can build your bed for your car in a short time.
Título: La protectora Autor: Keko (guion y dibujo) Editorial: Edicions de Ponent Fecha de edición: septiembre de 2011 64 páginas (b/n) LA PROTECTORA, KEKO Este cómic, ilustrado por José Antonio Godoy (Keko), está inspirado por Otra vuelta de tuerca de Henry James. Es la primera adaptación al cómic de una novela del autor estadounidense a la lengua española. LA PROTECTORA, UNA SECUELA En La protectora no se ha pretendido de hacer una versión de este clásico del género fantástico, sino hacer una secuela y crear un nuevo texto a partir de sus aspectos más evocadores. La protectora de Keko empieza donde acaba la novela de James: Miles, el hermano mayor, ha fallecido, y Flora, la niña pequeña, vuelve a estar a cargo de su tío en la gran ciudad; mientras tanto, la institutriz -la protectora del título- está recluida en un sanatorio mental. Pero el tutor de Flora pronto descubrirá que los sucesos ocurridos en la Mansión de Bly, han dejado una fuerte huella en la niña. Al parecer, el pasado no se va a resignar a permanecer oculto... OTRA VUELTA DE TUERCA Y LA ILUSTRACIÓN La novela de Henry James, Otra vuelta de tuerca ha tenido numerosos ilustradores y muchas versiones en cómic o como novela gráfica. Numerosos ilustradores han dibujado los personajes y los ambientes de la Mansión de Bly. Entre ellos destacan las ilustraciones de: IBAN BARRENETXEA LYND WARD GUIDO CREPAX
I track the tag #lattecloudsİlayda and Izzy ig:ilyd.m or iz.sheptak
Click here to purchase this print to hang in your room.
“Once you realise that there is nothing in this world which you can call your own, you look at it from the outside as you look at a play on the stage, or a picture on the screen, admiring and…
A phobia is a persistent, uncontrolled, unrealistic fear of anything it can be an object, person, animal, an activity, or
Image 11 of 26 from gallery of Nursery “Pluchke” Ukkel / ZAmpone Architectuur. Photograph by Tim Van de Velde
This Australian photographer explores sexuality and beauty through her gynocentric, visceral work
House of Stories: Paula Rego, a new museum dedicated to the artist is opening in Cascais near Lisbon
Edgar Berg's project "Catching the Last Light " saw this beautiful location while on location scouting for another project in South Africa.
Songsheet of 'The March of the Women', 1911. Songsheet in the suffragette colours of purple, green and white, showing women and children marching with the banner of the Women's Social and Political...
You wake up in the morning, drink one too many cups of chai-tea, take...
Murder, delusions of grandeur, dark rituals, brainwashing — these cults did it all.
Psychosis refers to a lack or loss of connection with reality and involves severe hallucinations and/or delusions. It can be a sign of different psychiatric disorders.
Edward Jean Steichen (March 27, 1879 – March 25, 1973) was an American photographer, painter, and art gallery and museum curator. He was the most frequently featured photographer in Alfred Stieglitz' groundbreaking magazine Camera Work during its run from 1903 to 1917. Steichen also contributed the logo design and a custom typeface to the magazine. In partnership with Stieglitz, Steichen opened the "Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession", which was eventually known as 291, after its address. This gallery presented among the first American exhibitions of (among others) Henri Matisse, Auguste Rodin, Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, and Constantin Brâncuşi. Steichen's photos of gowns designed by couturier Paul Poiret in the magazine Art et Décoration in 1911 are regarded as the first modern fashion photographs ever published. Serving in the US Army in World War I (and the US Navy in the Second World War), he commanded significant units contributing to military photography. He was a photographer for the Condé Nast magazines Vogue and Vanity Fair from 1923–1938, and concurrently worked for many advertising agencies including J. Walter Thompson. During these years Steichen was regarded as the best known and highest paid photographer in the world. Steichen directed the war documentary The Fighting Lady, which won the 1945 Academy Award for Best Documentary. After World War II he was Director of the Department of Photography at New York's Museum of Modern Art until 1962. While at MoMA, in 1955 he curated and assembled the exhibit The Family of Man. The exhibit eventually traveled to sixty-nine countries, was seen by nine million people, and sold two and a half million copies of a companion book. In 1962, Steichen hired John Szarkowski to be his successor at the Museum of Modern Art. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Steichen
Researchers have long known that the impacts of gun violence ripple out far beyond victims and their families. But the price we pay as a country can be hard to measure, because data is hard to come by. (And the National Rifle Association is working hard to keep it that way.) For a 2015 investigation,...
Recently in Florida, a 14-year-old girl was walking down the street when a man in an SUV pulled up beside her and offered her $200 to have sex with him.
Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-1892) è l’ultimo grande maestro di ‘Ukiyo-e: una tecnica di stampa su blocchi di legno (quelle a tema erotico sono chiamate Shunga), tecnica che morì con lui s…
Great way to develop your photography or experimentation skills by doing some projection photography. Could link it to hidden identity, disguise, alter ego/multiple personalities or expression. Li…
Il faut penser sonore. Une photographie qui grince. Elle ne craque pas, elle ne crie pas: elle gémit. Le mouvement n’est pas sec mais continu. Il est arrêté en plein. Sur le vif. La prise est comme une déflagration dont la photo se fait écho. Elle résonne. Ce qui est figé continue à jamais d’être à l’endroit…
Turns out the 8 hour work day isn't just hurting worker happiness, it's strangling productivity.
Loie Fuller will always stand out in my memories of undergraduate Dance History classes (taking place in a really musty damp room) as the kookiest and most interesting historical hero of dance. I…
The Roman Pool at Hearst castle is a tiled indoor pool decorated with eight statues of Roman gods, goddesses and heroes. The pool appears to be styled after an ancient Roman bath such as the Baths of Caracalla in Rome c. 211-17 CE. The mosaic tiled patterns were inspired by mosaics found in the 5th Century Mausoleum of Galla Placidia in Ravenna, Italy. They are also representative of traditional marine monster themes that can be found in ancient Roman baths. The statues are rough copies of ancient Greek and Roman statues. One such copy represents the “Apoxyomenos.” Statuary was used on a considerable scale in the Baths of Caracalla.
Randomly weird. Awesomely Nutty. Outrageously Strange Humor.
“Liz Luna!” As you approach the threshold to “Pierre Huyghe,” a gallery guard-cum-town crier asks you for your full name. Name Announcer (2011), the ...
A minimum wage job pays more in a week than an average sweatshop worker makes in a year.
{Image: Day 32/365 – Plugged In by Tom Lin on Flickr} Those among us who have an iPod, Macbook, iTouch, iPhone or iPad have surrendered our powers of concentration and free time to this cult, not to mention our personal data. An entire generation will only be able to walk into its future so long […]
In this rare manifesto designer Rei Kawakubo of Commes des Garcons reveals some of the paths she follows to find absolutely NEW paths, her rigorous challenge to herself.
Hannah Höch was not a “good girl.” She was, as curator Juan Vicente Aliaga notes, a “total woman.” Staking her claim among the male Berlin Dada group with grotesque photomontage…