189303
27 Dec 16 at 10 pm

vivienvalentino:

In memory of some of the amazing, talented and beautiful people we have lost this year. May they rest in peace.

(via latitudeoctopus)

pearwaldorf:

Our culture has celebrities in place of myths, and we have grief twitter instead of byzantine lore about the journey to the underworld and the proper ways of burial. When celebrities die and we mourn them in a massively public way, this is a safe way to practice mourning for our parents and our partners and our friends, to try to force ourselves to make the unthinkable familiar. 

The generational quality of this grief comes from the fact that, as the celebrities with whom we grew up die, it signals that we are at the age where people are dying, and we look ahead to the inevitable disasters, the wave that grows larger on the horizon. If our public grief is a performance, it’s a performance in the way that a disaster drill is a performance. 

Our grief at losing an icon who meant a great deal to us is a real grief but a bearable one. But that bearable grief is a test-drive for future unbearable ones. We practice together in the hope that we can be prepared, so that the idea of loss does not seem so alien. 

Complaints about the inappropriate nature of grief on social media – that it’s a circle-jerk, a joiner’s club, an obligated performance – are as defining a part of these mournings as the remembrances themselves. But to call this grief a performance is to miss the point – it’s not a performance, it’s a rehearsal. It seems right to me that grief be public, and messy, and inconvenient, that it make everyone in its path uncomfortable. 

Small amounts of discomfort, after all, increase our tolerance for large amounts of pain. Mourning celebrities who mattered to us is a way to remind ourselves that no one is spared, not even those who seemed immortal, larger than a human being with petty little organs doing their pedestrian little jobs inside their skin. Speaking things aloud removes their terror, dulls the power of their unfamiliarity. We speak this over and over to try to come to terms with something that cannot possibly be made familiar.

Helena Fitzgerald

(via halleycomets)

today i’m not okay

 2
25 Dec 15 at 6 pm
mindpalacestudy:
“USEFUL MATERIALS
• sketchbook
• pencil set
• waterproof fineliners
• white pen
• watercolours
• acrylics
• pastels
• inks
• copic markers
• brushes
• travel brushes
• gouache
• oil paints
• craft knife
TUTORIALS
• lighting a face
•...
 449
16 Dec 15 at 12 am

willohblue:

Unseen photos from 1974 

© 2015 Jeroen Ras

(via cant-connect-to-mysql)

 1
22 Nov 15 at 7 pm

no but i do want jacob rees-mogg. only tory i’d have.

hit me up on depop for some cheap-ass fatshion sizes 14-18

username is chloebowie

i’m so fucking gay