Naomi Seagal
Tag: art
Cool subtle pride gear – these designs with the meanings behind the original gay pride flag on them! Threadless added this cool new t-shirt style (left) that I love so you should totally get one for pride month…. 30% of the profit goes to the artist which is far more than society6 and redbubble!!

My face.
Business butch looks ft. Matisse
Sketchbook- front, back, and most recent entry. Trying to get back into the art habit.
The perfect evening: a bath and then sketching iconic titties out looks
Thx King Princess for my life !!!
Ft. Me doing the same lesbian head tilt

Keith Haring in 1989: “Unfinished Painting”. Haring died few months after and this is his last painting. This is supposed to be a self-portrait. Haring knew he wouldn’t have enough time to finish it. This is one of the saddest but certainly the most powerful thing I’ve ever seen.
to clarify: this is a finished self portrait. haring did know that he would be unable to continue to work; this “unfinished” painting refers to that self-consciously as a visualization of how the aids crisis and government neglect robbed him of his life and future career.
i feel like this distinction is important? there are many artists who died due to hiv/aids and left unfinished work, but haring made this specifically to comment on his impending death. i feel like stating that it’s actually unfinished takes away some of his agency as an artist/activist/pwa and the political power of the work.
Kent Rogowski: Love = Love, 2006-2008
Love=Love is a series of collages that were created using pieces of over 60 store bought puzzles. Although puzzle pieces are unique, and can only fit into one place within a puzzle, they are sometimes interchangeable within a brand. These puzzles were cut using the same die, but depict unrelated images. Using only the flowers and skies from each of the puzzles, I created a series of entirely new compositions by recombining the puzzle pieces. These spectacular, fantastical and surreal landscapes sit in direct contrast to the banal and bucolic images of the original puzzles. (artist statement)




























