
“Kaktus” (1953) from ‘Women in Trees’, published by Hatje Cantz
/ source: hyperallergic
more [+] Women in Trees
images that haunt us

“Kaktus” (1953) from ‘Women in Trees’, published by Hatje Cantz
/ source: hyperallergic
more [+] Women in Trees

Raiss’ collection of women posing in trees grew over the years, but in
his decades’ worth of scavenging, he very rarely found similar photos of
men posing in trees.
source: huffingtonpost
more [+] Women in Trees

Raiss’ collection of women posing in trees grew over the years, but in
his decades’ worth of scavenging, he very rarely found similar photos of
men posing in trees.
source: huffingtonpost
more [+] Women in Trees

Raiss’ collection of women posing in trees grew over the years, but in his decades’ worth of scavenging, he very rarely found similar photos of men posing in trees.
source: huffingtonpost
more [+] Women in Trees

I – El río, los cambios de luz y de estación,
las casas que sugieren un pasado decoroso.
Sólo un opaco fragor
de los asuntos humanos.
Es cierto, las noches son más frías
y el tiempo se demora entre los bancos de niebla.
La ira parece innecesaria; persiste apenas
la ausencia del mar,
la impresión de vidas y de muertes que se hilvanan
a un mismo nacimiento.
II – Un plato, un vaso, una silla;
un cielo insulso y leve, blanquecino.
Pasado el verano —la vulgaridad del verano—
el invierno reduce el mundo a dos o tres
emociones esenciales. Papeles, libros,
recuerdos de palabras.
Y luego los sueños; las formas imprecisas
de claridad y dominio.
Gerardo Gambolini – Finisterre I (Text source: zoopat)
image via
lasmicrofisuras