Myths/ Fairytales/ Legends
The Jupiter Tree
A widower remarries, but the new wife hates the son he had with his first wife, and wants their daughter to be the sole heir. One day, she offers the boy an apple from inside a chest. And when he reaches in, she slams the lid, chopping off his head. To hide her crime, she reattaches the head with a scarf. Eventually, the woman's daughter accidentally knocks the boy's head off and believes she's killed him herself. Next the woman and her daughter cut the boy up and put him in the stew, so his dad eats him. But the boy is reincarnated as a bird, who drops a giant stone on his stepmom, killing her and turning him back into a boy.
A widower remarries, but the new wife hates the son he had with his first wife, and wants their daughter to be the sole heir. One day, she offers the boy an apple from inside a chest. And when he reaches in, she slams the lid, chopping off his head. To hide her crime, she reattaches the head with a scarf. Eventually, the woman's daughter accidentally knocks the boy's head off and believes she's killed him herself. Next the woman and her daughter cut the boy up and put him in the stew, so his dad eats him. But the boy is reincarnated as a bird, who drops a giant stone on his stepmom, killing her and turning him back into a boy.
William Eggleston
As you can tell my Building 19 photos and William Eggleston's photos relate between the rusted, old, dirty types of neighbor hoods and the buildings within there. He was one of the first color photographers in 1970. He showed the rustic parts of towns and cities.
Building 19
Cupcakes
Portraits
Diane Arbus
Diane Arbus likes to push boundaries and take pictures of things or people that aren't common. During the times of these pictures woman weren't equal to men and being part of the LGBT community wasn't common. She didn't care what people were or what they did she just found them important to society and took the pictures. She wanted them known and not shunned from society because they are different.