(Source: wearethesewalls, via ladyglo)
(Source: wearethesewalls, via ladyglo)
Get it grrrrl
(Source: catjpg, via smile-sam19)
(Source: mortthelemur, via penis-hilton)
TIPU’S TIGER - LONDON - ENGLAND
A delightful crank-operated pipe organ depicts a tiger calmly devouring a hapless colonial.
First discovered by the British East India Company amongst the belongings of a tiger-obsessed sultan, Tipu’s Tiger is a physical reminder of the enmity felt between the residents of India and the British colonials. Sultan Tipu was known as “The Tiger of Mysore”, and was the legendary enemy of the East India Company in the late 1700s, waging years of battles that became known as the Mysore Wars.
Tipu famously despised the English, and also had quite a thing for tigers. According to the V&A: “Tigers and tiger symbols adorned most of his possessions, from his magnificent throne to the uniforms of his guards. His armoury included mortars shaped like sitting tigers, cannon with tiger muzzles, and hand weapons decorated with gold tiger heads, or inlaid in gold with tiger masks… He ordered the walls of houses in Seringapatam to be painted with scenes of tigers mauling Europeans. Live tigers were kept in the city and there were stories of prisoners thrown into the tiger-pits.”
Most likely made in India, but possibly with French mechanisms, the design may have been influenced by the much-publicized story of the tiger-mauling death of the son of a prominent general engaged in the battles against Tipu in 1792. Later, similarly macabre pottery figurines, known as “The Death of Monrow”, depicting the mauling in progress were popular mantle-toppers in England.
Found more about the amazing feline automaton here !
Is it too early to request one of these for Christmas?
So sick of eating food. I wish I could gain calories from exercising.
(Source: miss-amanda-nicole)
(Source: thelandofwtf)
ben hart, 2013
(Source: frustrateed, via penis-hilton)
(Source: punk-, via mileycrosswire)
(via alex-correa)
Ad Reinhardt, How to Look at Art, Arts & Architecture, January 1947
(Source: lessadjectivesmoreverbs, via nocommonwealth)