TumblrPics.com
HOME
DMCA
Live
Gallery
Viewer
Social History
embracingmylove
shannon lee
hhhhhhhooooohoh h
jermainecoles
disgustingrapemeat
LIVE
Man and MachineLewis Wickes Hine was an American original and champion of social change. #LaborDay h
After Brooklyn Museum’s successful run of Killer Heels, we’re bringing it down about 6 inches. The R
The Petticoat Duel of Almeria Braddock and Mrs. ElphinstoneIn 1792 Mrs. Elphinstone made a social ca
rp. @_enocheshun “The Black skin is not a badge of shame, but rather a glorious symbol of nati
Europe’s Forgotten Untouchables — The CagotsIt’s a terrible fact that throughout history preju
Attention Shoe Lovers! TODAY Elizabeth Semmelhack, shoe historian (your dream job, right?) and Senio
Dr. James Weir and the rise of the Viragints,Dr. James Weir Jr. was a naturalist and evolutionary sc
This fall, we’re taking a look at how artists in the Brooklyn Museum collection have promoted civic
Wet Night, Washington Square, John French Sloan, 1928
Mama ThompsonWaco, Texas[Thompson Family Album]©WaheedPhotoArchive, 2015
afterellen:just really good friends through the years
The Thompson SistersWaco, Texas[Thompson Family Album]©WaheedPhotoArchive, 2015
The Seamstress, Jacob Lawrence, 1946
thebrownqueerproject:February is Black History Month! Here are just a few Black Queer People who ded
In April of 1967, Kathrine Switzer, a journalism student at Syracuse University ♀️ entered the Bost
The Shoemaker, Jacob Lawrence, 1945
Islamism and Nazism have a historical connection that isn’t often acknowledged.
sassy-cicero-says:7/100✔Today’s focus was the first chapter of Henrik Mouritzen’s :(1998). The first
If you ask someone to name five artists, they will likely name prominent male artists, but how many
Ongoing reports of sexual harassment and sexual assault in the cultural sphere have underscored the
Betye Saar is an American artist best known for her multimedia collages, box assemblages, altars and
As a photograph of a scene from a Federal Theatre Project Living Newspaper production, Shadow of the
How do today’s struggles mirror the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s? What can we
Prev Page
Next Page