Myth Folk Gallery
silence-and-ultraviolence
delphine fawundu-buford
aandhi1975
gay macrophilia
h20-tx
Over the holiday break two important additions were added to my inventory: Jón Baldur Hilðberg and S
Adding on to the already large pile of vouivre drawings in my gallery: this! You might be asking: wh
“Shelly, when the research team brought you their report… did they mention how big the
For Eyes of Time, Chitra Ganesh paired her own site-specific work with a curated selection of object
edsonlnoe:Selkie. A mythological creature found in Irish folklore. Are said to live as seals in the
Redesign of my old avatar, aka the thing in the icon, might make more later who knows. This is based
Egyptian Creation Myth,According to ancient Egpytian mythology, before the creation of the universe
sophiessaliva:i did a small 3-part series based on magical weapons in myth and folklore, im gonna up
queeniegoldtsein:for @melqomene and @arthemis mythological event — 4th day: favourite slavic deity/g
divine-thrills:mythology meme | Slavic legendary creatures - SirinSirin or the Bird of Sorrow is a m
Drupka Kunley, the Divine Madman of the Dragon Lineage,A Tibetan poet and Tantric Buddhist teacher o
Jeanie Tomanek (American, b. 1949, Batavia, NY, USA) - Another Night Journey, Paintings: Oil
A bugbear is a boogeyman from English folklore. Often said to resemble a monstrous bear, it is said
Janus/January, from the series The Months by Jacobus Harrewyn (1698)
Psyche Discovering the Sleeping Cupid (Italy 1710-20)
Charon by Cornelis Bloemaert (1635-38)
Diana Discovering the Pregnancy of Callisto by Jacob Lois (1643)
Diana by Hans Sebald Beham (1539)
Bacchante by Robert Le Lorrain (1700)
Unknown Artist - Old Korean Painting: Tiger and Rabbits (Rabbit holding a pipe for a Tiger, with ano
Japanese Giant Firebreathing Chicken — The BasanIn medieval Japanese folklore the Basan was a
By Kirsty Mitchell
King Lycaon, the First Werewolf,According the Greek mythology Lycaon was a tyrannical king of Arkadi
librum-prodigiosum:The Water Leaper is a wicked creature from Welsh folklore, also known as the Llam
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