Stone Head Gallery
dragonsiofwrathneliodas
animalrifter
zephyr blue
dieselnuts
girardet
Keith on the back cover of Goats Head Soup which was released 40 years ago.
Harry Styles Packslike or reblog if you save/use
A silver headband inlaid with red precious stones Afghanistan Islamic Oxus region
. no We Heart It. weheartit.com/entry/82238530/via/teddypicker__
Goat’s Head Pendant with Garnet stones for eyes.
Harry Styles Packslike or reblog if you save/use
thegoldenyearz: The Rolling Stones for Goats Head Soup photoshoot by David Bailey, 1973
Ombre Crystal Crown: $50.00✨ ✨ ✨ ✨ ✨ ✨✨☼Hand selected pieces of high quality Ombre, 3 tone Quartz ar
When asked to provide headlines describing InterseXtions program this past this year, our teen staff
originalplumbing:Hirstory lesson time! When heading to all your “Pride” parties this weekend, don’t
kksart:12/20/18 - ‘phases’, ceramic (white stoneware)this piece actually has interchangeable heads!
Klara Kristalova (Czech, b. 1967, Prague, Czech Republic, based Norrtälje, Sweden) - 1: She’s
kksart: 12/20/18 - ‘phases’, ceramic (white stoneware) this piece actually has interchangeable heads
Head of Mercury. Emmanuel Hannaux, c1895. France.
ortut:Jindra Vikova - Talk, 1993
Head of Asclepius. Roman copy (second half of 2nd cent. CE) after a mid-4th cent. BCE Greek origina
Canopic jar lid (limestone) in the shape of a falcon head, representing the deity Qebehsenuef, one o
Portrait head of Amenhotep III, shown wearing the double crown and ceremonial beard. Artist unknown
Head of a Buddhist guardian king, perhaps Tseng-ch’ang (=Sanskrit Virudhaka), regent of the south. U
Ancient Egyptian column capital (limestone) in the shape of the head of the goddess Hathor. The col
Monumental marble head of the Roman goddess Juno, wearing a diadem. Found at Vienne (ancient Vienna
Head of Zeus. Artist unknown; Flavian period (69-96 CE). From Ephesus; now in the Ephesus Archaeol
Limestone head, identified as the Ptolemaic queen Arsinoe II. Artist unknown; 278-270 BCE (reign of
Marble head of the Roman deity Jupiter. Artist unknown; 2nd cent. CE. Now in the Spurlock Museum,
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