Pics that go hard in an aesthetically powerful way
ITT: Pics that Go Hard :
Anonymous :
22 days ago :
No.2088
>>2410
>>2088 (OP)
Dafoe is a cool-looking guy, but he's still just an actor. I wouldn't really describe a picture of someone in such a non-serious profession as going hard.
Niki Lauda returns to racing just weeks after his near-fatal crash at Monza '76, in agony from his burns, and against all medical advice.
Anonymous :
20 days ago :
No.2410
>>2411
>>2410
Posted the wrong photo with that lol.
>>2432>>2410
Acting does not preclude hardness. A performance is still first and foremost aesthetics, after all, and going hard is not at all a non-serious profession.
>>2088 (OP)
Dafoe is a cool-looking guy, but he's still just an actor. I wouldn't really describe a picture of someone in such a non-serious profession as going hard.
>>2410
>>2088 (OP)
Dafoe is a cool-looking guy, but he's still just an actor. I wouldn't really describe a picture of someone in such a non-serious profession as going hard.
Posted the wrong photo with that lol.
>>2410
>>2088 (OP)
Dafoe is a cool-looking guy, but he's still just an actor. I wouldn't really describe a picture of someone in such a non-serious profession as going hard.
Acting does not preclude hardness. A performance is still first and foremost aesthetics, after all, and going hard is not at all a non-serious profession.
Anonymous :
20 days ago :
No.2436
>>2459
>>2436
The steeled gaze of the revolutionary spirit captured on camera. Very hard indeed. Unfortunately some people beneath you misunderstood the meaning of "Pics that Go Hard" and instead just decided to post random pictures of historical figures, most of which do not in fact go hard.
You all know it in your heart to be true.
mayakovsky the russian futurist poet. Supposedly despised by Lenin but kept as a necessary evil.
The Peronist ortodoxy (right-wing) takes the stage to receive Perón, who was exiled since 1955. This happened amidst the Masacre de Ezeiza (Ezeiza Massacre), where the Peronist Revolutionary Tendency (especially Montoneros) and the Syndical Peronism (the right wing of the movement) clashed over who was the true peronist, and as such deserved to be closer to the leader.
Ultimately Perón thought the Tendency mistook the movement for something that it wasn't: Perón didn't saw Peronism as a step towards the construction of the "Patria Socialista" (Socialist homeland?). He instead dictated that the ortodoxy was the only form of authentic Peronism.
Here's a pic of him with José Ignacio Rucci, leader of the CGT (the largest syndicate in the country), who was killed by members of Montoneros in 1973. The story goes that Perón said: "They have killed my son". The Montoneros sang: "Rucci, traidor, saludos a Vandor” (Rucci, traitor, greetings to Vandor). Vandor was another syndical leader killed by another organization, the ENR, during the "Operativo Judas". He was considered a traitor for being open to negotiations with military dictatorships.
Anonymous :
20 days ago :
No.2459
>>2461
>>2459
Some of them go hard indeed, if you're not an ignoramus. images don't exist in a vacuum, and the context often enriches and heightens them.
>>2436
You all know it in your heart to be true.
The steeled gaze of the revolutionary spirit captured on camera. Very hard indeed. Unfortunately some people beneath you misunderstood the meaning of "Pics that Go Hard" and instead just decided to post random pictures of historical figures, most of which do not in fact go hard.
Anonymous :
20 days ago :
No.2461
>>2463
>>2461 Then the context should enrich and heighten them, like with Guerrillero Heroico, rather than adding nothing to it, like most of the following pictures.
>>2459
>>2436
The steeled gaze of the revolutionary spirit captured on camera. Very hard indeed. Unfortunately some people beneath you misunderstood the meaning of "Pics that Go Hard" and instead just decided to post random pictures of historical figures, most of which do not in fact go hard.
Some of them go hard indeed, if you're not an ignoramus. images don't exist in a vacuum, and the context often enriches and heightens them.
>>2461
>>2459
Some of them go hard indeed, if you're not an ignoramus. images don't exist in a vacuum, and the context often enriches and heightens them.
Then the context should enrich and heighten them, like with Guerrillero Heroico, rather than adding nothing to it, like most of the following pictures.
wrong. Most of them do go hard. Especially Kharms.
the only known person in the Turkish war of independence to have gone even harder than Mustafa Kemal himself
Anonymous :
17 days ago :
No.2919
>>3021
>>2919 I'm ambivalent on Atatürk, but I am certain that his looks and demeanor contributed immensely to his cult of personality. I spent a lot of time in Turkey and I have to say I have very rarely met anyone who admires any person with the same reverence and sincerity as a large portion of modern Turks admire Atatürk.
Roachposting under the guise of aesthetics. Thread's over
>>2919
Roachposting under the guise of aesthetics. Thread's over
I'm ambivalent on Atatürk, but I am certain that his looks and demeanor contributed immensely to his cult of personality. I spent a lot of time in Turkey and I have to say I have very rarely met anyone who admires any person with the same reverence and sincerity as a large portion of modern Turks admire Atatürk.
>>3021
>>2919 I'm ambivalent on Atatürk, but I am certain that his looks and demeanor contributed immensely to his cult of personality. I spent a lot of time in Turkey and I have to say I have very rarely met anyone who admires any person with the same reverence and sincerity as a large portion of modern Turks admire Atatürk.
Even the Islamists?
Anonymous :
16 days ago :
No.3030
>>3404
Picrel is the artist, dancer, writer (etc.) Alastair
>>3030
Are you the guy who occasionally mentions Augiéras on /lit/? If so, probably best rec I got there some years ago. I read his others, the Voyage of the Dead and to Mount Athos, as well: both were pretty great but more wandering… Sorcerer's is really concentrated to its best then. Lovely descriptions of nature. His paintings are interesting too, esp. the few landscapes he did.
>>2509
The writer and painter François Augiéras
Oh wow, I've never seen anyone else who has read Augieras. Sorcerer's Apprentice is on my desk at home right now.
Picrel is the artist, dancer, writer (etc.) Alastair
>>3030
>>2509
Oh wow, I've never seen anyone else who has read Augieras. Sorcerer's Apprentice is on my desk at home right now.
Are you the guy who occasionally mentions Augiéras on /lit/? If so, probably best rec I got there some years ago. I read his others, the Voyage of the Dead and to Mount Athos, as well: both were pretty great but more wandering… Sorcerer's is really concentrated to its best then. Lovely descriptions of nature. His paintings are interesting too, esp. the few landscapes he did.
honestly better threat than /FA
Students replacing the university's flag with the Argentine flag (1918).