While looking for some related information, I just stumbled across this stunning digital collage of the goddess Hekate.
My favorite thing about the internet is that it lets me experience art that I otherwise never would have known existed. My greatest frustration with the internet is knowing that I haven't yet discovered vast troves of art that I would adore, and that I won't live long enough to find a thousandth of it.
A small silver pendant bearing a crescent moon and seven stars.
Four variations are available, each with the moon pointing a different direction respective to the bail: waxing, waning, bull-horned, and horseshoe.
Made of solid .925 sterling silver, one half inch in diameter.
Each piece is hand-made to order in my home studio, with unique variations and defects as a result of the fabrication and casting process.
Added to the Witchcraft Aesthetic line in July of 2023.
Today's #GoodMorning post is not a #Painting but this 10th century Buff Sandstone Relief of a 'Goddess Admiring Herself in a Mirror'.
This sensuous #Goddess has Her right arm raised to secure a lock of hair, the left hand holding a mirror
This item which once adorned a #Hindu Temple in #MadhyaPradesh#India belonged to the Doris Wiener (#Art smuggler) collection which was sold by Christie's
Some recent additions from my personal library, hard to find works in very good condition added to The Curiously Curated Collection of Vintage Books at KnoxvilleRose on Etsy 🌹📚🌹
Missed a couple days! Sorry Heru-wer and Set. But today belongs to Aset. Her chaorl service is here. You can also check our Heru-wer and Aset’s services there too.
Did you know that a Roman #slave really wanted a hat?
In #Ancient#Rome, a slave was considered property. He had no personhood.
But if a master decided to free the slave, he brought him before the magistrate, explained his reasoning for the manumission (freeing), and after some ceremony, the slave was free.
To show his new status, he’d shave his head & wear from then on a felt cap - the symbol of #liberty carried by Libertas, the Roman #goddess of #freedom.
Second, the #Goddess "ordinary observer" is a hypothetical person (like the "reasonable person" in torts), not a real person. These comments are irrelevant.