#1965-1974
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Mr & Mrs Clark
Ossie Clark and Celia Birtwell Fashion and Prints
Edited by Federico Poletti
SilvanaEditoriale, Cinisello Balsamo 2022, 208 pagine,185 ill., 24 x 29 cm, Cartonato, English, ISBN 9788836653768
euro 40,00
email if you want to buy :[email protected]
Mostra Prato Museo Tessuto 2022/23 , Fondazione Sozzani Milano 2023
Il volume rende omaggio a un iconico “fashion duo”, Ossie Clark e Celia Birtwell due creativi inglesi il cui sodalizio artistico e personale, breve ma molto intenso, ha dato origine a uno stile inconfondibile che ha lasciato un segno nella Londra del periodo compreso tra la minigonna di Mary Quant e il movimento punk sovversivo di Malcolm MacLaren e Vivienne Westwood, dal 1965 al 1974. Ossie e Celia è la storia di un’alchimia speciale, una delle prime coppie artistiche in cui uno stilista e una designer di tessuti hanno lavorato insieme completandosi in totale armonia fino alla loro separazione nel 1973. Celia era la creatrice delle meravigliose stampe ispirate alla natura e alle diverse correnti artistiche che Ossie, con la sua abilità nei tagli e nella modellistica, trasformava in abiti sensuali e femminili grazie alla leggerezza dei tessuti come crêpes, sete e chiffon che hanno conquistato il jet-set internazionale e la scena musicale dell���epoca. Da Brigitte Bardot a Liz Taylor, fino a Verushka, tutti erano affascinati dalla loro moda. Mick Jagger, Brian Jones, Keith Richards, Jimi Hendrix, Marianne Faithfull, Anita Pallenberg, Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Bianca Jagger e Marisa Berenson sono solo alcuni dei personaggi che Ossie Clark ha vestito. Partendo da un primo importante nucleo di abiti provenienti dall’archivio di Massimo Cantini Parrini, arricchito di ulteriori prestiti provenienti dalla collezione americana di Lauren Lepire e dagli archivi londinesi della famiglia Clark e della stessa Celia Birtwell, il volume racconta il contesto e l’evoluzione dei due artisti tramite abiti, tessuti, disegni fino a oggi mai pubblicati, testimonianze video, foto ed editoriali d’epoca.
21/03/23
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#Mr & Mrs Clatl#Ossie Clarck#Celia Birtwell#fashion exhibition catalogue#Museo Tessuto Prato 2022-23#Fondazione Sozzani Milano 2023#1965-1974#sixties & seventies#abiti#tessuti#disegni#video#foto epoca#fashion books#fashionbooksmilano
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via Gridllr.com — Likes well done!
1965-1974 | Krasnoe Sormovo ”Sormovich” (Красное Сормово ”Сормович”) Hovercraft | Source
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DNI: NON BLACK PEOPLE!!
So…y’all seeing the Antiblackness jumping out of the nonblack people in the Free Palestine on tiktok and other social media platforms(mainly Twitter)?
Like it’s crazy how all this started because Maya Ayooni came at a Black woman, sicked her 2.1 million followers(some of which are still on Tori Griers page today), did a whole live framing her as an angry Black woman and just being condescending overall, then making a quick little apology video that had the comments locked so there’s only ten of them. Then a bunch of non black people and even other Arabs(unsurprising tbh) started jumping on Black people collectively. It’s absolutely disgusting that I’ve actually seen someone call Kamala Harris a white man in a colored woman’s body(she’s biracial but come on now) to referring to other Black people as melanated people.
And Maya’s butt had the nerve to repost this tiktok calling Black people colonizers which by the way is the same video calling Black people, melanated people.
@queen-shiba
Here’s some links with the TikToks that started this whole mess:
UPDATE!! MAYA IS TARGETING BLACK WOMEN ONCE AGAIN
#antiblackness#antiblackracism#blackblr#I don’t think they understand that the voting rights act was in 1965#in terms of American history Black people getting rights is very recent#the civil rights movement was in the 1960s#So that’s about 60 years ago#for reference my mother was born in 1974#so understand why Black people would get upset at you for telling us how to vote as if we recently didn’t just get this freedom#and here it is again where nonblack people feel entitled to Black support and treat us like we’re their personal mules#it’s disgusting#and unacceptable#I’ll repost the tiktok of the live Tori had because it was so horrendous#racism#misogynoir#antiblack
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Muhammad Ali & Sonny Liston (1965) - Neil Leifer
Muhammad Ali & Cleveland Williams (1966) - Neil Leifer
Muhammad Ali & George Foreman (1974) - Neil Leifer
#photography#neil leifer#muhammad ali#sonny liston#cleveland williams#george foreman#boxing#1960s#1965#1966#1970s#1974
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W A T C H I N G
the whole HAMMER FILMS 'DRACULA' series with my mom in order for the first and perhaps final time. ❤️
It's a late edition to our yearly family Halloween movies. I finally got Scars of Dracula it was on sale.
Dracula, aka 'Horror of Dracula' (1958)
The Brides of Dracula (1960)
Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1965)
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)
Taste the Blood of Dracula (1969)
Scars of Dracula (1970)
Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972)
The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973)
The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974)
#DRACULA (1958)#HORROR OF DRACULA (1958)#THE BRIDES OF DRACULA (1960)#Dracula: Prince of Darkness (1965)#Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968)#Taste the Blood of Dracula (1969)#Scars of Dracula (1970)#Dracula A.D. 1972 (1972)#The Satanic Rites of Dracula (1973)#The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974)#HAMMER FILMS#Hammer horror#Christopher Lee#Peter Cushing#horror#family#gothic horror#watching
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【昭和40年代(1965~1974年)】 自宅にて(中央は母紀久子、右手前は長男弘成) (『回想 世耕弘昭』より)
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Diamonds on Wheels (1974)
The nightmare rally by Castex, Pierre Georges (1965)
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Women's Not So Distant History
This #WomensHistoryMonth, let's not forget how many of our rights were only won in recent decades, and weren’t acquired by asking nicely and waiting. We need to fight for our rights. Here's are a few examples:
📍 Before 1974's Fair Credit Opportunity Act made it illegal for financial institutions to discriminate against applicants' gender, banks could refuse women a credit card. Women won the right to open a bank account in the 1960s, but many banks still refused without a husband’s signature. This allowed men to continue to have control over women’s bank accounts. Unmarried women were often refused service by financial institutions entirely.
📍 Before 1977, sexual harassment was not considered a legal offense. That changed when a woman brought her boss to court after she refused his sexual advances and was fired. The court stated that her termination violated the 1974 Civil Rights Act, which made employment discrimination illegal.⚖️
📍 In 1969, California became the first state to pass legislation to allow no-fault divorce. Before then, divorce could only be obtained if a woman could prove that her husband had committed serious faults such as adultery. 💍By 1977, nine states had adopted no-fault divorce laws, and by late 1983, every state had but two. The last, New York, adopted a law in 2010.
📍In 1967, Kathrine Switzer, entered the Boston Marathon under the name "K.V. Switzer." At the time, the Amateur Athletics Union didn't allow women. Once discovered, staff tried to remove Switzer from the race, but she finished. AAU did not formally accept women until fall 1971.
📍 In 1972, Lillian Garland, a receptionist at a California bank, went on unpaid leave to have a baby and when she returned, her position was filled. Her lawsuit led to 1978's Pregnancy Discrimination Act, which found that discriminating against pregnant people is unlawful
📍 It wasn’t until 2016 that gay marriage was legal in all 50 states. Previously, laws varied by state, and while many states allowed for civil unions for same-sex couples, it created a separate but equal standard. In 2008, California was the first state to achieve marriage equality, only to reverse that right following a ballot initiative later that year.
📍In 2018, Utah and Idaho were the last two states that lacked clear legislation protecting chest or breast feeding parents from obscenity laws. At the time, an Idaho congressman complained women would, "whip it out and do it anywhere,"
📍 In 1973, the Supreme Court affirmed the right to safe legal abortion in Roe v. Wade. At the time of the decision, nearly all states outlawed abortion with few exceptions. In 1965, illegal abortions made up one-sixth of all pregnancy- and childbirth-related deaths. Unfortunately after years of abortion restrictions and bans, the Supreme Court overturned Roe in 2022. Since then, 14 states have fully banned care, and another 7 severely restrict it – leaving most of the south and midwest without access.
📍 Before 1973, women were not able to serve on a jury in all 50 states. However, this varied by state: Utah was the first state to allow women to serve jury duty in 1898. Though, by 1927, only 19 states allowed women to serve jury duty. The Civil Rights Act of 1957 gave women the right to serve on federal juries, though it wasn't until 1973 that all 50 states passed similar legislation
📍 Before 1988, women were unable to get a business loan on their own. The Women's Business Ownership Act of 1988 allowed women to get loans without a male co-signer and removed other barriers to women in business. The number of women-owned businesses increased by 31 times in the last four decades.
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📍 Before 1965, married women had no right to birth control. In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), the Supreme Court ruled that banning the use of contraceptives violated the right to marital privacy.
📍 Before 1967, interracial couples didn’t have the right to marry. In Loving v. Virginia, the Supreme Court found that anti-miscegenation laws were unconstitutional. In 2000, Alabama was the last State to remove its anti-miscegenation laws from the books.
📍 Before 1972, unmarried women didn’t have the right to birth control. While married couples gained the right in 1967, it wasn’t until Eisenstadt v. Baird seven years later, that the Supreme Court affirmed the right to contraception for unmarried people.
📍 In 1974, the last “Ugly Laws” were repealed in Chicago. “Ugly Laws” allowed the police to arrest and jail people with visible disabilities for being seen in public. People charged with ugly laws were either charged a fine or held in jail. ‘Ugly Laws’ were a part of the late 19th century Victorian Era poor laws.
📍 In 1976, Hawaii was the last state to lift requirements that a woman take her husband’s last name. If a woman didn’t take her husband’s last name, employers could refuse to issue her payroll and she could be barred from voting.
📍 It wasn’t until 1993 that marital assault became a crime in all 50 states. Historically, intercourse within marriage was regarded as a “right” of spouses. Before 1974, in all fifty U.S. states, men had legal immunity for assaults their wives. Oklahoma and North Carolina were the last to change the law in 1993.
📍 In 1990, the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) – most comprehensive disability rights legislation in U.S. history – was passed. The ADA protected disabled people from employment discrimination. Previously, an employer could refuse to hire someone just because of their disability.
📍 Before 1993, women weren’t allowed to wear pants on the Senate floor. That changed when Sen. Moseley Braun (D-IL), & Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) wore trousers - shocking the male-dominated Senate. Their fashion statement ultimately led to the dress code being clarified to allow women to wear pants.
📍 Emergency contraception (Plan B) wasn't approved by the FDA until 1998. While many can get emergency contraception at their local drugstore, back then it required a prescription. In 2013, the FDA removed age limits & allowed retailers to stock it directly on the shelf (although many don’t).
📍 In Lawrence v. Texas (2003), the Supreme Court ruled that anti-cohabitation laws were unconstitutional. Sometimes referred to as the ‘'Living in Sin' statute, anti-cohabitation laws criminalize living with a partner if the couple is unmarried. Today, Mississippi still has laws on its books against cohabitation.
#art#feminism#women's history#women's history month#iwd2024#international women's day#herstory#educational#graphics#history#70s#80s#rights#women's rights#human rights
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ok so the other age-range poll was poorly set up by having every year in the 90's be its own individual option, and then grouping together all the decades around it
sorry if you were born before 1960 but im only allowed 12 options. feel free to comment your birth year in the replies or notes.
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【今昔写真 vol.33】
東大阪キャンパス22号館は昭和44年に理工学部と農学部の学舎として新築され、昭和56年に増築、平成4年に改修工事が行われました。現在は理工学部の学舎の一つとして利用されています。写真は昭和44年完成時と令和4年の学舎です。
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Nacque l’esigenza di una struttura occulta più efficace
Carmine Pecorelli risultava iscritto alla loggia Propaganda Due, ma la motivazione che spinse il giornalista a far parte di questo gruppo segreto resta a noi sconosciuta. Alcune fonti lo definirono un «massone con riserva» <59, altre un «piduista atipico» <60, molto probabilmente aderì per poter trarre informazioni riservate. Sappiamo che nel 1972 Licio Gelli, nella cornice dell’hotel Baglioni a…
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#1908#1944#1965#1966#1970#1972#1974#anticomunista#clerico-comunisti#Commissione#deviati#fascista#Frank Gigliotti#Gesù#Giacomo Fiorini#Giustiniani#Gran Maestro#grande#istituzioni#James Angleton#Licio Gelli#Lino Salvini#Loggia#Luigi Cipriani#massoneria#occulta#oriente#OSS#P2#palazzo
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Russia, 1881: We’re gonna kill any Jew that doesn’t flee Russia. We’re restricting Jewish emigration to Europe, but permitting emigration to the Middle East.
Germany, Austria, Italy, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Finland, Slovakia, Croatia, France, and others, 1933-1945: We’re gonna kill every Jew in Europe. Flee to the US or Palestine, or die trying.
The US, 1927-1952: Yeah sorry we’re restricting Jewish immigrants to like. 300 people per country. So good luck getting in. We recommend that Jews go to Palestine instead. Btw we are looking to take in Nazi scientists if you know any
Egypt, 1947-1950: We’re rounding up all our Jews and deporting them to Israel
Iraq, 1951-1952: We’re rounding up all our Jews and deporting them to Israel
Algeria, 1962-1965: We’re pressuring and intimidating Jews in the hopes that they’ll all leave the country and go to Israel
Egypt, 1956: We’re rounding up all our Jews and deporting them to Israel (again)
Egypt and Libya, 1967: We’re rounding up, torturing, and killing all our Jews. The ones that survive can flee to Israel
Poland, 1968: The Jews in our country are already loyal to Israel. They will face dire consequences if they don’t leave our country and go to Israel
Ethiopia, 1974-1985: We’re going to marginalize and eventually try to kill all our Jews, and the only way they can escape is by being airlifted out of the country by Israeli helicopters
The US, 2023: Why can’t the Israeli Jews just go back to where they came from? Don’t they all have dual citizenship or whatever?
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I FUCKING LOVE HIM.
Bill Wyman gif set
#bill wyman#gimme shelter#i can't get no *clap clap* satisfaction *cute duckface*#je suis un rock star#white lightnin'#monkey grip#1970#1965#1981#1982#1974
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Double standard of West
We see a very irritating ans arrogance work by Swedish Government on the name of freedom. How can a country give permission to a single man on the name of freedom to hurt the sentiments of more than 2000 million people. European and American are not a human I prove this that American and European are not human they are pig and wolf in human shape. Allah made them as a human but these people who…
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#dailyprompt-1956#dailyprompt-1957#dailyprompt-1958#dailyprompt-1959#dailyprompt-1962#dailyprompt-1965#dailyprompt-1966#dailyprompt-1967#dailyprompt-1969#dailyprompt-1970#dailyprompt-1971#dailyprompt-1972#dailyprompt-1973#dailyprompt-1974#dailyprompt-1975#dailyprompt-1976#dailyprompt-1977#dailyprompt-1978#dailyprompt-1979#dailyprompt-1980#dailyprompt-1981#dailyprompt-1982
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EGOT winning american film, television, and broadway actor James Earl Jones has passed away on September 9, 2024 at the age of 93.
Jones made his film debut in Stanley Kubrick's Dr. Strangelove. He received a Golden Globe Award nomination for Claudine. Jones gained international fame for his voice role as Darth Vader in the Star Wars franchise, beginning with the original 1977 film. Jones' other notable roles include in Conan the Barbarian, Matewan, Coming to America, Field of Dreams, The Hunt for Red October, The Sandlot, and the voice of Mufasa in The Lion King. Jones reprised his roles in Star Wars media, The Lion King (2019) remake, and Coming 2 America.
Jones' television work includes playing Woodrow Paris in the series Paris between 1979 and 1980. He voiced various characters on the animated series The Simpsons in three separate seasons. He then was cast as Gabriel Bird, the lead role in the series Gabriel's Fire which aired from 1990 to 1991. For that role, he won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series and was nominated for his fourth Golden Globe Award, this time for Best Actor in a Television Series Drama. He played Bird again in the series Pros and Cons, which ran from 1991 to 1992; that earned him his fifth and final Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Television Series Drama. He then had small appearances in the series Law & Order, Picket Fences , Mad About You, Touched by an Angel, Frasier. His role in Picket Fences earned him another Primetime Emmy Award nomination, one for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series. His later television work includes small roles in Everwood, Two and a Half Men, House, and The Big Bang Theory.
Jones' theater work includes numerous Broadway plays, including Sunrise at Campobello (1958–1959), Danton's Death (1965), The Iceman Cometh (1973–1974), Of Mice and Men (1974–1975), Othello (1982), On Golden Pond (2005), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (2008) and You Can't Take It with You (2014–2015). He was also in various off Broadway productions and Shakespeare stage adaptations such as The Merchant of Venice (1962), The Winter's Tale (1963), Othello (1964–1965), Coriolanus (1965), Hamlet (1972), and King Lear (1973). His roles in The Great White Hope (1969) and Fences (1987) earned him two Tony Awards, both for Best Leading Actor in a Play.
#James Earl Jones#Star Wars#Darth Vader#The Lion King#Dr. Strangelove#Conan the Barbarian#Coming to America#Field of Dreams#Matewan#The Hunt for Red October#The Sandlot#film#television#broadway#obituary#R.I.P.
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