#pietro longhi
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literaryvein-reblogs · 6 days ago
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Writing Notes: Fainting
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Fainting - (also called syncope) a transient loss of consciousness and muscle control brought about by an inadequate amount of oxygen reaching the brain.
In all cases, the individual:
feels lightheaded and
briefly loses consciousness.
A person who faints temporarily loses consciousness and muscle control.
The period of unconsciousness may last a few seconds to a few minutes.
Recovery is spontaneous.
Fainting normally causes no permanent damage to the brain, although the individual may be injured by falling when losing muscle control.
Physicians distinguish several categories of fainting:
Cardiac fainting - (cardiac syncope) occurs because heart disease prevents the heart from pumping enough blood to the brain. A person with cardiac syncope tends to faint more than once. Cardiac syncope is a sign of a serious health problem.
Reflex fainting - occurs in response to events such as emotional stress, fear, or physical pain.
Situational fainting - occurs reproducibly when the individual assumes a certain posture or performs a specific act. [NOTE: Reflex and situational fainting are not life-threatening and rarely indicate the presence of serious disease.]
Orthostatic hypotension - occurs when a person rises from lying or sitting to standing. Changing position causes blood pressure to drop suddenly in some people, resulting in a feeling of lightheadedness or a brief faint. It can be caused by certain drugs (both prescription and illicit), heavy alcohol consumption, some diseases (e.g., Parkinson’s disease, dementia) and decreased blood volume (e.g., dehydration, severe blood loss).
Fainting is caused by inadequate amounts of oxygen reaching the brain.
Cardiac syncope can be brought on by:
vascular disease,
congestive heart failure,
irregular heart rhythms (cardiac arrhythmia),
heart valve disease, or
disease of the heart muscle (cardiomyopathy).
The causes of less serious types of fainting are based on:
emotional responses,
changes in blood pressure,
decreased blood volume, etc.
Treatment depends on the underlying cause of the fainting.
In cases of reflex and situational fainting, no treatment may be needed.
People experiencing orthostatic hypotension are counseled on how to move safely from lying or standing to prevent injury from fainting.
People with cardiac fainting continue medical care, most likely supervised by a cardiologist.
Source ⚜ More: Notes & References ⚜ Writing Realistic Injuries
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laclefdescoeurs · 2 months ago
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Il risveglio della dama, Pietro Longhi
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rococo-art-history · 10 months ago
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The Ridotto painted by Pietro Longhi (1701 - 1785)
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granstromjulius · 10 months ago
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Pietro Longhi
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carloskaplan · 6 months ago
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As cóxegas (hacia 1755), de Pietro Longhi 
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kaitropoli · 6 months ago
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The Rhinoceros
By Pietro Longhi
Oil Painting, 1751.
Ca' Rezzonico.
THERE are two slightly different versions of this painting, but for now (and because this will be quick for me), I will detail certain things that stand out to me in this piece.
=== BEFORE READING INFO BELOW: (POTENTIAL TRIGGER WARNINGS: ANIMAL ABUSE; POSSIBLE CUCKOLDRY) === TLDR TOPICS (With Skip Marks): Clara, a live exhibited rhinoceros...paragraphs 1-5; Possible cuckold messaging in this painting (going with the story of Clara)...paragraph 5; The Venice Carnival (masks)...paragraphs 6-7. ===
THE Rhinoceros--or known by two different names: (1) Clara the Rhinoceros; (2) Exhibition of a Rhinoceros at Venice--has the very obvious subject of Clara, a rhinoceros who was displayed in Venice during Carnival. Clara had been on tour throughout Europe, now finally making her debut in wonderful Serenissima, the floating city where women and men walk with their identities covered during the time of enlightenment, reformation, and new political thought while the Holy Roman Empire shines down their reign, and the Papal States are near their last century of control.
CLARA has been the subject of a few art pieces throughout her touring days on Earth. She once came from India and spent her last days in Lambeth, England (imagine dying in Britain💀), witnessing history before her very eyes; though, she wouldn't know it, especially being the one making history as one of the first living rhinos to be exhibited in modern Europe since 1515 (and before 1515, it was the og Roman Empire... centuries before 1515!). She was an orphan who was adopted by a dude in Bengal by the name of Jan Albert Sichterman, who worked for the Dutch East India Company, and then, of course, he sold her to a man who would be a permanent father figure for the rest of her life, cpt. Douwe Mout van der Meer (wild ahh name, but he's Dutch, so what do you expect?). I guess it'd be wrong to call him a father figure, considering he also technically "sold" her, as in what you'd do back then if your child had a deformity and you're poor (market crash, dustbowl, Great Depression things) and the freak show was in town, but when you have daddy issues, being made an attraction is still love (and a good kind of attraction) in your eyes. I mean, I'd probably lose all respect for myself if that means I can travel (I'M KIDDING... probably. The opportunity hasn't come knocking at my door just yet).
THERE'S much history to our girl, Clara, like how she had her own personal 8HP-drawn wooden carriage (treated like the damn queen she is), or how she moisturized with fish oil (we don't use Drunk Elephant around these parts👹). They kept her in better, more secure care than Dürer's Rhino (1515, remember? Anyway, he drowned! They weren't gonna do that to our Clara-baby) when traveling to Italy... but this is where something did happen to her..................
UPON arrival in Rome, Clara was discovered to have lost her horn (evidently seen in the artwork above). It is debated how she lost it: either she rubbed it off (which apparently is a common trait among rhinoceroses who are kept in tight confinement), or somebody cut it off (Wikipedia claims for safety reasons, but does not provide a footnote, so keep a close eye on that). ** SIDE NOTE: I tagged this part specifically as animal abuse; though poaching is a serious topic, in a case like this, it can be compared to the *controversial* practice in which rhino workers dehorn to ensure nobody attempts to poach the animal (a way of justifying this is that the horns are made of keratin, which, if you don't know, is the same as our fingernails; rhinos will regrow their horns in ≤ two years; rhino horns are sought out for a good chunk of money due to them being used in medicines, typically that found in Asian cultures, so people will hunt these animals with tranquilizers (not the issue seen in Philly right now, but if you have time, check that out) and leave them to bleed to death due to negligently cutting the horn off).
AS I had briefly mentioned, horns can grow back, so try not to worry too much about our girl. After all, she lived quite longer than expected, so it couldn't be all that bad. Anyway, back to when she was hornless and staying in Venice during the time of Carnival, Italian painter Pietro Longhi, who was notorious for his Venetian everyday life paintings, decided it'd be nice to visit Clara and paint her. In this scene, we see a man in the crowd holding up a horn, which leads many to believe that this is a message. You know how you do those bunny ears when somebody's taking a photo--children to their grandmothers, sisters to their brothers, and so on and so forth? Well, believe it or not, the bunny ears were the original symbol for cuckoldry, besides the obvious metal hand (sad day for the metalheads... or maybe good day if you're a cuck, but that wouldn't make sense because you gotta have taste to be into metal). Horns are used to represent cuckolds because it uses the similarity of stags' mating rituals, compared to how it got the name due to cuckoo birds leaving their eggs in others' nests (kind of like those types of faeries that stole children and left their own to mimic... which this led to an ACTUAL murder... but that's not up for discussion today, sorry). Anyway, because this dude is holding a horn, which appears to seem like it belonged to Clara, and the unattended ladies in the back (we will discuss them in a hot minute), this man may as well be a cuckold, or, unlikely (because I think it's funnier and more apparent), signing somebody else off as one.
FOR the other patrons in the crowd, as I have mentioned a billion times already, this was Carnival time (Fat Thursday to Fat Tuesday, celebrating before Ash Wednesday and Lent; U.S. citizens know Mardi Gras, which is technically the last day of Carnival... if that's an easier explanation, I'm glad to help, because I don't feel like getting into the specifics of it all). Tradition is to wear masks (although this was the main cause for the abrupt ending of Carnival until it was revived in the 1970s), which was originally done to hide identities, which made it easier for social classes to clash. One of these ladies is wearing a mask (can you guess which one?), and it holds a provocative nature.
MORETTA, or also known as servetta muta, is a strapless mask that is usually crafted with black velvet. The wearer would bite down on a bead which keeps the mask in place, however disables them from speaking. Seems impractical, right? Well, women died for it as much as the men they were attracting did. The silence, and the contract of black to their skin, making the mask pop out, just like their breasts when wearing décolleté alla veneziana fashion (clothes which reveal the body; and don't get me started with the shear fabric and what they did to make their nipples more apparent). To take away from the face will bring more attention to other areas, which was the achieved goal. To bring silence is to be the mysterious dark beauty that people still talk about being today! Don't deny that this is feminism, because it is in the end... giving women the choice to keep playing a mysterious game where their intentions are anonymous, or to burrow in the advances of the potential suitor. Whichever they chose, it is ultimately up to the man if he wants to play a round of blind dating/hookup.
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LINKS TO SOURCES:
| Wikipedia - Carnival of Venice
| Wikipedia - Clara (Rhinoceros)
| National Gallery - NG1101
| Historians of Netherlandish Art - Exhibition: Clara the Rhinoceros
| Mental Floss - Clara
| Science - Cutting Off Rhino Horns
| Save the Rhino - Poaching
| Italy Mask - History of the Venice Carnival
| Ca' Macana - The Moretta or Muta
YAPPING all done completely by me (@kaitropoli)
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nancydrewwouldnever · 1 year ago
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Pietro Longhi, Exhibition of a Rhinoceros at Venice, ca. 1751, oil/canvas (National Gallery, London)
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artschoolglasses · 1 year ago
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The Dance, Pietro Longhi, 1750
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lazyasriel · 4 months ago
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Had this in my drafts from when I saw the painting on holiday
Proof of how true the meme turned out to be:
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Guess which one I am
The painting is The Coffee, Pietro Longhi
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negreabsolut · 1 year ago
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Una versió alternativa d'El Ridotto a Venècia, de Pietro Longhi.
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aquitainequeen · 2 years ago
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'You see that lady at the back, with the black circle on her face?'
'Yes?'
'Well, that was a special sort of mask for women; you kept it on by holding a button that was sewn on the inside of the mask between your teeth! ...which meant that you couldn't talk while wearing it.'
'Ah. Of course.'
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tenebrius-excellium · 1 year ago
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"The Temptation" by Pietro Longhi, 1746, 24 x 19 1/2 in. (61 x 49.5 cm), oil on canvas.
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rococo-art-history · 10 months ago
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Rhinoceros in Venice painted by Pietro Longhi (1701 - 1785)
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oldsardens · 4 months ago
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Pietro Longhi - The Tickle
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artschoolglasses · 1 year ago
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A Lady Receiving a Cavalier, Pietro Longhi, 1745-55
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wickedlittlecritta · 1 year ago
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La Polenta (1740), by Pietro Longhi. Oil on canvas.
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