(Source: dibsonthattats, via remove-your-crown)
life:
Not published in LIFE. Gay rights event, 1971.
In late 1971, two years after the Stonewall riots in New York sparked the modern gay rights movement in America, and twelve months before LIFE ceased publishing as a weekly, the magazine featured an article on “gay liberation” that, seen a full 40 years later, feels sensational, measured and somehow endearingly, deeply square all at the same time.
Read more here.
Salvador Dali painting Amanda Lear in Spain, 1971. Photo by Yul Brynner.
“Dalí was a genius who liked ambiguity and he used to talk to women as they were men”, said Lear, a model-turned-pop singer, painter and actress, whom it was once rumoured had a sex-change paid for by Dalí, though she has always denied that she was born a boy.
Lear became Dalí’s constant companion, muse and disciple, and accompanied Dalí and Gala on their trips to Barcelona, Madrid, New York and Paris over a period of fifteen years. Lear posed for some of Dalí’s works such as Venus in Fur and Vogué, took part in several of his film projects and was seen by his side during press conferences.
Lear’s origins are unclear: contested facts include her birthdate, her birth sex, the names and nationalities of her parents and the location of her upbringing. Lear’s alleged transsexual background has been commented upon in the media and in the biographies of those who knew Lear earlier in her life.
(via douceperlesmexicaines)
Do not get angry
Do not worry
Be thankful
Work hard
Be kind to others
(Source: quote-book, via v-o-g-u-e-and-v-o-d-k-a)
(via fuckyeahtattoos)
A little gross… Still want to be him! Best job HANDS DOWN in the world
(Source: idontdonice, via stfuitspablo)
Led
(Source: mikediamond, via unfaithful2me)
Fucking live it
(Source: elizabethhope93, via funkyblacknwhite)
(via theheartisking)




