A Wooden Sculpture Depicting Death Made In 1520
Death was often made the subject of art, personified, given a material shape. It is curious that in English and German culture, Death is seen as male and in French and Italian culture, it is represented as a female.
A 16th century sculptor, Hans Leinberger, interprets Death as a skeleton. It is a representation of what becomes of a person after they die. It has arrows in one hand and a bow in the other, standing in a twisted pose. The sculpture is made from a single piece of pear wood. The ability to carve the partially exposed ribs and bones, the tattered clothing and to create an image of a rotating body shows the extraordinary skills of the artist.
The issue with this is that in todays society we cannot be sure if you are trying to be funny, or if you actually belive it
"trying" is the key word...looks more like someone zoom called her first year psych class at college and now she's a progressive communist with short blue hair
Or she is in fact an evangelical Christian from Texas and believes this shit because she heard about it on info wars.
Or "she" is a guy who got a random girls name on a website. We'll never know. But we now know your political views and your sense of humor
"who's a good boy?'
or
"who ate the beef on the table? Brutus, did you eat the beef" as Brutus looked away guilty as he11