View allAll Photos Tagged prostitute
Prostitute playhouse about 'it's better to be a helpful prostitute than a evil doctor.' Every pieces in the house are handmade with paper, Fimo and mixed material.
date completed: may 2011
Why would you ever wear the shirt if you could run around with your nipples out?
Oh Bare rose, you think of everything.
Prostitutes' cemetery - 'fallen' women were buried outside the boundaries of the City. South Bank in Middle Ages was filled with prostitutes and brothels. The girls were called 'Winchester Geese' because they operated in areas owned by Bishop of Winchester. I believe some of them wore fox tails attached to dresses to indicate they were prostitutes.
Now the fence is used to memorialise people who are thought to be on the fringes of society. There's an article on the Guardian website by the excellent Julie Bindel about this place.
The feet of the prostitute that I see. I took her out to dinner and then spent the night with her. She may look really nasty and smell really nasty but it was worth the money!
A garden in the making: an estimated 15,000 people, mostly prostitutes and poor people, are buried in a small patch of land a stone's throw from London Bridge. Not so long ago, Transport for London wanted to get its hands on the plot; now it's becoming a quirky green space to enjoy and remember. On the railings facing the street, people have put up ribbons and home-made votives to remember those long dead, and friends and relatives lost more recently too.
Photograph of an unknown womanthat was taken sometime during the early 1930's.
This photograph was in a photo album that belonged to a man who served in the United States Marine Corps during the 1920's and 1930's. Most of the photos were of girlfriends and prostitutes.
This is old stuff.. I think it's from the end of 2004? For my Thesis/Senior Project in school, I made a body of work I called "My Neighborhood", and these portraits were one part of it... the real center of the show was a series of large hand painted & drawn landscapes detailing a strange little neighborhood, with some characters travelling from one panel to the next, and these continuing characters were shown even larger in full-body shots that were silkscreened, placed in between the landscape panels. These are small (4"x4") portraits of almost all the other characters inhabiting the series... I'm kind of bummed, but there's a few of these missing for one reason or another.
Prostitutes' cemetery - 'fallen' women were buried outside the boundaries of the City. South Bank in Middle Ages was filled with prostitutes and brothels. The girls were called 'Winchester Geese' because they operated in areas owned by Bishop of Winchester. I believe some of them wore fox tails attached to dresses to indicate they were prostitutes.
Now the fence is used to memorialise people who are thought to be on the fringes of society. There's an article on the Guardian website by the excellent Julie Bindel about this place.
Seen on the side of The Black Boy Inn in Caernarfon. Telling the tale of the prostitutes that worked there.
A garden in the making: an estimated 15,000 people, mostly prostitutes and poor people, are buried in a small patch of land a stone's throw from London Bridge. Not so long ago, Transport for London wanted to get its hands on the plot; now it's becoming a quirky green space to enjoy and remember. On the railings facing the street, people have put up ribbons and home-made votives to remember those long dead, and friends and relatives lost more recently too.