Based on an anonymous German portrait (c. 1909–1910), this reimagined piece flips the script on the prim and proper portrayal of early 20th-century womanhood. Here, a poised figure pensively posed at her desk becomes a feminist icon — reclaiming the gaze, channeling power, and serving vintage attitude with a side of sass.
Based on an anonymous German portrait (c. 1909–1910), this reimagined piece flips the script on the prim and proper portrayal of early 20th-century womanhood. Here, a poised figure pensively posed at her desk becomes a feminist icon — reclaiming the gaze, channeling power, and serving vintage attitude with a side of sass.
Part print lab, part time machine, part treasure hunt, Press Play mixes original works, adapted prints, and a deep curatorial dive through dusty archives in search of forgotten gems and visual oddities from art history’s fringes. Some are entirely our own invention; others are collaborations across centuries.
Art that’s smart, strange, a little subversive—and tastefully irreverent.
Press Play to begin.