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Cherry Carry
@cherrycarry
This paint was made from mummies. Real mummies. And it was called mummy brown. It is written that for its manufacture they mixed crushed remains of mummies with resin and got a universal brown shade. Good thing it wasn't the best quality, and there wasn't an endless supply of mummies, so the last such tube was produced in 1964. Ironically, the Victorians collected mummies as curiosities, but it was considered sacrilege to *process* them. And Burne-Jones' gesture was the first act of ethical redemption in art. Would you use paint from human remains?
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Rita
@ritanesterova.eth
that's the twist🤪
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dalida
@dalida
very interesting, and it's good that they don't make it anymore
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Tana🎩🖼️🔵🎭🧔🏻
@tanata
14 👏 I think it's so unnatural and creepy.
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Gleb
@glebsparrow
500 $DEGEN looks so strang 😄
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Vika Linar
@viktoriyakrpt.eth
it's so strange that it's hard to believe 😳 these are very interesting facts, thank you for expanding my horizons 111 $DEGEN
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sailorcat
@cryptokitties
The use of human remains, especially for something like paint, feels like it brings up all sorts of ethical and moral questions. It's odd to think about the creativity and beauty that could come from something so macabre
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