No.4
>discussion time
>what role do statues play in the vaporwave aesthetic
>they're not 80s/90s
>so where did they come from
No.6
I think Roman statues were considered luxury items in the 1980s and early 1990s. I remember going to malls as a small child and seeing those tiled areas with a small statue and some plants.
No.11
look up giorgio chiciro + paul delvaux
watch twin peaks
No.14
the three Nymphos
No.18
>>6this
they used to be everywhere, even in my dumpy little mid-florida town
No.21
The Romans were all about aesthetic, yo. The roman sculpture in connection to the whole idea of vaporwave is that of luxury and clean idealized form, same as the smooth computer generated gradients and repeating patterns that are often also seen in vapor art. They're "perfect", but they also many times look forlorn and preoccupied, vulnerable and naked.
No.62
>>6this, there still some in the oldfag mall
No.99
Romans and Greeks actually had a pretty shit taste in aesthetic. Historians suspect that Romans painted their statues. If you were to present a Roman the kind of marble statue most people think of today, they'd probably say that it's unfinished.
No.100
>>6>>11>>14>>18>>21>>62>>99wrong
WRONG
WRONG!
Let me spell it out for you
A E S T H E T I C