Tumgik
#Manara
nakhtflug · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media
Storia dell'umanità, Milo Manara
125 notes · View notes
suite116 · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
(via Milo Manara)
382 notes · View notes
lasaraconor · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
225 notes · View notes
vinylfirst · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
102 notes · View notes
aitan · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Milo Manara
155 notes · View notes
nicklloydnow · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
“THE BORGIAS AND THE MAFIA
In 1455, the Holy See was occupied by Alfonso de Borja, a descendant of this eighth knight, under the name Callixtus III. Having gained the trust of King Alfonso Il of Naples, he came to power at the age of seventy-seven, while suffering from stomach cancer. His pain made him suspicious. He believed only in the loyalty of his Spanish family. Through the legacy of inheritance, his fortune fell into the hands of Rodrigo Borgia, who used it to fund his own ascension to the papal throne. Thus was born the first Mafia clan in history.
The Borgias possessed an absolute thirst for power. Europe had, by then, lost all hope in the goodness of God: the plague known as the Black Death had made miserably clear just how precarious human life can be, and with the bitterness of an orphan deprived of its supreme father, the populace consoled itself by indulging in carnal pleasures. It was in this context that Rodrigo Borgia, now Pope Alexander VI, began trafficking in a very powerful drug: papal bulls, which granted the forgiveness of sins . . . Every citizen could murder, steal, gamble, engage in prostitution or incest or unbridled gluttony, and all without fear: because in exchange for a handful of ducats, the Church offered absolution and the assurance that God would welcome the sinner into heaven.
The Borgias' passion for life, for dominance over all mankind, their disdain of any divine retribution, this absolute lack of morality, offset by their staggering appreciation of fine art, utterly captivated me. Knowing that the respectable Church of today once had a Spanish adventurer at its roots, a clever thief who was surrounded by his bought-and-sold lovers and by his children, each embodying a spiritual summit as well as an abyss - Cesare, strength and tyranny; Lucrezia, beauty and lust; Giovanni, intelligence and vanity; Gioffre, purity and stupidity - reminded me of the lotus plant, whose bright flowers spring from filthy swamps . . . And so I yielded to the temptation to write a comics script: in the form of a vast historical fresco on the creation, growth, and death of this provocative family, so similar to some of the people currently governing our planet.
(…)
In place of the Black Death, we have cancer and AIDS, along with pollution of our air, our water, and our planet. Instead of cities at war, we are witness to entire countries fighting. Christianity and Islam remain in conflict even today. The discovery of the Americas has now become interplanetary exploration. We're experiencing the artistic revolution of the Renaissance through personal computers and the Internet. The papal bulls of yore are today's commercial "benedictions" from the United States. Just as the ducat was the key to paradise during the Renaissance years, our only God is the almighty dollar: whether its value goes up or down and the gates of heaven open or close . . . Just as Machiavelli, in his book The Prince, recommended aggressive invasions to achieve Italian unity, in this day and age a powerful nation (that shall remain nameless) ruthlessly attacks any country, claiming to obstruct "Evil" but spurred on, in fact, by its thirst for oil . . . Today, the Borgias have been replaced by oil mafias, pharmaceutical industry multinationals, drug cartels, and greedy bankers.
And yet, the corruption that flourished during the Renaissance could not prevent the emergence of a Leonardo da Vinci, a Raphael, a Botticelli, a Michelangelo, a Dante, a Machiavelli even, as well as so many others who opened up new vistas to human awareness. This is what brings us great hope: the possibility that the decadence of the world today is just the pain of a chrysalis becoming a butterfly, and that from the last vast crisis into which we plummet a new humanity will arise, one that will look upon us with the same tender compassion we feel for the monkeys.
—Alejandro Jodorowsky
August 2011”
92 notes · View notes
fungusamongusblog2 · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
170 notes · View notes
poprotica · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
130 notes · View notes
mirobraz · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Nadya Yumasheva as "Miele".
Fonte: fecebook.com/milomanaraofficial
9 notes · View notes
c-etait-ailleurs · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Milo Manara (image complète)
58 notes · View notes
suite116 · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
(via Milo Manara)
139 notes · View notes
lasaraconor · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
91 notes · View notes
ilterzouomo · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Manara, pinocchio
26 notes · View notes
aitan · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
Milo Manara, cover di Black Widow per Marvel.
61 notes · View notes
artesthetic · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
191 notes · View notes
megliodiunafoto · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes