Anahid Arslanian. Altar to
Lilith. Mixed Media Assemblage Box, 15" x 21" x 3".
© Anahid Arslanian, all rights
reserved. Used by permission
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Fortunato Caragliano.
Lilith. Created using Adobe Photoshop 4.0, Valis's MetaFlo &
StrataStudio 1.75 for the Apple Macintosh. Orig. size: 4255x6720 pixels.
The picture was originally released in the end of 1996 (november) by
U.D.C., Catania, Italy, and then used by NovaExpress, a weekly magazine based
in Rome, as an illustration for the cover.
© copyright 1996 U.D.C., Catania, Italy. Used by permission
of the artist.
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Morgan Drex. Lilith and Medusa.
watercolour and pencil on paper--all 3 images part of one scroll.Used by permission
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Unknown. The dark moon: Sun, Earth, Moon &
LilithThe Earth's second moon was an astronomical 'discovery' that was ultimately discredited. However, not before the astronomer who discovered it named it Lilith, and it was then incorporated into some astrological systems as an influential heavenly body with some of the characteristics of the mythical figure Lilith. It is still used by some astrologers. If you created this image, or if you know who did, please contact me.
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Floralyn Groff Flory. Lilith as celebrant. Three dimensional,
multi-media. Made from grapevines, stained glass, feathers, birds feet, clay
and plaster. Part of a 5 piece display accompanied by poetry.The artist comments: The artwork was created to honor the journey that women make as they struggle to follow their own path and find themselves in spite of the limitations, judgements, restrictions and demands placed on them by society, family and friends. Used by permission.
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Allison Merriweather, Lilith.
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Luis Royo, Black Angel. I don't actually know if Royo intends this to be a portrait
of Lilith.
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© Copyright 1995-2001 Alan Humm.
Comments and corrections to: humm@ccat.sas.upenn.edu. |
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