Belle
Part VII of Fallen Princesses series.
In the story Fallen Princesses.
18 responses
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Jaime Virguez gave props (8 Jun 2009):
this is really cool so surreal!
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Mike Morris gave props (8 Jun 2009):
NIce.
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Kale Friesen said (9 Jun 2009):
your work is very good, glad to see people out there thinking about society and taking the time to comment on it in their work
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Mary Hockenbery said (10 Jun 2009):
brilliant
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José A. Bolio gave props (13 Jun 2009):
increíble
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Les Chappell said (16 Jun 2009):
The fact that this princess is from "Beauty and the Beast" only makes it all the more coldly ironic. Very clever.
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David McCrillis gave props (20 Jun 2009):
Wicked!
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Allen Freeman gave props (21 Jun 2009):
This is fantastic. What a concept!
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Aaron Burton gave props (25 Jun 2009):
Gotta love perfection!
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Sakena said (25 Jun 2009):
your worf is fantastic,
congrats -
Allyson Fennell said (29 Jun 2009):
These are all stunning images. In this case, though, I can't see what it has to do with the Disneyfied or even original fairytale. Belle/Beauty was born a beauty. She doesn't undergo any magic or effort to become so, and I recall that she is also humble about it.
I think the Wicked Queen from Snow White would suit this concept a little better, because she was using all kinds of dark magic to stay young and hot! -
Linda Lim said (4 Jul 2009):
I guess this concept is not about an original beauty undergoing even more surgery to stay young and hot. It's about her being abused (from the bruises in her eyes) by her 'beastly' husband. An observation about the plight of married women and debunking the myth of "living happily ever after"...or is it both?
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Joanna said (6 Jul 2009):
This is an interesting series, but I would have liked to see more complexity. All these women are sad. There's no shade of gray, no conflict of emotions.
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Veronica Martinez gave props (7 Jul 2009):
awsome work!
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Hilary F said (8 Jul 2009):
Belle was able to see past the Beast's beastly exterior to the real person inside, but she isn't able to see past her aging face to her real inner self. I think this is what a lot of women go through; we tend to be fairly forgiving of a man's flaws when the person inside is desirable; we are much less forgiving of ourselves.
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Jessie Eisner-Kleyle said (8 Jul 2009):
Despite her generosity, charity and goodness, she has at this point succumbed to the pressure of being named "Beauty." Your work is BRILLIANT - go get 'em!!
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ashton gosnell gave props (17 Jul 2009):
awesome job.
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Jan Hoffman gave props (6 Aug 2009):
Quirky & creative -- excellent
Also by Dina Goldstein



