Shelley • 23 • bookworm • Hufflepuff • mascara hoarder • bonafide cat lady • future librarian extraordinaire • I have 3 cats of my very own: Little Bear, Dusty, and Spiff. You'll see them on here from time to time. I'm probably on my Anime Blog
Here’s a snippet about her from this article (that also features more photographs of her work, including this sculpture):
Rong has pursued sculpting since an early age. She studied art at the Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, then under the tutelage of sculptor Wang Du, and later she “immersed herself” in figurative sculpture techniques used by European artists in the Renaissance and Baroque periods. Their sense of femininity plays a defining role in Rong’s contemporary works, and the stylistic guidelines help carry on the tradition of realistic sculptures in art.
Hi guys! i just wanted to let you know that i have a tag on here that links to every single writing reference/tips/masterpost i’ve ever seen in this here website.
I’ll link it here. you can also find all these posts in one place under the tag for my writing peeps
i see so many girls and there’s so many different types of pretty… there’s like the honey, green tea pretty girls that like sitting outside and soaking up the sun…. the dark pretty with black eye make up and wild hair and piercings… the bad bitch pretty with killer highlight and striking style….. the lazy pretty girls with snapbacks and sneakers…. the bookish girls with glasses and sweaters that make your heart melt…. the soft Angel pretty girls who just look as sweet as a peach with soulful eyes…. the cute girls with chubby cheeks and messy hair and it seems like warmth emits from them… girls are so fucking beautiful
The Trump Administration recently released its proposed federal budget for FY2018. The Institute of Museum of Library Services (IMLS), the independent agency that administers the bulk of federal library funding under the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA),is included in the list of independent agencies whose budgets the proposal recommends eliminating.
There’s an easy way for you to help - call your Representative today and ask them to sign the letters now circulating. These letters support $186.6 million for the Library Services and Technology Act, which goes to every state in the country for them to decide how best to use it, and $27 million for the Innovative Approaches to Literacy Program that buys books and other supplies for kids from the poorest communities across the country.
Members of the House have only until April 3 to let our
champions know that they will sign the separate LSTA and IAL “Dear
Appropriator” letters now circulating, so there’s no time to lose.
Use ALA’s Legislative Action Center today
to ask your Member of Congress to sign both the LSTA and IAL letters. Many Members of Congress will only sign such a letter if their
constituents ask them to, so it’s up to you to help save LSTA and IAL
from elimination or significant cuts.
Five minutes of your time could help preserve over $210 million in library funding now at risk.