cim | cindy shine gifs | TrashyPorn
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic
asylum-art:  Sandra Chevrier’s “Les Cages: A Fractured Gaze” at Mirus Gallery Canadian artist Sandra Chevrier’s collaged portraits utilize a facet of pop culture that has never, until recently, been regarded as “for women”: the superhero comic