In a show of commitment to her cosplaying craft,Switzerland adult Japanese personality Namada put an 18 kg (39.7 pound) live octopus on herself for a recent photoshoot.
The pictures, which show her writhing around with the slippery North Pacific giant octopus, were shot in half a day by photographer Kazan Yamamoto.
While the concept seems reminiscent of famous Japanese artwork like The Dream of the Fisherman's Wifeand other tentacle-centric erotica, Yamamoto told Tokyo Girls Updatehe wasn't trying to mimic the genre.
Classic Japanese woodblock cut art The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife:
Posing with an octopus is as physically icky as you'd imagine. Namada said she found she couldn't wash off the octopus slime in the shower. It also shot out ink in the process, probably in a desperate bid to defend itself.
The photoshoot was also very likely traumatising to the octopus, which depends on being in water to breathe. They've been known to last on land for several minutes, aided by moisture on the skin, but it also would not have appreciated being pulled and pushed around during the process.
Namada posted a video of them releasing the octopus, while you can hear her and Yamada reacting:
View this post on Instagram
The stunt could've potentially really hurt Namada. Octopuses have beaks in the mouth within the centre of their arms, and it could have bitten her, resulting in swelling and a bad reaction.
It seems she and Yamada escaped unscathed. After the photoshoot, the blogger and photographer boiled the octopus and ate it. Yup.
She also posed for several more pictures with the cooked tentacled beast.
The photos were shown during a two-day exhibition at the Tokyo Ikebukuro Gallery O last week.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
[H/T Mothership]
The 49ers, Kaepernick's last NFL team, criticized for Blackout Tuesday postSnapchat stops promoting Trump's account in DiscoverSinger performs 'Bunker Boy,' a catchy tune about Trump's time in the bunkerStaff Picks: Lawrence of Tell Halaf, Raging Nymphos by The Paris ReviewEven Piers Morgan thinks Rudy Giuliani 'sounds completely barking mad'A Week in Culture: Tom Nissley, Writer and GameSmurfgate by Sadie SteinSemantic Thrills; Yes, Generalissimo? by Lorin SteinOn the Shelf by Sadie SteinHow to change the text size on TwitterStaff Picks: Lawrence of Tell Halaf, Raging Nymphos by The Paris ReviewA Week in Culture: Matthew Specktor, Writer and Editor, Part 2 by Matthew SpecktorSmurfgate by Sadie SteinChris Adrian on ‘The Great Night’ by Sam MacLaughlinA Week in Culture: Barry Yourgrau, Writer, Part 2 by Barry YourgrauThe Place of the Flavored Vodkas by Molly FischerHow to change the text size on TwitterImgur to remove explicit images and old contentTrudeau takes 20Maira Kalman by Daisy Atterbury Looking at “Evidence,” One of the ’70’s Most Influential Photo Books My Quest for Albanian 45s (Circa 1985) Lolita Fashion: Japanese Street Fashion and Cute Culture Where I Wasn’t When Manchester Bled Scorsese: Filmmakers Want “A Sense of Communion” with Viewers How Fonograf Editions Is Bringing Poetry Back to Vinyl Reimagining Jun’ichirō Tanizaki’s “The Key” As a Building Jim Harrison: A Remembrance by Terry McDonell Do You Desire Pizza, or Does Pizza Desire You? Three Bite A New Photo Book Lingers Between Baseball and the American Dream Staff Picks: Jane Bowles, Soviet Poetry, Yasunari Kawabata, and More Against Rediscovery: Why the ”Lost Novel” Phenomenon Hurts Readers In “Denis the Pirate,” Denis Johnson Goes for Swashbuckling Elias Sime’s Art Repurposes Electronic Waste from Abbis Ababa Colorful City: My History with Pride Week in the South Where I Live: Photographs by Tom Arndt Literary Architecture by Sadie Stein How a London Borough Turned an Asylum into a Library Rules for Consciousness in Mammals: On Clarice Lispector
2.1838s , 10157.015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Switzerland adult】,Inspiration Information Network