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Apr 20, 2025 14 tweets 5 min read Read on X
“Beauty perishes in life, but is immortal in art.” – Leonardo da Vinci

But what does immortal beauty look like?

Here are ten soul-piercing sculptures that will haunt you or will leave you breathless. 🧵👇 “Modesty” by Antonio Corradini
1. Michelangelo’s Pietà

It is Easter Sunday. And only befitting to start with Michelangelo's masterpiece.

She doesn’t scream.

She cradles him—broken, lifeless—her face frozen in grace. Carved from marble before Michelangelo turned 25.

One block. One chisel. One mother’s eternal grief.
2. Bernini’s Abduction of Proserpina

Fingers grip flesh. Marble bends like skin.

This isn’t just sculpture. It’s a moment of terror, power, and desperation—frozen forever.

Bernini was only 23.
3. The Veiled Christ by Giuseppe Sanmartino

Christ's dead body. Veiled. Still breathing.

That’s how real it looks.

Carved in 1753, and to this day no one agrees how he did it.
4. Nike of Samothrace

Wings stretched wide. Headless, yet defiant.

She’s not a victim of time. She defies time. Found in pieces, now commanding a staircase in the Louvre.

Victory never looked so fierce.
5. Corradini’s Modesty

She’s veiled, but nothing is hidden.

One of the greatest illusions in art—marble turned to sheer silk.

You can feel the breath beneath it.
6. Perseus with the Head of Medusa by Benvenuto Cellini

Triumph and terror in one strike.

Medusa’s face contorts in her last moment. Perseus—cold, calculating.

This isn’t heroism. It’s raw, divine justice.
7. Narciso by Jago

A modern sculpture with ancient power.

A man gazes into his own reflection, forever in love with himself—until he’s destroyed by it.

Beauty weaponized. Narciso by JAGO (Jago; actual name Jacopo Cardillo)
If this thread moved you even a little ...

I share the world’s most powerful art and stories every week.

Subscribe free → thecultureexplorer.beehiiv.com/subscribeThe Veiled Virgin, masterly created out of Carrara marble, a material derived from Tuscany, by Italian sculptor Giovanni Strazza.  Credit: @Ticiaverveer
8. Ippolito Scalza’s Pietà

Mary doesn’t just mourn. She pleads.

Her son’s body slumps. The silence is unbearable.

This version of the Pietà feels heavier.

Closer. Human. Image
9. Apollo and Daphne by Bernini

She runs. He chases.

Just as he grabs her, she turns into a tree—bark swallowing her fingers, hair turning to leaves.

Desire meets horror.
10. The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa by Bernini

She’s pierced by divine love.

Eyes closed. Mouth parted. Her body caught in a moment between agony and ecstasy.

Bernini made marble breathe.
For more content like this, follow my account @CultureExploreX.

Which of these 10 stunned you the most?

If your favorite sculpture isn’t on the list, drop it below—I want to see it. Veiled Virgin is a Carrara marble statue carved in Rome by Italian sculptor Giovanni Strazza (1818–1875). Credit: @archeohistories
Bonus: Saint Bartholomew Flayed
Duomo di Milano.

He holds his own skin like a cloak.

Art doesn’t get darker—or more unforgettable.

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More from @CultureExploreX

May 4
Switzerland looks unreal in places.

Glacier lakes, cliffside villages, medieval towns, waterfalls, castles, and mountains that make you wonder how one small country holds this much beauty.

Let’s travel through 20 of its most iconic and scenic places. 🧵 Credit: @collapsed24
1. Zermatt (Matterhorn)

At the base of the Matterhorn, Zermatt feels like Switzerland at full force. Car-free streets, alpine chalets, epic hikes, and one of the most recognizable mountains on Earth. Credit: @MagicalEurope
2. Lauterbrunnen

Surrounded by towering cliffs and 72 waterfalls, Lauterbrunnen feels less like a village and more like a valley from a dream.
Read 23 tweets
Apr 17
Some sculptures do more than impress. They make stone feel alive.

Leonardo da Vinci had said:
“Beauty perishes in life, but is immortal in art.”

a thread... Image
1. Michelangelo once said the true work of art is only a shadow of divine perfection.

Then he carved the Pietà.

Cold marble became grief, tenderness, and absolute control. It still feels unreal more than 500 years later.

St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City.
2. The Veiled Christ by Giuseppe Sanmartino feels impossible.

That veil should not exist in stone. Yet it clings, folds, and breathes across the body of Christ with terrifying precision.

Few sculptures blur the line between craft and miracle like this one.

Cappella Sansevero, Naples.Image
Read 23 tweets
Feb 28
Iran is often reduced to headlines about politics.

But behind them stands one of the oldest continuous civilizations on Earth, where architecture, poetry, and faith shaped beauty for over 2,500 years.

Here’s a journey through Iran’s architectural splendor. 🧵 Image
1. Vank Cathedral, Isfahan (1606)

Built by Armenian Christians under Safavid rule, this cathedral blends Persian ornament with Armenian sacred art, a reminder that Iran’s history is deeply multicultural. Credit: @archi_tradition
2. Golestan Palace, Tehran (1524)

A Qajar royal complex where Persian tradition meets European influence, reflecting Iran’s encounter with modernity without abandoning its identity. Image
Read 23 tweets
Feb 20
Sicily has survived because it refuses to choose one civilization.

Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Normans, Spaniards. They all arrived certain they would leave their mark.

And none erased what came before.

An island that reminds how civilizations are built. 🧵👇 Image
The Palatine Chapel

Step inside and the ceiling alone will stop you.

Byzantine gold mosaics blaze above you. Islamic muqarnas ripple overhead. Latin kings ruled here, but the room speaks Greek and Arabic too.

The Normans did not destroy Sicily’s past. They absorbed it. That is why this chapel feels eternal.Credit: Culture_Crit
The Valley of the Temples

Before Rome was an empire, these Doric giants already stood in the sun.

The Temple of Concordia still rises with almost defiant symmetry. Two and a half millennia later, its columns barely flinch.

You don’t just see antiquity here. You feel its weight.Photo by Peri Deniz on pinterest pin/55380270411561563/
Read 14 tweets
Feb 3
I didn’t turn to old Christian thinkers because I was looking for religion.

I turned to them because even though success answers many questions, it doesn’t tell you who you are becoming.

Here’s what 2,000 years of Christian thought taught me (🧵) about where to turn when modern life stops making sense.Image
Paul of Tarsus is the worst place you’d expect wisdom from.

He spent years hunting Christians, convinced he was right. Then his entire identity collapsed.

His lesson isn’t about self-improvement. It’s this: It's never too late to change.

Artwork: Conversion on the Way to Damascus by Caravaggio (1601).Image
Origen of Alexandria lost his father to execution as a teenager.

Instead of hardening, he went deeper. He believed truth isn’t meant to be skimmed or consumed.

It’s meant to confront you where you’re avoiding yourself. Image
Read 16 tweets
Jan 9
What if I told you there’s a country with
more UNESCO sites than Egypt,
borders with 15 nations,
and empires older than Rome

yet the world reduces it to nukes and veils?

That country is Iran.
And most people have never really seen it. 🧵 Created around 520 BC, the Bisotun Inscription stands as a monumental testament to the ambition and authority of King Darius the Great of Persia.
Iran isn’t new.
It’s older than the name “Persia.”

Ērān, meaning “land of the Aryans,” was carved into stone nearly 1,700 years ago.
This identity existed long before modern borders.

But the world stopped listening.

“Persia” sounded beautiful.
“Iran” sounded dangerous.
One became poetry. The other became a threat.A rock relief of Ardashir I (224–242 AD) in Naqsh-e Rostam, inscribed "This is the figure of Mazda worshipper, the lord Ardashir, King of Iran." Photo by Wojciech Kocot - Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Iran spans deserts, forests, mountains, and coastlines.
It touches the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf.
It borders 15 countries.

It has always been a bridge and a battlefield.
Too strategic to ignore.
Too rooted to erase. Image
Read 13 tweets

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