Evolution, 1908

In November 1906 artist Hilma af Klint wrote, “The experiments I have undertaken...will astound humanity.” Geometric and organic forms, af Klint invented a distinctive artistic language, now recognized as among that era’s earliest forays into abstraction.
Born in Stockholm in 1862, af Klint grew up in a family of naval officers and cartographers. She and her family lived at the Military Academy in Karlberg Palace in the city, spending summers on rural Adelsö island in Lake Mälaren, where she developed a close connection to the natural world. Af Klint attended Sweden’s Royal Academy of Fine Arts and, following her graduation with honors in 1887, found recognition showing landscape painting at a series of group exhibitions organized by the Swedish Association for Art.
Af Klint also worked as a scientific illustrator. Commissions in these years included anatomical illustrations of horses for a textbook on equine surgery and drawings of fungi specimens as part of research by a renowned Swedish mycologist. In these renderings, af Klint skillfully captured the specificity of her subjects’ color, texture, and shape, demonstrating her sensitivity to nature and her observational abilities.
At the same time, af Klint pursued an interest in spiritualism, believing in a realm beyond the visible, engaging with Theosophy and anthroposophy. Founded by Helena Blavatsky in 1875, Theosophy embraced reincarnation, the divinity inherent in every being, and the possibility of evolving one’s consciousness. Rudolf Steiner built on these ideas in founding anthroposophy, focusing on the individual’s spiritual journey—their direct contact with the spirit. These belief systems, adopted across the globe by artists and others in the early 20th century, were central to af Klint’s worldview, and she explored spiritual ideas in her artistic practice and in the notebooks she kept throughout her life.
As early as 1896, af Klint participated in seances and created collaborative automatic drawings with a collective of women called The Five. In 1906, she accepted from her spirit guides what she described as “a great commission,” which led her to create a monumental cycle of paintings, 193 in all, known as the Paintings for the Temple.
The central series, called The Ten Largest, charted humanity’s journey from youth to old age and featured pulsating, abstract shapes that recall the spiraling tendrils and biomorphic forms of plants.
In January 1917, seeking to represent nature’s most basic element, af Klint embarked on The Atom Series (1917). Employing the visual language of science, she created abstract diagrams depicting what is impossible to see with the naked eye. Af Klint also ascribed moral conditions to the atom, connecting its form and energy to human character, writing, “The atom finds within itself Truth and Justice.”
She continued to explore the possibilities of the diagram, and in the spring of 1919 embarked on a project to demonstrate the “connection between the plant world and the world of the soul.”
Beginning that April, af Klint embarked on daily observations of nature, drawing flowering plants on the island of Munsö, outside of Stockholm, creating a portfolio known as the Nature Studies. Breaking with traditional botanical art, af Klint paired each plant with a diagram, which visualized an aspect of human character or a spiritual quality she gleaned from close looking. Af Klint imagined the Nature Studies as the central element in a flora, or a botanical atlas, demonstrating her belief that careful observation of nature would reveal ineffable aspects of the human condition.
In channeling a spiritual realm, af Klint pioneered a singular form of abstraction before contemporaries like Vasily Kandinsky, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, and Kazimir Malevich. In 1932, understanding the radical potential of pushing beyond conventional representation, af Klint determined that her paintings, drawings, and notebooks “should be opened twenty years after my death.”
Upon her passing in 1944, af Klint bequeathed her works to her nephew, who followed her directions and preserved them for the future. Today, exhibited across the world, af Klint’s paintings and drawings, along with her voluminous writings, have prompted a reevaluation of abstraction’s beginnings.
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oh shit oh fuk
I think I might develop a crush on my friend, if I haven't already and am just unaware of it. we've been curling up and cuddling a lot lately and its been lovely, watching movies and then falling asleep intertwined together, giving each other tender touch, tracing lines on each others skin and cuddling for hours. But I dont want to put myself in a position of unrequited desire.
Its so nice to entwine ourselves, her head on my chest, pulling hair out of her face and tracing lines on the skin of her back; falling asleep with her arms around me, laying on her shoulder and looking up at her. And her meows/mewls are so cute (she's a kitty). I dont want to stop that closeness but also if I develop a crush I should. and like yes I'm autistic and dont pick up on sexual/romantic interest from others, but I'm also pretty sure she hasn't expressed any indications of that towards me. Idk, rn I'm happy with where things are at, and if I stop being happy with it, wanting more or having like clear crush-crush feelings, I'll talk about it with her; I'd be crushed (lol) if the friendship got weird and awkward or dissolved.
update upon reading responses
Oki so y'all got me doubting my perception of things, I'm gonna talk to her (hopefully today, she's coming over to spend time with my roommate and said shed get here a bit before so hopefully we've got time for that) and ask what her perceptions intentions and desires are around all of this. Ams anxious but is better to talk than not talk.I'm pretty sure if someone cuddled me once I'd cross over the point of no return.
I'm not built for that kinda affection being platonic. Low key makes me a bit worried because of some of the things I've heard about trans women's spaces
Wish at least some cuddling was more normal as a platonic thing. Only had one friend who'd I'd cuddle with and that was platonic (at least for me... he later did try kissing me while really drunk, so I'm not not sure if it really was 100% platonic). What lily is describing seems like a lot more...
I guess so, idk. I would like more physical intimacy but I also find it really intimate, like even just casual touches (back, shoulder, etc) to be a close friend kinda thing. Cuddling or honestly even just frequent/extended hugs is just a lot for me personally for a friend idk. Hugs being more of a friend thing would be nice, cuddling is just idk, maybe I'm not open enough
And yea Lily is describing wayy more lol