The painting in the picture below is titled “The Dream”, and was created by Pablo Picasso.
It seems likely the painting was named “The Dream” because it reminded whoever named the painting of someone who was dreaming.
According to Happeh Theory, this women is not dreaming, she is masturbating. Picasso painted what he say when this woman was masturbating.
How is it possible to reach that conclusion? Here is a picture of a real life woman.
As you can see, the woman is holding a pose similar to the painting.
They both lean to their left.
Both of their right shoulders are raised upwards,
which gives both of them a pair of slanted looking shoulders that slant from high on the right to low on the left.
Both of them have their right hand at their groin.
The real life woman’s left hand is by her breast which is a sexual thing to do. The position of the hand by the breast suggests that her current posture could be due to sexual excitation.
It is relevant to note that the in the painting the left breast can be faintly seen while the right breast is covered up. The real life woman almost looks like her breast can be seen in the way she is pushing it forward and placing her hand underneath it.
The head of the real life woman does not match the head of the painting. In the painting, the woman was masturbating in the privacy of a room while Picasso painted her. She could be more natural and allow her head to fall to her shoulder the way it is.
The real life woman must hold her head erect because she is doing a photo shoot. If the woman was not doing a photo shoot, the natural position for her head to be in would be laying on her left shoulder like the head of the woman in the painting.
Although the two pictures are not exactly similar, exposure to Happeh Theory will eventually train you to see that the bodies of the two woman are, for the purposes of Happeh Theory, almost identical.