Jump to content

Free shipping starting from €99

Subscribe to the newsletter and receive 10% OFF

CACTUS PRESENTS

Inspired by Women

They defied their time, broke the mold, changed history.

Marie, Jane, Diana, Frida, and Artemisia.

5 extraordinary women who become color.

CACTUS FOR YOU

Cat Eye C178 Semi-Permanent Nail Polish

Regular price €12,90
Selling price €12,90 Regular price

Cat Eye C178 Semi-Permanent Nail Polish

Regular price €12,90
Selling price €12,90 Regular price

Cat Eye C178 Semi-Permanent Nail Polish

Regular price €12,90
Selling price €12,90 Regular price

Cat Eye C178 Semi-Permanent Nail Polish

Regular price €12,90
Selling price €12,90 Regular price

Cat Eye C178 Semi-Permanent Nail Polish

Regular price €12,90
Selling price €12,90 Regular price

Frida Kahlo

A serious accident changes her life and forces her to immobility: this is how she begins to paint, finding in color a way to express all her pain. She obtains several exhibitions which, unfortunately, are often overshadowed by her husband, because she is a woman. Following his death, her paintings, in which she shows scars, fragility and identity, are rediscovered.

Frida is not afraid to show herself as authentic in a reality that would prefer her to be more composed.

Diana Spencer

She becomes the Princess of Wales at just twenty years old: it sounds like a fairy tale, but it's a life of impositions, pressure, and loneliness. So she chooses to transform her suffering into commitment to others, dedicating herself to volunteering and raising her children. She tackles topics that were previously taboo for the crown, breaking the silence. Her sensitivity redefines the idea of a modern monarchy; she is close to the community, she is the people's princess.

Diana makes sensitivity a strength and chooses kindness as a form of courage.

Jane Austen

Jane was born in England in the late eighteenth century: women's destiny was marriage, but she wanted to write. She published her works simply signed "By a Lady," and in her novels, she wrote about brilliant women forced to be financially dependent on men. It was only after her death that her brother Henry revealed her identity to the public. Today, her novels are among the most beloved classics of world literature.

Jane observes with intelligence and speaks with elegance. She knows that her character stems from her intellect.

Artemisia Gentileschi

She dreams of becoming a painter, but in the 17th century, women were not allowed to. She secretly learns to paint in her father's workshop. In a male-dominated world, she paints strong and courageous women. She is the first woman admitted to the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno in Florence. For centuries, many of her works were attributed to male painters: only today, critics recognize her among the protagonists of Italian Baroque.

Artemisia defends her own voice and believes in her own art, even when the world tries to silence her.

Marie Curie

A society that denies women access to university and a male-dominated laboratory. Marie continues her studies in the shadows. She will discover Radium and Polonium, revolutionizing science and becoming the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, but above all, the only one to receive two in different disciplines: physics and chemistry.

Marie does not ask for space, but decides to seek it with determination in a world that does not grant it.