If you're not familiar with the work of photographer/performance artist Spencer Tunick, he's spent the last twenty years gathering large assemblies of naked people and photographing them as part of his installations. His latest piece was shot in San Miguel de Allende in Mexico, and involved 110 women in the street wearing nothing but a strand of marigolds in celebration of Día de los Muertos.
Now, you may be wondering aloud, "what does it all mean?" I encourage you not to get bogged down in such frivolity. It all means that there are a bunch of naked women draped in nothing but a scarf made out of marigolds. That's the great thing about art. It doesn't always have to mean something, even when people insist that it does.
Check out some more of his work below, including his eerie assemblage of naked women made-up to look like Frida Kahlo. Now that probably means something... or not.