tournesolmange-homme:

…Is that a light fixture pretending to be a birdcage?

HECK YES IT IS!!

(via sweethomestyle)

frauleinl:


Clare Caulfield, Flatiron Building, New York (hand-painted screenprint).

This is perfect & I love it. 
frauleinl:


Clare Caulfield, Flatiron Building, New York (hand-painted screenprint).

This is perfect & I love it. 

frauleinl:

Clare Caulfield, Flatiron Building, New York (hand-painted screenprint).

This is perfect & I love it. 

(via i-love-art)

"Softly like I was the art."
Eileen Myles, Inferno (a poet’s novel)

(Source: leopoldgursky)

skeletales:

Charlotte Caron crated these portraits for her third year degree in the fine arts. She has always worked on the body including the head figure as in instrument of thought. She is of the opinion that everyone is wearing a mask in society with friends or at work.That was what she aimed to highlight. Following that thought she used two medium, the painting and photography, which allowed her to compare two worlds and to create a certain duality. The combination of two mediums shows the man in a new light, reavealing his animal side. It returns to the wild condition with all of his drives and bestiality.

(via leopoldgursky)

hadrianestou:

Mario Chiattone - Bridge and study of Volumes (1914)
hadrianestou:

Mario Chiattone - Bridge and study of Volumes (1914)

hadrianestou:

Mario Chiattone - Bridge and study of Volumes (1914)

mythologyofblue:

Mathilde Roussel, from the series, Move 
“The houses are cut out from the image, they have been erased, they are missing. The absence of these houses refers to all the objects and stories that belonged to the house and are now part of memory.” -Mathilde Roussel
mythologyofblue:

Mathilde Roussel, from the series, Move 
“The houses are cut out from the image, they have been erased, they are missing. The absence of these houses refers to all the objects and stories that belonged to the house and are now part of memory.” -Mathilde Roussel

mythologyofblue:

Mathilde Roussel, from the series, Move

“The houses are cut out from the image, they have been erased, they are missing. The absence of these houses refers to all the objects and stories that belonged to the house and are now part of memory.” -Mathilde Roussel

(via leopoldgursky)