by Wild Rose Thorn

#extradirty
Cosmic Funnies
wallacepolsom
Peter Solarz

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JVL
styofa doing anything

shark vs the universe

PR's Tumblrdome

@theartofmadeline
Three Goblin Art
Not today Justin
occasionally subtle

Origami Around

oozey mess
Xuebing Du

if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell

roma★

★

seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Hungary
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Bolivia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Canada
@12zodiac
by Wild Rose Thorn
Twin Peaks print ad
The Westbury Horse, 1939 by Eric Ravilious
Train Landscape, 1940 by Eric Ravilious
The Bridge of Immortals located in Huangshan , China
Aestean Pettway Young, Gee’s Bend
These are four examples of ceramics from Tonala, Mexico, circa 1920s.
While Tonala ceramics from the last half of the 20th century have been well documented and collected, works from the 1920s are less known.
The drawing on the surface of these pieces is vibrant and direct, which was typical of the style of that time.
Artfoundout
Evgeny Antufiev, Immortality Forever, 2015, bronze, 14х19 cm
teapot creature set 2022
speckled buff & black clay inlay
Yuanyuan Yang (2008)
this could be us
bitch you got low iron?? get back in the mines then !!!! 😂😂😂
haters will see you in diamond armor and call you iron deficient
Pieced by Rosie Lee Tompkins, Quilted by Irene Bankhead, from the Eli Leon collection, Yo-Yos & Half Squares: Contemporary California Quilts, Oakland Museum of California September 12, 2015–February 21, 2016
Black Girl (1966) dir. Ousmane Sembène
I was obviously a prison abolitionist long before this, but I genuinely feel like during the coronavirus crisis, you cannot simultaneously be against the death penalty and not be an abolitionist. Prisons, detention centers, and jails will become death camps as COVID-19 spreads rapidly through them, those incarcerated and detained will not have appropriate medical care, and they will die. Being incarcerated right now is a death sentence. It is really inexcusable in this moment to be trying to draw lines between prisoners who “deserve” to be freed and those who don’t. It’s not ethically consistent unless all of those who you deem undeserving are people who you believe should be killed by the state. Are you ready to defend state death camps for Black and brown people? For immigrants? Who is deserving of humanity? Are you comfortable deciding who is human and who isn’t?
As of today (May 13, 2020), COVID has now killed more US prisoners in weeks than the US death penalty has in over a decade.
So let me repeat: you cannot simultaneously be against the death penalty and not be an abolitionist. Incarceration is a death sentence.
Shirkers (2018) dir. Sandi Tan