Well, let it pass; April is over, April is over. There are all kinds of love in the world, but never the same love twice.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Sensible Thing” (via wordsnquotes)
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@americanfolkhero
Well, let it pass; April is over, April is over. There are all kinds of love in the world, but never the same love twice.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Sensible Thing” (via wordsnquotes)
Male and female statues tell a sad story of love
In the seaside city of Batumi, Georgia, there is a moving statue called “Man and Woman”, which shows two people embracing and passing through each other at 7 p.m. local time everyday. Behind the statue there is a tragic love story that a couple have to be separated due to different religious backgrounds.
The steel sculpture is eight meters tall, created by Georgian sculptor Tamara Kvesitadze in 2010. The two figures come from the novel, “Ali and Nino,” published in 1937 by Azerbaijani author Kurban. It portrays a Muslim boy who falls in love with a Georgian Christian girl during the First World War, but they end up never seeing each other again.
The sculpture recreates the time Ali and Nino first meet, kiss and embrace, then finally separate. (Photo via boredpanda)
Antony Gormley, A Case for an Angel I, 1989,
Plaster, Fibreglass, Lead, Steel and Air,
77½ x 337¾ x 18 1/8in. (197 x 858 x 46cm.)
Anubis & Horus spotted having tea in Cairo, 2006.
They’re spilling it girls
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The Grenfell Tower fire exposed the class violence embedded in London’s rich, gentrifying neighborhoods.
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Centre National de la Danse, Paris, Designed by architects Jacques Kalisz & Jean Perrottet, 1965, staircase light by Hervé Audibert
Well, let it pass; April is over, April is over. There are all kinds of love in the world, but never the same love twice.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, “The Sensible Thing” (via wordsnquotes)
eros house
Weronika Dudka
Louisville, Kentucky, 1937.
Steampunk Squidipus by Alan Williams metal artist
A Smoldering Bouquet of Roses Photographed by Ars Thanea