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Product Placement

blake kathryn

@theartofmadeline

oozey mess
🪼

pixel skylines
Three Goblin Art
tumblr dot com
Misplaced Lens Cap
ojovivo
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Andulka
KIROKAZE
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Janaina Medeiros
NASA
AnasAbdin

seen from Sweden

seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Australia

seen from Poland
seen from T1

seen from Iraq

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from Iraq
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seen from United States
seen from United States
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@arsmaestitia
Hunting World F/W 2018 Menswear Milan Fashion Week
Winter Landscape with Church 1811, Oil on canvas, 33 x 45 cm Museum fur Kunst und Kulturgeschichte in Dortmund, Germany
In this painting, Friedrich creates what is surely one of the most startlingly powerful devotional images in the history of Christian art. He unites the Tetschen Altar with a stark, frigid winter landscape to great effect. Unable to reach the vast church in the distance, the weary traveler - perhaps Friedrich himself - has collapsed in the snow. It is the first time that a fully constituted Gothic cathedral, rather than a ruin, appears in Friedrich’s work. The discarded crutches lying in the foreground make it seem all the more unlikely that the man could ever have made the journey in the first place. However, the scene is not as bleak as one might have initially theorized. Taking refuge in a grove of fir trees - standing once again for hope - he is greeted with a vision of the crucified Christ. If there is a political dimension to the painting, it seems to be a call for germans to take refuge in their medieval past against the predations of foreigners. The spiritual message more is clear: even in this most unfortunate circumstances, salvation is available to any who would seek it. The ‘crutches’ of worldly materialism can only take on so far.
I know I’ve made cryptids before but I don’t think they compare to the emotion that an image of two borzois staring at you in front of a Staples at night conveys
The Gentle Alien needs some school supplies
Answer our questions and you may enter
they’re both named Staple
Houses of the Holy, Denis Esakov
FUTURE IV
Nuit blanche II. Maison sur la colline.
Peter Chan
Blog: http://pixelp.tumblr.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pixelpchan/
Go with the flow, let the water carry you.
Ankou succession.
Instagram:armanluro
Twitter@ArmandLuro
Cast enamel bat necklace, 1900 France.
omfg
Object of the Week: The Great Tazza, George Woodall, Thomas Webb & Sons, Amblecote, England, about 1889-1895. Bequest of Juliette K. Rakow. From The Cameo Glass Collection of Leonard S. Rakow and Juliette K. Rakow. 92.2.8.
Carved cameo decoration on objects like this tazza was all the rage in late 19th century England as people looked to ancient Roman techniques for inspiration. To keep up with this demand, Thomas Webb & Sons employed 70 engravers to work overtime and on Saturdays.
Jo Kido x INPRNT.
The entrancing works of artist Jo Kido are all available as fine art prints in her INPRNT Shop!
This is a sponsored post by INPRNT (Check them out on Tumblr!) but I still choose and write about the artists ;)
Bat Goblet, made in 1909 by Henri Husson for Maison A.A Hébrard.