Monterey Bay Aquarium

JVL
Sade Olutola
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

⁂

#extradirty
Xuebing Du

tannertan36

Product Placement
wallacepolsom
art blog(derogatory)

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Mike Driver
d e v o n
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Kaledo Art
noise dept.

No title available
Cosimo Galluzzi
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@b-nerd
An Anthology Vol.1 by Yukai Du
Yukai Du is a UK-based illustrator and animator. Graduated from Central Saint Martins in 2014, she has been exploring and establishing her work in both still images and motions. - from her website.
Instagram: @crossconnectmag
Lauren Gregory: Oil Painting Gifs
Brooklyn-based and Tennessee-raised, Lauren Gregory is a third-generation southern female painter. who also works as a animator and director. She earned an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2009 and developed oil paint stop-motion animations - moving paintings in which thick impasto strokes appear to move before the viewer’s eyes - and music videos for international acts.
More unique art on Cross Connect Magazine: Twitter || Facebook|| Instagram Posted by David
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I like how half of these people reacting are drunk.
tag yourself I’m the guy with the rubiks cube that just starts screaming
my great-grandfather had to leave italy in the 20′s because he hit a fascist with a tuba, so if you think I am going to take this sitting down you are going to have to catch these hands and also this tuba
most tumblr jokes are utterly embarassing to say in public but today i said to someone “bold of you to assume i have dignity” and i won’t lie it was the most powerful I’ve felt in years
“Stupid Watergate” - the animated feature film concept (credit to HBO’s John Oliver for the title.)
Stormy, Sedate, Stupid, Steadfast, Sanctimonious, Slippery, Screwed
Regional Gothic
Southern
New England
Western
Midwestern
Rocky Mountain
Appalachian
Pacific Northwestern
Southwestern
Alaskan
Florida
honestly “i’ll do whatever you want” “then perish” is the single most powerful exchange possible in the english language and it’s from some bizarre “hewwo” obama rp
And there was that other post where someone dreamt that Obama said “violence for violence is the rule of beasts” like what is it about Obama that makes people come up with such raw fucking dialogue for him
my mother had a dream where he lived in the forest and she had a cigarette with him and he said “to become god is the loneliest achievement of them all” and put it out and walked into the mist and i’ve never fucking forgotten that
Reboot this post to be blessed with dream Obama’s wisdom
reblog for easter
forget april fools day its almost time for the best video on this entire fuckin planet
sunglasses. no sun. it’s cloudy: overcast.
My favorite thing is that Europe is spooky because it’s old and America is spooky because it’s big
“The difference between America and England is that Americans think 100 years is a long time, while the English think 100 miles is a long way.” –Earle Hitchner
A fave of mine was always the american tales where people freaked out because ‘someone died in this house’ and all the europeans would go ‘…Yes? That would be pretty much every house over 40 years old.’
‘…My school is older than your entire town.’
‘Sorry, you think *how far* is okay to travel for a shopping trip?’
*American looks up at the beams in a country pub* ‘Uh, this place has woodworm, isn’t that a bit unsafe?’ ‘Eh, the woodworm’s 400 years old, it’s holding those beams together.’
A few years ago when I was in college I did a summer program at Cambridge aimed specifically at Americans and Canadians, and my year it was all Americans and one Australian. We ended the program with a week in Wessex, and on the last day as we all piled onto the bus in Salisbury (or Bath? I can’t remember), the professors went to the front to warn us that we wouldn’t be making any stops unless absolutely necessary. We’re headed to Heathrow to drop off anyone flying off the same day, then back to Cambridge.
“All right, it’s going to be a long bus ride, so make sure you’re prepared for that.”
We all brace ourselves. A long bus ride? How long? We’re Americans; a long bus ride for us is a minimum of six hours with the double digits perfectly plausible. We can handle a twelve hour bus ride as long as we get a bathroom break.
The answer. “Two hours.”
Oh.
English people trying to travel around Australia and wildly underestimating distance are my favourite thing
a tour guide in France told my school group that a particular cathedral wouldn’t interest us much because “it’s not very old; only from the early 1600s”
to which we had to respond that it was still older than the oldest surviving European-style buildings in our country
China is both old and big. I had some Chinese colleagues over; we were discussing whether they wanted to see the Vasa ship (hugely expensive war ship which sank on it’s maiden voyage after 12 min). They asked if it was old, I said “not THAT old” (bearing in mind they were Chinese) “it’s from the 1500s.” To my surprise they still looked impressed, nodding enthusiatically. Then I realised I’d forgotten something: “…I mean it’s from the 1500s AFTER the birth of Christ” and they went “oh, AFTER…”.
My dad’s favorite quote from various tours in Italy was “Pay no attention to the tower – it was a [scornful tone] tenth century addition.”
My last boss was Chinese, and she said when her parents came to visit her from Beijing they pronounced Chicago “A very nice village.”
This post keeps getting better
The 90th Oscars are tonight, and so is the announcement of one of the event’s most popular categories: Best Picture. Here are this year’s nominees:
“Peach and Glass,” 1927, by Georgia O’Keeffe © 2014 The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
“Morning (Two Dead Stags and a Fox),” 1853, by Sir Edwin Landseer
“Portrait of a Courtesan with a Bird,” 19th century, India
“Portrait of Charles E. Dana,” c. 1915, by John McLure Hamilton
“Coal Billboard, Near Ellengowan, PA,” 2004 (image); 2011 (print), by Zoe Strauss
“Fashion,” c. 1932, by Toni von Horn
“Glasses and Eggs,” 1952, by Josef Sudek
“U.S. Navy Fleet,” c. 1943, United States
“Churchill at Biggleswade, Political Speech,” 1955 (negative); printed later (early print), by Carl Mydans
Gabriel Picolo - http://gabriel-picolo.tumblr.com - https://www.facebook.com/GabrielPicoloArt - https://www.patreon.com/Picolo - https://twitter.com/_gabrielpicolo?lang=es - https://www.redbubble.com/es/people/GabrielPicolo - https://www.behance.net/_Picolo - https://society6.com/gabrielpicolo - https://vimeo.com/user39738478 - https://www.instagram.com/_picolo
Tomm Moore - http://tommtumb.tumblr.com - https://twitter.com/tommmoore?lang=es
Jupiter’s Colorful Cloud Belts
Scientist Adam J Calhoun removed words from famous novels to analyze their punctuation styles, then converted the data into heat maps. Periods, question marks, and exclamation points are red, commas and quotation marks are green, and semicolons and colons are blue.
Source
Romain Trystram - https://www.linkedin.com/in/romain-trystram-948a5719 - https://romaintrystram.myportfolio.com - https://dribbble.com/RomainTrystram - https://www.artstation.com/romain_trystram