Po pogromie (After the Pogrom). Maurycy Minkowski, 1905. Oil on canvas.
Monterey Bay Aquarium

@theartofmadeline

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Andulka
Jules of Nature

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor

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TVSTRANGERTHINGS

#extradirty
Cosimo Galluzzi

JBB: An Artblog!

Kiana Khansmith
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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wallacepolsom
sheepfilms
Misplaced Lens Cap
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seen from Malaysia
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@badpeacebby
Po pogromie (After the Pogrom). Maurycy Minkowski, 1905. Oil on canvas.
Jewish retirees in South Beach, Miami, Florida. Photographs by Gay Block.
“In 1982 I fell in love with the old people of South Miami Beach. They were the bubbes and zeydes I wish I had. These were pensioners living on social security checks in one-room apartments, telling stories of their lives and their children.”
Bitches be like "You're on the wrong side of history!" and then receive personal thank yous from Khamenei and Al Qaeda
Roberta Mazzone
Sleeping Bags, 1991-2001
Covers of the literary and artistic magazine in Yiddish “Milgroim” and in the Hebrew version “Rimon”, designed by Franzisca Baruch and Ernst Böhm, Berlin, 1922
Leonora Carrington’s (b. UK, 1917-2011) “Dybbuk Suite”, after the Yiddish play “The Dybbuk/דער דיבוק” by S. Ansky.
"The Dybbuk" relates the story of a young bride possessed by the the malicious spirit of her dead beloved on the eve of her wedding. First staged in in Warsaw by the "Vilna Troupe", it is considered a seminal play in the history of Yiddish theatre. The story is based on years of research by Shloyme Ansky, who travelled between villages in Belarus and Ukraine, documenting Jewish folk beliefs and tales. The Dybbuk is known as the dislocated soul of a dead person in Eastern European Ashkenazi mythology, deriving from the Hebrew word דִּיבּוּק dibbūq, meaning 'a case of attachment', which is a nominal form of the verb דָּבַק dābaq 'to adhere' or 'cling'.
New Orleans ❤
Thunderstorm jazz is freaking awesome. I need an album of that. I’d sleep like a baby.
“oh I’ll bet that’s Dorren... yup, that’s Doreen.” https://www.doreensjazz.com
Reblogging not for the first nor the last time. There’s just something right about this conjunction of laid-back music and lively weather...
Surendran Nair — Tonight I am Coming to Visit You in Your Dream and None Will See and Question Me: Be Sure to Leave Your Door Unlocked (Cuckoonebulopolis) [oil on canvas, 2002]