"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

⁂
Claire Keane
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
ojovivo

roma★
Not today Justin

Janaina Medeiros
taylor price

izzy's playlists!
i don't do bad sauce passes
Show & Tell
Game of Thrones Daily
$LAYYYTER
No title available

shark vs the universe
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document

Origami Around
hello vonnie

seen from Malaysia

seen from Bulgaria
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from New Zealand

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from United States
@botty-shelly
After almost 50 years educating actor-creators within their community, the company says it will need to raise $125,000 to stay open.
Seema Hari for Banglez Jewerly, photographed by Pavithra Ramasubramanian.
I think this is the most beautiful representation of a woman’s reproductive system, that I have ever seen till date!
(By Jennifer O’Toole: @cellsdividing )
Her official website: https://www.cellsdividing.com/
Marcel Duchamp made two paintings inspired by a chocolate grinding machine that he saw in the window of a confectioner’s shop in Rouen, France. In this work, the artist rendered the machine in a dry and impersonal painting style, akin to the precise mechanical drawing found in architectural plans. Duchamp was fascinated with the rotating drums of the chocolate grinder and the machine would reappear several times in his work, most notably in the lower section of “The Large Glass.” See this work on view in our Duchamp Galleries.
“Chocolate Grinder (No. 1),” 1913, by Marcel Duchamp © Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / Succession Marcel Duchamp
(Left image) Mobius Strip (Right image) Drawings of a Klein Bottle (Marcel Duchamp, ca. 1960)
Only one “indigenous to the fourth dimension,” to borrow the words of [Marcel] Duchamp himself in À l'infinitif, could grasp the torsion that creates such a volume that no longer has an outside nor an inside, and that makes of a solid mass a curious entity in which the notions of interior and exterior, of surface and depth, are annulled or exchanged.
Get this from a library! Models of the real projective plane : computer graphics of Steiner and Boy surfaces. [François Apery]
Some works of Marey and Muybridge was inspired many artist. Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968), a French-American painter, portraying a movement from a subject descending a staircase in his painting, Nude …
Derivations (Kinect version) Demo
Here it is -- The explosion in the shingle factory. Somebody needs to perform it nude now ... descending a staircase -- in earth tones.
“Binary Botty” 3D Computer Graphic pre-visualization for color 3D printing. Hommage to Anna the Happy Hedonist of NerdPr0n.com
Botty Suzy 3D computer graphics pre-visualization/VRML 2.0 object. Hommage to Dr. Susan Block
“Botty Blue Kat”, Kat as blue Venusian with Acrylic Botty paint on Cast Urethane with Fake Fur, hidden metaphysical symbol and scallop shell.
Dimensions: 9cm x 14cm x 13cm (H x W x D)
https://web.archive.org/web/20080509171222/http://emsh.calarts.edu/~mathart/sw/Botty_Shelly/Botty_Shelly.html