"My Wife’s Lovers" by Austrian painter Carl Kahler; 1891.
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Mike Driver
cherry valley forever

Love Begins
Sweet Seals For You, Always
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

blake kathryn
NASA
will byers stan first human second
occasionally subtle
taylor price
almost home
YOU ARE THE REASON

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Sade Olutola
ojovivo

PR's Tumblrdome
seen from Egypt

seen from Senegal
seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from South Korea
seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from Canada
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seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Singapore
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@cbriz
"My Wife’s Lovers" by Austrian painter Carl Kahler; 1891.
Soviet soldier passing a polar bear some milk, 1950.
Source
Adriaen van Utrecht - Still Life - Game, Vegetables, Fruit, Cockatoo (1650)
Prehistoric Showdown
Art marker and sharpie on drawing paper
Lauren Trahan, 2015
JEAN LUC BOUREL "Au bord du ciel" 2012 (4)
X-mas prints for friends and family.
The first row were based on my studies and sketches from the Horniman Museum and Gardens.
The one with the foxes was based on my records from the Zoological Museum Hamburg.
Last one, the white-eared Bulbul, was based on the pictures taken by Matt Pike. I made some totes with this drawing, profits went straight to help Yazidi refugees in northern Iraq/Iraqi Kurdistan.
Giancarlo Carbon Controluce, 1956
Marco Cadioli
Necessary lines, 2014
”..In Necessary Lines, Marco Cadioli looks to the earth adopting the point of view of satellites, to focus his attention on the lines that man traces on the planet’s surface along his never-ending effort of appropriation of the natural landscape: “necessary” lines, according to the inspired definition coined by Carl Andre to describe Frank Stella’s paintings in a text from 1959 that has been seminal for Cadioli’s project:
“Art excludes the unnecessary. Frank Stella has found it necessary to paint stripes. There is nothing else in his painting. Frank Stella is not interested in expression or sensitivity. He is interested in the necessities of painting […] Frank Stella’s painting is not symbolic. His stripes are the paths of brush on canvas. These paths lead only into painting…”
Aurelija Čepulinskaitė
Commission work.
Jefta
© Image courtesy of the artist
Andy Warhol with his Cow Wallpaper Exhibited at Leo Castelli, April 1, 1966
Photographed by Fred W. McDarrah
Steven Chapman
Polly Morgan
Lucien Herve
winter prather