Bamboo Pavilion at the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney by Vo Trong Nghia Architects
(via designboom)
Keni

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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wallacepolsom

Kiana Khansmith
ojovivo
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

@theartofmadeline
Claire Keane
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH
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occasionally subtle

#extradirty

izzy's playlists!
Sade Olutola
Misplaced Lens Cap
trying on a metaphor
seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from China
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seen from United States

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@clablr
Bamboo Pavilion at the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney by Vo Trong Nghia Architects
(via designboom)
Sheebs
Wentworth Falls
Blue Mountains National Park, New South Wales
October 2015
“why you always lookin’ at me like that??”
Lightning inside a volcanic ash cloud in Patagonia.
Tricia Miranda choreography WTF by Missy Elliot
full video here
I've watched this SOO MANY times and it still makes me so happy
Journalist Spends Four Years Traversing India to Document Crumbling Subterranean Stepwells Before they Disappear
Across India an entire category of architecture is slowly crumbling into obscurity, and you’ve probably never even heard it. Such was the case 30 years ago when Chicago journalist Victoria Lautman made her first trip to the country and discovered the impressive structures called stepwells. Like gates to the underworld, the massive subterranean temples were designed as a primary way to access the water table in regions where the climate vacillates between swelteringly dry during most months, with a few weeks of torrential monsoons in the spring.
Thousands of stepwells were built in India starting around the 2nd and 4th centuries A.D. where they first appeared as rudimentary trenches but slowly evolved into much more elaborate feats of engineering and art. By the 11th century some stepwells were commissioned by wealthy or powerful philanthropists (almost a fourth of whom were female) as monumental tributes that would last for eternity. Lautman shares with Arch Daily about the ingenious construction of the giant wells that plunge into the ground up to 10 stories deep.
You can read a more comprehensive account of stepwells by Lautman on Arch Daily.
Tatiana Maslany & Arrested Development?!? Two of my favorites in one picture!
I don't know what's going on anymore. Tonight I watched goggle box instead of doing uni or packing to move house so I guess I've completely given up rn
:')
Some people seem to be confused about Bernie Sanders and the label “democratic socialist.” Luckily for them, Sanders is going to explain the term and its principles in a big way.