Sick of living . . . Unwilling to die
i don't do bad sauce passes
almost home

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JBB: An Artblog!

Love Begins
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Origami Around
$LAYYYTER
taylor price

#extradirty
Keni
ojovivo
art blog(derogatory)
🪼
One Nice Bug Per Day

Product Placement
DEAR READER
Jules of Nature
cherry valley forever

seen from Singapore
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seen from United States

seen from United States
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@cult-rites
Sick of living . . . Unwilling to die
sad, sad, lonely, sad, lovely, sad, lonely, lovely, lonely.
How come you don't post so much anymore?
Because tumblr is a way for sad people to transform into sadder people
It has been a long time since we have talked. You helped me at my worst and I just want to say thank you and I have not forgot about you.
This made me so happy to the point of me screenshotting it. Thank you for being wonderful and I hope things are well with you. :-)
Van Gogh + Skulls
Mitochondrion - Archaeaeon
art by Jeremy Hannigan
Ivan the Terrible and his Son
Battlefield.
Käthe Kollwitz, from Käthe Kollwitz by Alfred Kuhn, Berlin, 1921.
(Source: archive.org)
Maximilian Pirner - Lovers in the Small Boat
Pepijn Simon (Dutch, b. 1967 Netherlands) - The Psychiatrist, 2015 Paintings: Oil on Canvas
“Stormy Weather” by Etta James
“Stormy Weather” by Etta James
“Born (1907 – 1988) into a family of artists, Karel Havlicek studied law and became a lawyer - a career he did not like. He spent most of his life in Kadan, in northwestern Bohemia. He married and had three children. Havlicek worked for the Czechoslovakian government during World War II. The situation became emotionally and morally impossible for him, so he resigned, a political decision that marked him the rest of his life. He began drawing at this time as a way of exorcising his emotional and spiritual conflicts. Working only at night, he followed a ritual reminiscent of automatic practices. His drew without premeditation, spontaneously, as if overtaken by spiritualist production. After 1948, he was forced to leave his job in a ceramics factory where he painted dishes, and he became a laborer. In 1948, the Czech art critic Karel Teige, a major figure in the Czechoslovak avant-garde, became interested in him and planned to organize an exhibition of his drawings, a project crushed by the political authorities. This was a profound disappointment to Havlicek. He died before knowing the freedom that came about with the Velvet Revolution.“
http://monsterbrains.blogspot.com/2016/01/karel-havlicek.html
http://www.cavinmorris.com/karel-havlicek/
Boy Staring at an Apparition (1824-25) ~ by Francisco Goya