
JVL

blake kathryn
Today's Document

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Andulka

tannertan36

No title available
taylor price
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Sade Olutola
🪼

if i look back, i am lost
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap

Kaledo Art
AnasAbdin

titsay

No title available

@theartofmadeline
Mike Driver
seen from Finland
seen from Malaysia
seen from Serbia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Peru

seen from Spain
seen from Peru
seen from South Africa
seen from Peru

seen from United States
seen from South Africa
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Italy
@doroverd3
The White Room / The Garden Room Pali Hill, Mumbai, India, 2019; images © The White Room.
doll’s estate
Kiki M 2019
Akira Seto, 1986
Elise Ferguson, BE, 2018, Pigmented plaster on paper, 62.9 x 43.8 cm.
Alberto Biasi — Afrodite (acrylic, wood, PVC, 1976)
Polly Apfelbaum, Target Practice 12, 2020, Woodblock monoprint, 14 x 14 in.
Yvonne De Carlo in Salome Where She Danced (1945)
Sometimes we all just need a good ear massage 💆♀️
(via)
I am so jealous.
Kaye Blegvad
kayeblegvad.com
🏺
Elana Herzog
Sand dunes zigzag across the Sahara Desert in the Tiris Zemmour Region of Mauritania. Since the majority of Mauritania is covered by desert, temporary dune ranges like those in this Overview can form, disappear and reform as sands shift. Average rainfall in Tiris Zemmour is around 3.9 inches (100mm) per year.
Instagram: https://bit.ly/2pOvYCa
23°46'03.4"N 7°07'52.7"W
Source imagery: DigitalGlobe
WHAT THE ‘F’
Crafts, illustration, and textile design piece by graphic designer Claudia Aksha of Jakarta, Indonesia
“The name Girls Gone Wild is chosen for this zine because it resembles how radical feminists were in the past, which is out of the norm and have no fear. And this zine will fully talk about radical feminism and the impact of radical feminism in the 21st century. Girls Gone Wild Zine is a little bit different from other feminism zine because GGW Zine criticize feminism (not in a bad way). GGW Zine criticize what feminism or feminist today often to forget and missed in today’s context. GGW Zine is straightforward, sarcastic and out of the feminist norm. GGW Zine is still a feminist zine, just in a different way.
The materials chosen for this zine is very unconventional, it’s not like how zine is normally produced. The reason behind it is because I wanted to discusses radical feminism in a radical way which is going outside the norm of how a zine should be.”