
No title available

JVL

Discoholic đȘ©

â
d e v o n

if i look back, i am lost
noise dept.
Game of Thrones Daily

Janaina Medeiros
tumblr dot com
Show & Tell

shark vs the universe

Andulka

â
taylor price
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No title available

Kiana Khansmith
DEAR READER

pixel skylines

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
seen from Kenya

seen from Australia

seen from Tunisia

seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@drivingangelino
đ¶Âżesos son reebok o son nike?đ¶
This is how they sleep all the time.
Source
This energy is wholesome
That fuckin picture of that guy at agraveyard holdin like, a cup or smt, with a mothman sized moth with him, both staring directly at the camera is somehow the funniest image but I havenât been able to find it in months
This one?
PRECISELY THAT ONE
Beautiful work by Scott Prior. I fell in love with his still life paintings, the way he captures light is otherworldly.
COOLIN
Marilyn ainât got shit on this man
I think I need help
âThe New American Gothicâ  by Criselda Vasquez (@crisssvasquez on instagram, signed prints available!)
âAs the American-born daughter of two Mexican immigrants, I illustrate their plight and the plight of many in my community with my art. I want to expose the heart-breaking pain of what a Mexican immigrantâs family goes through. I focus on bringing my familyâs world into the light and out of the shadows. My paintings are best described as visual comments on the hidden daily reality of the Mexican-American experience. These portraits and still lifes reveal my family in their own authentic environment and expose how I live in two worlds. My paintings layer the American culture over the Mexican world. I feel society needs to be aware of the humanity on the other side of the door. The two most important people in my life, my parents, are also the two who motivated me to develop such a strong concept. When my parents pose for these paintings, their faces are reduced to extremely raw and somehow vulnerable expressions. Sadly, they strive to be invisible every day. They donât have to pretend to illustrate the invisible. They have dealt with constant rejection, suspicion and fear so long, that it seems now that it comes naturally to them. I strive to capture how their expressions deliver that sense of tiredness, resignation, and quiet acceptance. It seems relevant to show that underneath all the politicization and undeserved labeling this community receives, these are regular people just like all of us. In the long tradition of immigrants that come to the United States, they have made homes here and they are just trying to live a simple life with a bit of security and hopefulness for their children. - Criselda Vasquez
Prints available! You can contact the artist at [email protected]