A tree grows in Brooklyn, Pejac
d e v o n

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Xuebing Du

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

izzy's playlists!

oozey mess
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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YOU ARE THE REASON
taylor price
i don't do bad sauce passes
almost home

JBB: An Artblog!

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

Origami Around
$LAYYYTER

#extradirty
Keni
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@eplod
A tree grows in Brooklyn, Pejac
(via Cette artiste créée des mondes miniatures flottants dans des tubes à essai.)
Artist Creates Spellbinding Salt Labyrinth Inside a 13th Century French Castle
#barnamonamour
Anish Kapoor, indian born british artist, San Gennaro, 2003
Anatomically correct
(via Nagami Unveils 3D-Printed Chairs by Zaha Hadid, Ross Lovegrove and Daniel Widrig — urdesignmag)
Oversized Crocheted Doilies by Ashley V Blalock Climb Up Trees and Gallery Walls
© Jerry Lee Ingram
Okuda created a massive work for the the Falles celebration in Valencia, injecting his contemporary, vibrant style. And last night, his Falla was set ablaze, as part of the festival’s tradition. See more on HiFructose.com.
Jeff Koons at The Broad. Photo: @mattlummus
Spanish photographer Javier Riera, LB3, 2007 His gallery in Valencia is Fondoarte.
Katja Novitskova, Pattern of Activation, 2014 Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler
The Korean artist’s first major East Coast exhibition traces the evolution of his idea of home through hand-sewn, fabric replicas of the places he has lived.
Suh’s exhibition, “Almost Home,” which opened March 16 at Washington, D.C.’s Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM), explores the intersections of space, time, and memory as they relate to the most intimate places he has inhabited.
Details rendered perfectly in hand-stitched, translucent fabrics lend an air of absolute authenticity to his “Specimens,” which are ethereal takes on quotidian household objects such as doorknobs, thermostats, circuit breaker boxes, and radiators. These articles—some hardware, some appliances, each more exquisite than the last—line the walls of the exhibition, categorized by the places where Suh lived and observed them.
Thomas Scheibitz german artist. One-Time Pad, MMK Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main 2013
A Multi-Faceted 16 Foot Golden Egg With a Beautiful Pine Sauna Interior That Sits in Kiruna, Sweden
Wonderfully Whimsical Kinetic Wooden Automata That Come Alive With the Simple Turn of a Handle