Coop Himmelb(l)au)’s House of Music, Aalborg, Denmark
Source: uncube magazine http://uncu.be/13222163
(Photo © Martin Schubert)

titsay
Cosimo Galluzzi
DEAR READER

@theartofmadeline
noise dept.
cherry valley forever
NASA

tannertan36
occasionally subtle
taylor price

blake kathryn
One Nice Bug Per Day
🪼

⁂
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Today's Document

#extradirty

No title available
Mike Driver
todays bird
seen from United States

seen from Belgium

seen from Finland
seen from China

seen from Colombia
seen from Netherlands
seen from Maldives
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Poland
seen from Netherlands

seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Switzerland

seen from Maldives
seen from Netherlands
@f101threed
Coop Himmelb(l)au)’s House of Music, Aalborg, Denmark
Source: uncube magazine http://uncu.be/13222163
(Photo © Martin Schubert)
René Magritte - Voice Of Space
Giant monkey writing on iPad - Laurence Vallières - Colab Gallery.
Colab tumblr
Lustik: twitter | pinterest | etsy
Futuristic visions of mega-cities by illustration team Atelier Olschinsky. Read more on Hi-Fructose.
EXCERPTS >|< Finding His Voice (1929)
| Hosted at: Internet Archive | From: Western Electric Company, Inc. | Download: Ogg | 512Kb MPEG4 | MPEG2 | Digital Copy: public domain
A series of Animated GIFs excerpted from Finding His Voice: a cartoon showing how sound motion pictures work, produced by a company that was an innovator in the field. Story by W.E. Erpi (pseudonym for Western Electric, Electrical Research Products Inc.). Directors: F. Lyle Goldman and Max Fleischer.
We invite you to watch the full video HERE.
EXCERPTS by OKKULT Motion Pictures: a collection of GIFs excerpted from out-of-copyright/unknown/rare/controversial moving images. A digital curation project for the diffusion of open knowledge.
>|<
Incredibly Delicate Nature Sculptures Made Out of Translucent Woven Metal
Artist Henrique Oliveira Constructs a Cavernous Network of Repurposed Wood Tunnels at MAC USP
Brazilian artist Henrique Oliveira (previously) recently completed work on his largest installation to date titled Transarquitetônica at Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade in São Paulo. As with much of his earlier sculptural and installation work the enormous piece is built from tapumes, a kind of temporary siding made from inexpensive wood that is commonly used to obscure construction sites. Oliveira uses the repurposed wood pieces as a skin nailed to an organic framework that looks intentionally like a large root system. Because the space provided by the museum was so immense, the artist expanded the installation into a fully immersive environment where viewers are welcome to enter the artwork and explore the cavernous interior. Transarquitetônica will be on view through the end of November this year, and you can watch the video above by Crane TV to hear Oliveira discuss its creation.
Via Colossal
The Lost Mushrooms of Oceania
Can’t…stop…posting…Steve Axford photos. Want to look at them all? Want to read our interview with him? Get to it.
Water carves gorgeous, surprising patterns into our landscape and shapes our culture, food and traditions. Photographer Edward Burtynsky shows how we use and misuse this vital natural resource in the stunning photos above.
See the full gallery here »
The photo series ‘Per Color’ reveals the intentional design of supermarkets, where colorful packaging lures us to products which we’ve lost every natural relation to.
In her work ‘Portable City’, artist Yin Xiuzhen collects clothes worn by people in different cities and uses them to create miniature models inside a suitcase. The suitcase also plays a tape with the local soundscape.
Vietnamese Motorbikes and the Amazing Things They Carry
The fish, wow.
foxesinbreeches: Mimesis by Barbara & Michael Leisgen, 1972-1973
Anechoic Chambers at Denmark Technical University
Source: uncube magazine uncu.be/669v8y
Photo: Alastair Philip Wiper
finally. leatherhard work in progress. still a ways to go.