Game of Thrones Daily

Origami Around

⁂
Acquired Stardust
trying on a metaphor
Today's Document
hello vonnie

Product Placement

Kiana Khansmith
art blog(derogatory)

Discoholic 🪩
No title available

Andulka

Janaina Medeiros
cherry valley forever
Three Goblin Art
taylor price
Peter Solarz
Cosimo Galluzzi

roma★
seen from T1

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from New Caledonia

seen from United States
seen from Taiwan
seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Ecuador
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Spain
seen from Norway

seen from United Kingdom
@flytrapteeth
Suehiro Maruo
Tania Mafilito by Rafael Mesa
remember when you were 10 and you would hang out with your friends in order to Look At The Computer together like you went to their house and experienced the information superhighway together. and then leave
How fucking old are you people?
normal amount
need some female director to lock in and make a movie where a grotesquely ugly and disgusting and monstrous woman slasher killer butchers handsome men in humiliating and sexualized ways. and it CAN'T be because they are rapists or abusers or otherwise misogynistic okay, she has to do it because she's a fucked up pervert
À l'intérieur / Inside (2007) | Dir. Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo
Serpents by Gérard DuBois (2019)
A friend stopped by
The mind is dark, and madness—a disturbance of the mind—is especially dark. In his dementia, Ajax's eyes 'are darkened'. Biological and daemonic causes of madness are black. The demons who send madness are 'dark-faced children of Night': Lyssa and the Erinyes, who rise from black Hades. Magic-organic causes of madness include black roots cut from black earth in the dark: a magic root still used in Shakespeare's time. 'Have we eaten on the insane root, / That takes the reason prisoner?' Banquo asks when the witches vanish. Internal organic causes include black bile.
Ruth Padel, Whom Gods Destroy: Elements of Greek and Tragic Madness (Princeton University Press, 1995), 49.
Lydia Pettit
Michael C. Hall and Orchids 🌸
That’s him, number three