Nick Cave, Berlin, 1986.
Photo by Bleddyn Butcher
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Show & Tell
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Kiana Khansmith
NASA
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Origami Around
trying on a metaphor
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YOU ARE THE REASON
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Today's Document

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JBB: An Artblog!
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Nick Cave, Berlin, 1986.
Photo by Bleddyn Butcher
1981 Enesco Garfield “Compute This Sucker” Figurine
Monty Python's Life Of Brian (1979)
🎬 Terry Jones
Simon & Garfunkel at New York City’s Cloisters Museum in April 1968.
phil ochs photographed by jim mccrary for his album pleasures of the harbor, august 1967
LECTURE 4: INFLUENCES (PART 1): The so-called “King of Skiffle,” the beloved Lonnie Donegan (1931-2002), borrowing heavily from folk, blues and country traditions, plays one of his biggest hits in this footage, “Cumberland Gap,” from 1957. This footage was shot on January 25, 1957, in London’s Conway Hall. “Cumberland Gap,” a nineteenth century Appalachian folk song, ended up becoming one of Donegan’s biggest hits, along with “Rock Island Line.” It reached #1 on the UK charts. The earliest recording of the song dated back to 1924, and it was remade countless times. It was one of Donegan’s signature songs for decades.
Louise Brooks
Louise Brooks by Eugene Robert Richee, 1928. From Aure Bonmati Mondejar
this is doing something to my brain like
Seinfeld – 4.14: The Visa
Brian Eno making Post-Punk before Punk existed, 1974
Siouxsie & The Banshees, 1983
Gwrych Castle in Wales