Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies
Sade Olutola
i don't do bad sauce passes

Origami Around
$LAYYYTER
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
noise dept.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

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YOU ARE THE REASON
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
Show & Tell
hello vonnie

★

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@hermes-voids
"Wisdom leads to unity, but ignorance to separation. So long as God seems to be outside and far away, there is ignorance. But when God is realised within, that is true knowledge." -Ramakrishna
Mac Baconai @Macbaconai
Briscoe Park
Undine Giving the Ring to Massaniello, Fisherman of Naples (J. M. W. Turner, 1846)
Expressionist Surrealism artworks by David Lynch
Get Thee Behind Me, Satan (Ilya Repin, 1895)
"The eyes peered clearly out of the surrounding mist, and eery cold wind filled the room"
Virgil Finlay (1914-1971) - Illustration for L. Spraque de Camp's 'The Eye of Tandyla'
(Fantastic Adventures Vol.13 #5, May 1951)
mothers around the world
animals in medieval armor
Pierrot and the Cat (1889)
— by Théophile Steinlen
Vesselin Vassilev
The Boat (Virgin with Corona) (Odilon Redon, 1898)
SEVERANCE - 1x06 - Hide and Seek
Pigeon 215 by Unknown ⌘ Water bends to nature’s simple needs
Mankind had unleashed its hidden beast and the result was not only the tangible horrors of Auschwitz and Hiroshima but a miasma of hatred, suspicion, and bigotry that lingered still. Under such circumstances artists continued to work, but they could no longer paint or sculpt the reassuring “things” — objects, landscapes, or people — that had occupied their predecessors for centuries. To do so would have seemed fakes, tantamount to nostalgia for an innocent past that had most likely never existed in the first place. The myths and themes of nationalism were also unworthy subjects in an age that had seen so many crimes committed in the name of the state. Religion? For many, it had been lost among the broken bodies piled up like cords of wood that had — for artists who had not witnessed them firsthand in war — appeared in newsreels at the cinemas or in the front-page photographs of daily papers. Artists who were able to, who needed to work despite for the desolation or the times, had been forced to look deeper for a subject, to look inside and the only thing they could be sure of — themselves.
— Mary Gabriel, Ninth Street Women
Monument Peace by sculptor Nugzar Manjaparashvili, 1970s. Nukriani, Georgia - stepegphotography