Wizard of the future. #erniebushmiller #Oprah #timeisnow #metoo
wallacepolsom
RMH
Show & Tell
One Nice Bug Per Day

if i look back, i am lost
Not today Justin
art blog(derogatory)

blake kathryn
Claire Keane

Kiana Khansmith
noise dept.
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
𓃗
h
YOU ARE THE REASON
untitled
hello vonnie

Andulka
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

gracie abrams
seen from Romania

seen from Italy

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Türkiye
seen from Canada

seen from Türkiye
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Ecuador
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@hungryfordeath
Wizard of the future. #erniebushmiller #Oprah #timeisnow #metoo
Family photos, op art and spray painted Xerox, 1975
https://youtu.be/D8YGES_Ynkk
Bella Lugosi in Bride of the Monster: written, directed and produced by Edward D. Wood, Jr., 1955 “The Screen’s Master of the WEIRD in his NEWEST and MOST DARING SHOCKER!” #belalugosi #ed wood
Gnaoua #1, Tangier, 1964, edited and published by Ira Cohen. Printed in Antwerp by Roger Binnemans. The only issue of this small literary magazine, ostensibly devoted to exorcism, reflecting the expatriate Beat community in Tangier. It contains contributions from Brion Gysin (“The Pipes of Pan”, 5pp.); four texts utilising cut-ups by William Burroughs (a preview of “Nova Express”); Ian Sommerville; Harold Norse; Allen Ginsberg; J. Sheeper (Irving Rosenthal); Mohammed Ben Abdullah Yussufi; Michael McClure; Alfred Jarry (translated by George Andrews); and others, plus five photos from Jack Smith’s “Superstars of Cinemaroc”. Wrappers designed by Rosalind Schwartz, though she is credited only for the cantharides beetles on the cover and copyright page.
#iracohen #jacksmith #briongysin
#nobannowall #muslimban #fakepresident
Manipulated Polaroid 1970s #richierich #manipulatedpolaroid #sx70 #polaroid
“A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims… but accomplices.”
#georgeorwell #1984 #dumptrump #fascism #stevebannon
Flower photography taken July 2015.
nightshade berries
snapdragons & blue cornflowers
Flower photography taken during July 2015.
Jack Smith, Normal Love, 1963–1965
Mario Montez as a mermaid taking a milk bath.
DESTROY ALL MONSTERS MAGAZINE 1976-1979 (Primary Information, 2011)
PRIMARY YELLOW
Backstage shots before the performance of Legend of Mothman/Spookhaus Apocalypse at the Detroit Institute of the Arts, October 2013. Collaboration with Cary Loren, Jamie Easter, and Matthew Smith. Soundtrack is by the Michael Flower Band (threelobed.bandcamp.com/album/the-michael-flower-band).
https://sites.google.com/site/rustynaila2/rusty-nail-studio/shadow-puppets-and-perfomances/legend-of-mothman-and-spookhaus-apocalypse
The Legend of Mothman & Spookhaus Apocalypse! was a shadow puppet play and collaboration by Monster Island; artist Tom Carey designed the shadow puppets, Jimbo Easter played the role of Mothman and made the stage sets, musicians Matthew Smith, Jimbo Easter and Cary Loren played a live soundtrack. Radio announcer Rob St. Mary's voice played ALL the roles. Intermission included monster mash dancers Anita Schmaltz and Alejandra Villegas (not pictured). The play was written by Cary Loren and first performed at the Detroit Institute of Arts as an all ages Halloween special in October, 2013.
Mothman soliloquy inside his underground cave under Zug Island.
Alien's discuss the problem of Mothman, teenagers and planet Earth.
Mothman postcard, based on Tom Carey designed puppets.
Musician Matthew Smith on stage behind set.
Skeleton watches the audience after reading the Mothman Prophecies.
Jimbo Easter as the Mothman.
Zombie usher (and monster mash dancer) Anita Schmaltz.
The Web of Eternity, was a collage board game, based on Akashic portals -- using game cards, playing pieces and throwing dice. Inspired by the work of poet Ira Cohen, in 2002, it became a template for the web-zine, Blastitude #13: The Web of Eternity; (a special issue of Blastitude) with a background vortex of stars and animations developed by web designer Anneke Auer.
The 13 animated portals each open to different pages; including an interview with Ira Cohen, a Destroy All Monsters scrapbook and articles on Ray Johnson and the number 13, Mike Kelley on UFOs, Byron Coley on Father Yod, Leni Sinclair rock photos, Akira Ifukube's Japanese monster soundtracks, Tosh Berman on his father artist Wallace Berman, Ben Shot on Sun Ra and more...
http://www.blastitude.com/13/ETERNITY
The History of Glamour
“In the film, the main character is looking for an identity, and glamour becomes for her a potent form of self-expression. She finds it very liberating, because she’s from a small town. But by the end of the story, glamour becomes limiting, then imprisoning, so she becomes a writer, chooses grammar over glamour.”
~ Theresa Duncan on The History of Glamour in Salon
Theresa Duncan's manifesto and masterwork.
I happen in my work to use words. And perhaps it's all incorrect that these be looked at in terms of painting or creativity or beauty or whatever. --Ray Johnson
Frankenstein (1999) Frankenstein (1999) Presented here is a piece by Extended Organ recorded in 1997 and released on our 1999 CD, XOXO, which is now out of print. Extended Organ was formed in 1995 by Joe Potts, Tom Recchion, Paul McCarthy and me, Fredrik Nilsen, as an experiment in sonic interaction over a droning substate. [...]
Fredrik Nilsen lays down some history on Extended Organ,
Photo: Extended Organ visits Mike Kelley's Mobile Homestead in Detroit
L to R: Paul McCarthy, Joe Potts, Tom Recchion, Fredrik Nilsen, Alex Stevens. Photo by Danny Gromfin
No one reads William Mortensen. (Also see Cary Loren’s essay on Mortensen on 50 Watts.)