Tulips.
Three Goblin Art
AnasAbdin
Not today Justin
ojovivo
KIROKAZE
hello vonnie

pixel skylines
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izzy's playlists!
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@theartofmadeline
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Kaledo Art

Discoholic 🪩
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Origami Around
cherry valley forever
Keni
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@juzmcmuz
Tulips.
The Internet is a miraculous tool, but all too often, it affects us like a drug. Many of its popular apps, news websites, and social networks have been carefully designed to addict and distract, so they can harvest human attention like the natural resource it is. “Keep searching and you will discover,” these services seem to proclaim, but the deepest truths cannot be found by searching — and you will not find them in data, in videos, or in images of other people’s lives.
Jonathan Harris is at it again.
Magic afternoon swim. #backinbondi
Stewart Brand, working in a shipping container, from How Buildings Learn
My research library was in a shipping container twenty yards away–one of thirty rented out for self-storage. I got the steel 8-by-8-by-40-foot space for $250 a month and spent all of $1,000 fixing it up with white paint, cheap carpet, lights, an old couch, and raw plywood work surfaces and shelves. It was heaven. To go in there was to enter the book-in-progress–all the notes, tapes, 5x8 cards, photos, negatives, magazines, articles, 450 books, and other research oddments laid out by chapters or filed carefully.
…
I knew from editing Whole Earth Catalogs that the most important tool for organizing projects is lots of horizontal space and immediate-to-hand storage. Boat carpenter Peter Bailey built it cheap and sturdy. He told me I would regret using plywood for pinning up photos and other graphics on the walls, and he was right…
People asked, “How can you stand it in there without windows?” All I could say was “A library doesn’t need windows. A library is a window.” In February I was using the flat space to organize Chapter 12 with the 5x8 cards on which all the book’s raw research was taped. By this time I had followed Peter Bailey’s advice to have sheet steel on the walls, and little magnets holding up the photos.
Lots of horizontal space…
This reminds me so much of David Hockney’s work method for Secret Knowledge, how he pinned up the whole history of western painting on his studio wall:
Read more on shipping container architecture and see my friend John T Unger’s plans for his studio made of shipping containers.
Filed under: lay it all out where you can look at it
Went to the Whitney yesterday and saw this “find your beach” ad and was reminded of Zadie Smith’s exquisite read prompted by that same ad. Must read.
Taming The Mammoth - a brilliant, irreverent and profound exploration by @waitbutwhy of the most important thing to be learned in life. This image had me cracking up. You’ll need to read the article for the context.
Finally got around to buying a print of one of my favourite ever pieces of art by the lovely @stefpos. Hope your hula hooping is still going strong!
via
The predicted cold snap hasn't exactly eventuated. #sydneywinter
The Gehry designed UTS business school in Sydney. Provocative. Refreshing. #nofilter
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The hits keep coming.
Bondi sunrise. #nofilter
Winter's coming pt II. Would be too mean to OS friends to use #nofilter tag so I won't.