Rothko.
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titsay

shark vs the universe
sheepfilms
untitled
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Cosimo Galluzzi

if i look back, i am lost
Noah Kahan
occasionally subtle

pixel skylines
Peter Solarz

#extradirty
Stranger Things

oozey mess
official daine visual archive
EXPECTATIONS
we're not kids anymore.
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
seen from Germany

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@lexyac-blog
Rothko.
In pure linen (Ascetic House Films)
Michael Wohlgemut & Wilhelm Pleydenwurff. Days One, Two, Three & Four of the Creation Cycle (top to bottom). Liber Chronicarum. 1493.
South Tyrolean Alps Lukas Furlan
Mother and Infant Baboon at London Zoo, 1937
On verso: Solly, Guinea Baboon in the London Zoo Monkey House, was presented with his sixth baby by Lettie, his third wife.
Genus: Eutrichodesmus
Eutrichodesmus is a reasonably sized genus ( ~30 spp.) of Haplodesmid millipedes which occur throughout parts of Asia. Like other members of the family Haplodesmidae, members of Eutrichodesmus are noted for having elaborate growths on their tergites (the dorsal portion of their exoskeletons). E. aster shown above shows this trait exceptionally.
Classification
Animalia-Arthropoda-Myriapoda-Diplopoda-Polydesmida-Haplodesmoidea-Haplodesmidae-Eutrichodesmus
Image: Sergei Golovatch, Jean-Jacques Geoffroy, Jean-Paul Mauriès, Didier VandenSpiegel
Emma Kunz
Into the darkness by Marzena Wieczorek
Leonora Carrington, Forbidden Fruit, 1969 (via sealmaiden)
FARSHAD SANAEE
Vesuvianite from Canada
Imogen Cunningham, The Wind, c. 1910.
The Bushmans Kloof rock art site in the Cederberg region of South Africa.
Recently awarded the status of a South African National Heritage Site, Bushmans Kloof contains over 130 rock art sites, some of which date to 10,000 years before present.
Stained with oxide pigments, these rocks depict the spiritual and cultural legacy of the San (also known as Bushmen), who have lived in these mountains for some 120,000 years. A particular point of interest about this rock art for some is the depictions of about 30 Cape mountain zebra, which are today endangered, with only about 1,200 remaining worldwide. Antelopes such as the eland, black wildebeest, and springbok are also depicted.
Recommended reading & food for thought: ‘Access to Rock Art Sites: A Right or a Qualification?’ By Ndukuyakhe Ndlovu in The South African Archaeological Bulletin, Vol. 64, No. 189 (June 2009), pp. 61-68
Photos taken by mlaaker. The contrast and tone of the original images have been readjusted.
Ebenezer Sibly, A New and Complete Illustration of the Occult Sciences, Book 4.
http://www.esotericarchives.com/solomon/sibly4.htm
dying toner imprints from a near-dead cartridge.