Grace Hartzel photographed by Thistle Brown
Jules of Nature
ojovivo

JBB: An Artblog!
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
almost home
One Nice Bug Per Day
Cosmic Funnies

if i look back, i am lost
i don't do bad sauce passes
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Cosimo Galluzzi

JVL
Claire Keane

No title available
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Love Begins

Janaina Medeiros

tannertan36
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kaledo Art

seen from France

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@low-keylilac
Grace Hartzel photographed by Thistle Brown
seiichi hayashi (b.1945)
Chen Chen & Kai Williams Creative Carpet Designs.
Victorian Tear Catchers
During the Victorian era, mourners sometimes collected their tears in gold decorated “tear bottles” to keep as a remembrance for the next of kin. It has also been said that the widows would go to the grave on the anniversary of the first year of death and sprinkle the tears on the grave to signify the end of the first year of mourning.
Little man on a little adventure
Maria Concejo Iwankowicz
Moorland stream #dartmoornationalpark #moors #nature #nomeart
Ana Mendieta, Siluteta Series Work, 1973
from an article in spare rib: a woman’s liberation magazine no. 74, september 1978
Li Songsong, known for using thick layers of paint to craft scenes that appear similar to fragmented memories, brings his historical look at China to Pace Gallery with the show “One of My Ancestors.” See more here.
Digital collage, May 2020
Charlotte Brontë — Jane Eyre
the remote, secluded and little known rice terraces of yuanyang county in china’s yunnan province were built by the hani people along the contours of ailao mountain range five hundred years ago. during the early spring season, the terraces, once planted, are irrigated with spring water from the forest above, reflecting sunlight to create these stain glass like landscapes
photos by jialiang gao, hai thinh, javarman, isabelle chauvel, chaluntorn preeyasombat and thierry bornier