BTS, THE BEST Album Art
Concept Art and 3D Modeling by me
Story:
The greatest exploration between time and space. Each icon represents the different hues of Film Out as they orbit together in unison in different cycles, on different timelines.

Product Placement

izzy's playlists!
h

blake kathryn

Discoholic 🪩
occasionally subtle
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Janaina Medeiros
trying on a metaphor
Not today Justin
sheepfilms
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
RMH
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

#extradirty
No title available
Cosmic Funnies
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
taylor price
Show & Tell
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States

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@madebyxan
BTS, THE BEST Album Art
Concept Art and 3D Modeling by me
Story:
The greatest exploration between time and space. Each icon represents the different hues of Film Out as they orbit together in unison in different cycles, on different timelines.
2019 Criterion covers
designed by me
𝔏𝔢𝔱 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔣𝔢𝔰𝔱𝔦𝔳𝔦𝔱𝔦𝔢𝔰 𝔟𝔢𝔤𝔦𝔫
there is a place you just can’t reach unless you have a dream too large to bear alone. — katsuki yuuri, yuri on ice: episode 12
ONE KILLER SUPERHERO
TAEYONG
𝐦𝐲 𝐟𝐢𝐫𝐬𝐭 𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐩𝐡𝐢𝐜 𝐨𝐟 𝐍𝐂𝐓 𝟏𝟐𝟕: 𝐇𝐈𝐆𝐇𝐖𝐀𝐘 𝐓𝐎 𝐇𝐄𝐀𝐕𝐄𝐍
Spotlight on James Baldwin
Over the course of the 1960s, the FBI amassed almost two thousand documents in an investigation into one of America’s most celebrated minds. The subject of this inquiry was a writer named James Baldwin. At the time, the FBI investigated many artists and thinkers, but most of their files were a fraction the size of Baldwin’s. During the years when the FBI hounded him, he became one of the best-selling Black authors in the world. So what made James Baldwin loom so large in the imaginations of both the public and the authorities?
Born in Harlem in 1924, he was the oldest of nine children. At age fourteen, he began to work as a preacher. By delivering sermons, he developed his voice as a writer, but also grew conflicted about the Church’s stance on racial inequality and homosexuality.
After high school, he began writing novels and essays while taking a series of odd jobs. But the issues that had driven him away from the Church were still inescapable in his daily life. Constantly confronted with racism and homophobia, he was angry and disillusioned, and yearned for a less restricted life. So in 1948, at the age of 24, he moved to Paris on a writing fellowship.
From France, he published his first novel, Go Tell it on the Mountain, in 1953. Set in Harlem, the book explores the Church as a source of both repression and hope. It was popular with both black and white readers. As he earned acclaim for his fiction, Baldwin gathered his thoughts on race, class, culture and exile in his 1955 extended essay, Notes of a Native Son.
Meanwhile, the Civil Rights movement was gaining momentum in America. Black Americans were making incremental gains at registering to vote and voting, but were still denied basic dignities in schools, on buses, in the work force, and in the armed services. Though he lived primarily in France for the rest of his life, Baldwin was deeply invested in the movement, and keenly aware of his country’s unfulfilled promise.
He had seen family, friends, and neighbors spiral into addiction, incarceration and suicide.He believed their fates originated from the constraints of a segregated society.In 1963, he published The Fire Next Time, an arresting portrait of racial strife in which he held white America accountable, but he also went further, arguing that racism hurt white people too.In his view, everyone was inextricably enmeshed in the same social fabric. He had long believedthat “People are trapped in history and history is trapped in them.”
Baldwin’s role in the Civil Rights movement went beyond observing and reporting. He also traveled through the American South attending rallies giving lectures of his own. He debated both white politicians and black activists, including Malcolm X, and served as a liaison between black activists and intellectuals and white establishment leaders like Robert Kennedy.
Because of Baldwin’s unique ability to articulate the causes of social turbulence in a way that white audiences were willing to hear, Kennedy and others tended to see him as an ambassador for black Americans—a label Baldwin rejected. And at the same time, his faculty with words led the FBI to view him as a threat. Even within the Civil Rights movement, Baldwin could sometimes feel like an outsider for his choice to live abroadas well as his sexuality, which he explored openly in his writing at a time when homophobia ran rampant.
Throughout his life, Baldwin considered it his role to bear witness. Unlike many of his peers, he lived to see some of the victories of the Civil Rights movement, but the continuing racial inequalities in the United States weighed heavily on him.
Though he may have felt trapped in his moment in history, his words have made generations of people feel known, while guiding them toward a more nuanced understanding of society’s most complex issues.
This month, TED-Ed is celebrating Black History Month, or National African American History Month, an annual celebration of achievements by black Americans and a time for recognizing the central role of African Americans in U.S. history.
From the TED-Ed Lesson Notes of a native son: the world according to James Baldwin - Christina Greer
Animation by Gibbons Studio
TOMORROW IS HALLOWEEN!!!
WHAT THE FUCK IT’S CHRISTMAS EVE WHY DID SOMEONE REBLOG THIS
TOMORROW IS HALLOWEEN!!!
PHOTOGRAPHY: Gregory Crewdson
Legendary photography Gregory Crewdson works within a photographic tradition that combines the documentary style of William Eggleston and Walker Evans with the dream-like vision of filmmakers such as Stephen Spielberg and David Lynch.
Keep reading
BLACKONTELEVISION is here!
The sister blog to @blackinmotionpictures is now active. If you’re a fan of the film blog, then you’ll definitely like the television one. Here it’s all about black tv and black characters on tv, with both old and new being celebrated. If you’re interested definitely check it out. And reblog this post to spread the word! Affiliates can apply here.
The Man Who Fell To Earth by Martin Ansin
**HEADPHONES ARE REQUIRED FOR A BETTER EXPERIENCE**
Dedicated this edit to these two well-known legends, Freddie Mercury and David Bowie. Rest in peace, you lovely souls. Your legend carries on.
“I wanted to prove the sustaining power of music.” -David Bowie “I think my melodies are superior to my lyrics.” -Freddie Mercury
where do we go from here? -Amber Run
Hi guys. I feel weird and seflish posting something like this but I’ve been struggling to get my work out there and subsequently make money from it. My dream is to be a concert photographer, it’s truly all I want to do. My current job isn’t enough for me to live on my own and support myself and my biggest fear is resigning to a full time job that I’m going to hate for the rest of my life. Living at home in such a toxic environment is also really starting to take its toll on me and I really want to get out of here as soon as possible. But the only way I can do that is by getting a real job and I want that to actually be the thing I want to do. But the only way I can do that is by actually taking photos.
I finally have a lot of shows coming up that I’m going to be able to professionally photograph but I don’t have tickets for them yet. I’m going to have to buy them all from Stubhub and those can sometimes be unreasonably priced. I’m not asking for money for nothing, so here are a few ways that you can help support me and receive something you might like in return:
I’ve made a Ko-Fi where I will try to post regularly from shows I have photographed and am going to photograph. You can Buy me a Coffee here.
I have an Etsy shop where I have an assortment of 4x6 matte prints to choose from of One Direction, NYC, and other artists and bands and stuff. You can purchase them here.
If you would like to arrange for me to send you HQ files of any of the photos on my website or on my etsy shop, that is an option as well. And if you live in NYC you can commission me to photograph you by messaging me on Instagram or shooting me an email! I know some cool locations!
If you’re feeling extra generous, this is my paypal link and I promise that any and all money sent here will go straight towards tickets for the concerts I’m going to photograph.
I’m trying my hardest to work with music magazines and blogs and getting my photos out there, but for now I’m on my own and any help would be appreciated. Thanks so much if you buy anything. If you don’t, please share and maybe one of your followers might. If you don’t do any of that, thanks for your time anyways, and I hope you have a lovely day :)
I just saw a post with your jackets and I'm in love. You have such a talent obviously!!! The jackets are beautiful and I wish I could buy one 🙂
aww thank you so much!!! im actually selling the black one here on my depop if youre interested https://t.co/RO3w7vnQA7
where do we go from here? -Amber Run