Details from the Valentino Fall/Winter 2015 Haute Couture collection
Sweet Seals For You, Always
NASA
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RMH
hello vonnie
we're not kids anymore.
macklin celebrini has autism
Cosimo Galluzzi
I'd rather be in outer space đž

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Fai_Ryy

Origami Around

Kiana Khansmith
EXPECTATIONS

Product Placement
cherry valley forever
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
The Bowery Presents

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ

JVL
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Details from the Valentino Fall/Winter 2015 Haute Couture collection
Collages by Katrien De Blauwer
Vesa Vassileva âAncient Bulgarian Chronicleâ 1978
Mineral Roof Garden in SĂŁo Paulo, by Roberto Burle Marx, 1983
Adut Akech photographed by Charles Dennington, make up by Victoria Baron for Vogue Australia in 2018
ARTHUR DOVE 'WILLOWS' 1940
đMoMA, New York
Upon seeing this piece in room 509 at the MoMA, I just went completely silent. Its mystery drew me in, tore my heart, and haunted me for days to come.
Painted in 1940, whilst Arthur Dove was recovering from a heart attack, the alluring sight of the dancing willow trees in his Long Island home captures something more than just a landscape. The artwork carries a feeling of nostalgia mixed with fear, but also lightness of being.
When most American painters were creating realistic, representational works, he became one of the first American artists to pursue pure abstraction. His failing body and artistically rebellious spirit created this piece, that transcends time and place.
THE HEADS OF PABLO PICASSO
Whether depicting a woman, a man, or even a bull, his heads became a visual diary of his artistic evolution.
From the softness of his Blue and Rose periods to the fractured forms of Cubism and the expressive distortions of his later years, each face reflects a different chapter of his career.
Looking at the distorted subjects, and knowing his volatile and controlling nature, we're left to wonder: do they reveal the artist's extraordinary skill, or his difficult character?
Chanel gold leather ankle-strap Oxfords from the Spring Summer 2015 Ready to Wear collection
UNDERCOVER Spring Summer 2024 by Jun Takahashi
Sheer trenchcoat with wings trapped between two layers of fabric. The wings recall the angels from Wim Wendersâs classic Wings of Desire.
Marisa Berenson photographed by Arnaud de Rosnay for Vogue January 1968
Happy World Collage Day with the works of Ladislav ValaĆĄek.
World Collage Day is an annual celebration initiated by Kolaj Magazine, to honor this intricate craft, held on the second Saturday of May.
Paper collage dates back to 10th-century Japan, where calligraphers glued paper fragments onto surfaces while composing poetry. Collage art exploded in popularity at the beginning of the 20th century, becoming closely tied to the rise of Modernism.
Ladislav ValaĆĄek (b. 1954) is a Czech artist known for his intricate handmade collages, created from fragments of old newspapers, books, and printed matter. After a career in foreign trade, diplomacy, and consultancy; and a lifelong passion for football, art remained a constant presence.
Creating collages is his daily ritual, dismantling printed histories and reassembling them into vivid, imagined worlds.
Martin Schongauer 'Study of Peonies' 1472
Martin Schongauer (c.1450â1491) was a German painter and engraver celebrated for his extraordinary precision and delicate linework, he helped bridge the medieval painting techniques with the early Renaissance mindset in Northern Europe.
In Study of Peonies (1472), Schongauer turns his attention to a simple plant, observing it with patience, accuracy, and quiet admiration. Flowers served as symbols in religious scenes, lilies meant purity and roses were for love. But his shift toward botanical realism marked an important moment in art history, where careful observation served both beauty and knowledge.
Laurence Treille photographed by Christian Moser for Jean Paul Gaultier Spring Summer 1988 collection
Toshiko Hishida 'A Glass' 1997
There is something so soothing about this paining.
Whilst a glass is an unusual subject for a still life, it's an amazing object to use to show how the light reflects.
The stillness it eludes transfers the viewer to a peaceful moment, a glimpse of a second where the sun rays fall perfectly on the glass, creating shadows in different colours.
Amilna Estevao photographed by Jason Kim, make up by Morgane Martini for Models.com 2016 editorial 'Glitter Bomb'
Gaurav Gupta Spring/Summer 2026 Haute Couture
Innocenzo Fraccaroli âWounded Achillesâ 1842
Fraccaroli was a Neoclassical sculptor of the Canova school. He aimed to depict Achillesâ surprise at the very moment he was wounded in the heel.
A plaster cast of this work is on display at the Galleria dâArte Moderna Achille Forti in Verona. The marble version is in the Galleria dâArte Moderna in Milan.