Tide Pool (1980) by Jeremy Miranda
RMH
🪼

izzy's playlists!
Stranger Things

#extradirty
Game of Thrones Daily

★
h
official daine visual archive
Mike Driver

JVL
The Stonewall Inn

Product Placement
$LAYYYTER
EXPECTATIONS

ellievsbear
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Keni
Not today Justin
taylor price

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from Australia
seen from Australia

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Iraq

seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@noirmariposa
Tide Pool (1980) by Jeremy Miranda
looking at the moon and experiencing a very deep yearning
Illustrations for Yukio Mishima's The Sound of Waves | Shiosai | 潮騒, by Lâm Tùng Nguyễn.
Native house in the jungles of Panama
American vintage postcard
Two females and a male golden snub-nosed monkey huddle together to keep warm in the extreme winter cold. Threatened mainly by forest loss and fragmentation, this endangered species is confined to central China. One of the shortlisted 25 images in the running for the Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice award at the Natural History Museum
Photograph: Minqiang Lu/2022 Wildlife Photographer of the Year
here
White-headed Langur (Trachypithecus leucocephalus), family Cercopithecidae, endemic to Guangxi, China
CRITICALLY ENDANGERED.
Photograph by VCG via: China Plus Culture
OMG THE LITTLE BABYS!!!!!! SO CUTEEEEEE
photographer: Herbert List
Perfomer of the Aztec Baile de los viejitos. Patzcuaro, Mexico. 1958.
tzitzimītl
MWW Artwork of the Day (11/22/20) Francisco Zúñiga (Costa Rican/Mexican, 1912-1998) Tehuanas (1973) Pastel on paper, 47.6 x 63.5 cm. Private Collection
Zuñiga is best known for his sculptures of women, as well as his focus on themes of motherhood. His massive works were primarily executed in onyx or cast in bronze, and fused classical sculptural methods with indigenous archetypes. His paintings and drawings also showed Western influences, but maintained a clear connection to Pre-Hispanic art. Exuberant, sensuous volumes and majestic proportions lend each Zuñiga woman a sense of sculptural and metaphysical completeness. Zuñiga’s drawing goes beyond simple technical virtuosity in search of an expression of human values. His poignant sculptures and drawings depict Mexico’s indigenous peoples. The familiar cast of characters is presented without smiles or tears. Each sturdy model reflects a resolute resistance to the hardships of everyday life. Each image is infused with a silent intensity and purity of form that also shows in his sculptural work. Francisco Zuñiga’s work reveals an inner strength in his subjects and insists on an unpretentious personal standard of beauty that is neither, “chic or pretty in a Western European sense.” His Mexican woman sit wrapped in fabric that is sculpturally modeled in rich tones with their faces revealing an unbending determination. (adapted from several sources)