'Fairy Orchestra' by Cicely Mary Barker, 1920s
Claire Keane

Love Begins
h
wallacepolsom
No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

roma★
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Mike Driver
Acquired Stardust
d e v o n

No title available
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Keni
YOU ARE THE REASON
Game of Thrones Daily
art blog(derogatory)

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

seen from Malaysia

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from Germany

seen from China
seen from Spain
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Poland
seen from South Africa

seen from United States

seen from Spain

seen from United Kingdom
@onlydust
'Fairy Orchestra' by Cicely Mary Barker, 1920s
Helligdomsklipperne on Bornholm (1882) by Peder Mørk Mønsted
Resting (c.1890) by Victor Gabriel Gilbert
Ruined Monastery of Eldena near Greifswald by Caspar David Friedrich
Three Tetons (1895) by Thomas Moran
Ship in Stormy Sea, 1858, by Ivan Aivazovsky (1817 - 1900)
Art by Kent Ambler
'The Tempest'. Michele Tedesco. 1888.
On the Suffolk Coast (1885) by Willard Metcalf
Artist : Hannah Willow
I've only ever really used Tumblr to like and lurk, but with what happened this week, I feel I should make this post. I'm putting this here for me, but if anyone else should find comfort in it, it's here for you too.
Bill Finn.
Over the last several days, my phone has been full of friends sharing their memories—of his music, of his wisdom, of that one sweater. So, as enigmatic as he was, let me try to put into words something of a tiny sliver of who he was.
He took his craft seriously, but not himself. And at the same time, he was remarkably blasé about his own work. Any serious questions about meaning were brushed off—whether because Bill couldn’t remember or because he wanted you to create and lean in to your own interpretation and meaning of his work is anyone’s guess. Probably both. He was more interested in what you thought than what he thought.
Bill wanted writers to push boundaries, create messes. A top-tier compliment from him was calling you “perverse.” He was crotchety sometimes, but always genuine, and full of joy. He was brutally honest and to-the-point; if he liked something, he told you, and if he didn’t like something (more often than not), he also told you. If he upset or offended you—well, that was a you problem.
But through all his bluntness, he wanted the best for you. He would go to bat for you, would fight tooth and nail for you to get the opportunities and recognition you deserved. He launched so many careers, mentored so many writers. As so many people right now are sharing: “What would I do if you had not been my friend?”
We will all miss him terribly.
The dreamer (1840) by Caspar David Friedrich
Moonlit mountain scenery with people standing at a river by Georg Emil Libert (Danish, 1820–1908)
'Witches dancing around fire' by Julia Sidorenko.
hi, a lot of you need a perspective reset
the average human lifespan globally is 70+ years
taking the threshold of adulthood as 18, you are likely to spend at least 52 years as a fully grown adult
at the age of 30 you have lived less than one quarter of your adult life (12/52 years)
'middle age' is typically considered to be between 45-65
it is extremely common to switch careers, start new relationships, emigrate, go to college for the first or second time, or make other life-changing decisions in middle age
it's wild that I even have to spell it out, but older adults (60+) still have social lives and hobbies and interests.
you can still date when you get old. you can still fuck. you can still learn new skills, be fashionable, be competitive. you can still gossip, you can still travel, you can still read. you can still transition. you can still come out.
young doesn't mean peaked. you're inexperienced in your 20s! you're still learning and practicing! you're developing social skills and muscle memory that will last decades!
there are a million things to do in the world, and they don't vanish overnight because an imaginary number gets too big
The Witch's Daughter by Frederick Stuart Church (1881)
'When the Flower burst out' by Ivar Arosenius, 1904.