wallacepolsom

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Discoholic 🪩
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
cherry valley forever
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Jules of Nature
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

oozey mess

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
RMH

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Kaledo Art
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Peter Solarz
Claire Keane

@theartofmadeline
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
NASA

PR's Tumblrdome

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@operatorio
#TheNewBlockaders
Acéphale
Mechanical Principles - Ralph Steiner - 1930 (short film)
Rubber’s Lover (1996, dir. Shozin Fukui)
... untitled
Gelatin silver print
© Ralph Steiner
https://archive.org/details/ReSearchIndustrialCultureHandbook/mode/2up
industrial art explained 1946
https://archive.org/details/dli.ernet.239094/page/n5/mode/2up
Industrial art may in time to come be regarded as the characteristic achievement of our civilisation. Its manifestations, so far as they survive, may disclose to posterity all the hesitancies, the conventions, the cautious dependence upon prototypes and the occasional outbursts of courageous innovation, which represent the history of design in industry since the close of the eighteenth century. Our almost exclusive preoccupation with production and mechanical efficiency during the first industrial revolution and our misunder¬ standing of the operation of design and the function of the designer will be duly observed; while the emergence of what has been called “machine art” may be recorded as marking the rise of the second industrial revolution. Our ways of life, the machines and arts upon which that life so greatly depends, may be revealed to the future by the chipped and rusting remains of a gas cooker or a refrigerator, the streamlined body of a motor coach or the fallen skeleton of a skyscraper. From such crushed and corroded bones, the archaeologists of the thirtieth century may attempt to reconstruct our lives. Helped a little by imagination, they may endow us with virtues, the possession of which we have never even suspected; or, with less generosity to the past, they may regard us as far worse than we really are.
Ratcliffe Power Station, Plate 28, Study 2
photo by Michael Kenna, 2008
Look, my first .gif