Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

izzy's playlists!

if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell
i don't do bad sauce passes
Misplaced Lens Cap
No title available
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.

blake kathryn
Mike Driver
occasionally subtle
Xuebing Du

No title available
will byers stan first human second
Stranger Things
h
taylor price

Product Placement
Peter Solarz
seen from United States

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seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Austria

seen from United States
seen from Romania
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seen from Canada
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seen from Maldives

seen from Türkiye
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@patternedtimes
Pre– and Post–World War 1 art experiments: new forms to express modern life.
Harsh colors; flat surfaces.
Linear drawings by Waclaw Szpakowski, an architectural engineer who worked for the Polish post and telegraph agency and created these works in his spare time. Beginning in the early 1920s Szpakowski made ink drawings on tracing paper. He traced lines by hand, always making them one millimeter thick and setting them four millimeters apart, to produce carefully calculated optical effects. He thought of these rhythmic compositions as expressing the underlying mathematical order of the universe. Occasionally, he even performed them on his violin, reading them as musical scores. Unlike most artists in our exhibition who exchanged ideas and works, Szpakowski worked in isolation and in complete indifference to the art of his time.
1910s - founding of Gestalt school of psychology...(the Modern period) produced psychological theorisations of pattern.
1900s - first time that patterns are classified as art
gombrich