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tannertan36
KIROKAZE
DEAR READER
Sade Olutola

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Three Goblin Art
almost home
Monterey Bay Aquarium
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Origami Around
One Nice Bug Per Day
trying on a metaphor
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dirt enthusiast
taylor price

Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature

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if i look back, i am lost

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@rootsandroll
palampore in the collection of PeabodyEssex Museum in Salem. I’ve owned a few of these. The best one was in terrible condition, but was from about 1720, with turkeys and orange trees. They were made on the Coromandel coast of India for the Dutch, Portuguese and English markets. some made it to New England in the 1740-70 period.
#itTakesTuesday - #JazzIsMyReligion.
Archtop Guitar and Mandolin, Radio City models, 1995, 2004 | Guitar Heroes | The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York - Love em Both
Crystal Morey, Sculptures.
Hand built porcelains sculptures by artist Crystal Morey who explains her work as, “we sit at a pivotal moment, faced with monumental questions leading to difficult, uncertain answers. My figures exist on this frontier, absorbed in their own feelings of stress, anxiety and ambivalence. Sculpted from the silken white earth of porcelain, I see these delicate figures as containing power – as modern talismans and precious telling objects. They are here to remind us of our current trajectory and potential for destruction and downfall.”
I’d have to say that these are some of the best, most intriguing sculptures I’ve ever come across, ever.
Don’t miss Supersonic Art on Instagram!
“Ariel : on the bat’s back I do fly after Summer, merrily” from William Shakespeare’s “The Tempest” artist : H.C. Selous
my bloody valentine
Aurora consurgens, St. Gallen 15th century
Zürich, Zentralbibliothek, Ms. Rhenoviensis 172, fol. 19v
Antonio Francesco Sebastiano;Peruzzini Ricci (temptation of St Anthony)
Ian Miller
https://monsterbrains.blogspot.com/2017/11/ian-miller.html
http://www.ian-miller.org/
Here’s a giant spider crab from Japan, featured in The American Museum Journal, 1904.
My Strange & Unusual Site | Books | Videos | Music | Etsy
Soviet Union keeping the world from destruction Soviet Union c. 1980s
The House of the Future. Motorola advertisements from the early 1960s, illustrated by Charles Schridde.
Bonfire Night 2017
“Remember, remember the fifth of November…“
Guy Fawkes is said to have been carrying this iron lantern when he was arrested in the cellars underneath the Houses of Parliament on the night of 4–5 November 1605. Fawkes and his conspirators planned to ignite barrels of gunpowder concealed under firewood in the cellar during the state opening of Parliament, with the aim of blowing up the chamber and killing the Protestant King James I. Thanks to an anonymous warning, the cellars were searched, Fawkes was discovered and the plot failed.
Celebrating the fact that King James I had survived the attempt on his life, people lit bonfires around London, and later the introduction of the Observance of 5th November Act enforced an annual public day of thanksgiving for the plot’s failure.
Gifted to the University by Robert Heywood in 1641, the lantern joined the Ashmolean collection over two hundred years later in 1887. Guy Fawkes’ lantern is currently on display in our new gallery, The Ashmolean Story, on our lower ground floor.
Guy Fawkes’ lantern. London, England c. 1605. Iron and horn, 34.5 cm tall.
The Gunpowder Plot Conspirators. 1605 print on paper, unknown British artist.
Fireworks by Konstantin Andreevich Somov. Bodycolour on black wove paper, 1929.
climbing down Satan’s fur
Dante, Divina Commedia, Urbino and Ferrara 1477-1478
Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Urb.lat.365, fol. 93v
Alexandra Dvornikova
lost among the words
Rabanus Maurus, De laudibus sanctae crucis (part of the ‘Mettener Armenbibel’), Metten Abbey 1414-1415
München, BSB, Clm 8201, fol. 68v