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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
we're not kids anymore.
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Monterey Bay Aquarium

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art

★

JBB: An Artblog!
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@sevensistersstar
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Alien - 1979
by 凱汀ZERO@wengwengchim
Evanescence, by Lazaro
Л.Баясгалан
"6 САРЫН 1" 1979 он
Даавуу, гуашь,
Монголын Уран Зургийн Галерейн алтан сан хөмрөг
Bayasgalan. L
"1 June" 1979
Fabric, gouache
Golden Treasure of Mongolian National Modern Art Gallery.
Soviet space art by Andrei Sokolov, printed in the 1976 postcard set “Man in Space.” Here we see Americans and Soviets linked up in orbit during the Apollo-Soyuz mission.
USSR Space Patches. Soviet Sputnik-1 and Space Rocket R-7. Free vector.
Free download vector files (eps, pdf): https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1VMhOXrfSHOGScv3f9a5BjqW16uV6sMFu
Soviet space art by Andrei Sokolov, published 1972.
Travel to Distant Worlds - art by Nikolay Kolchitsky (1957)
If you have been brutally broken, but still have the courage to be gentle to others then you deserve a love deeper than the ocean itself.
Nikita Gill (via quotemadness)
Solaris / Солярис (1972) dir. Andrei Tarkovsky
It may seem that the nature scenes that introduce the film are too lengthy, but the layering of these scenes, which depict a certain farewell to nature on Earth, creates the emotional basis of the story after the main character is sent up to the space station, and tortures the viewer with an incredible nostalgia for Earth’s nature, a feeling akin to being homesick. Without this long introduction, you cannot make the audience experience the actual desperation felt by the people trapped on the Solaris station.
I saw this film late one night at a screening room in Moscow, but while I was watching it, my heart was aching from an incredible longing to return to Earth. Just where is scientific progress leading mankind? This film manages to capture perfectly the sheer fearfulness. Without it, science fiction becomes mere fancy.
These thoughts were racing through my mind while I was a captive of the screen.
Tarkovsky was sitting in the corner of the screening room watching the film with me, but he got up as soon as the film was over, and looked at me with a shy smile. I said to him, “It’s very good. It’s a frightening movie.” He seemed embarrassed, but smiled happily. Then the two of us went to a film union restaurant and toasted with vodka.
Tarkovsky, who does not usually drink, got completely drunk and cut off the speakers at the restaurant, then began singing the theme of Seven Samurai at the top of his lungs. I joined in, eager to keep up.
At that moment, I was very happy to be on Earth. — Akira Kurosawa
Mirror (1975) dir. Andrei Tarkovsky
Stalker (1979)
MARY OLIVER
Thirst (2006);
original photos and edit