“I laughed and said, ‘Life is easy.’ What I meant was, ‘Life is easy with you here, and when you leave, it will be hard again.’”
— Miranda July; No One Belongs Here More Than You
styofa doing anything
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shark vs the universe

blake kathryn
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Janaina Medeiros
almost home

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Claire Keane
sheepfilms
DEAR READER
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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roma★
KIROKAZE
Jules of Nature
Keni

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@sofitechture-blog
“I laughed and said, ‘Life is easy.’ What I meant was, ‘Life is easy with you here, and when you leave, it will be hard again.’”
— Miranda July; No One Belongs Here More Than You
Architectural Photography, Communication and Added Value by David Cardelús
An excerpt of the paper presented by David Cardelús on November 4, 2016, on the Inter 2016 = Photography and Architecture international conference at the Museum of the University of Navarra in Pamplona, Spain, discussing some ideas on how semiotics are applied to the creation of added value to the communication of an architecture project in photographs.
When I am commissioned to shoot the photographs of an architecture project I always consider that:
Architectural photographs do interpret a project, they never document it: anyone can point a phone or a camera to a building and capture an image documenting its appearance without any other intention beyond certifying it. For me, architectural photography used as a documentary tool has little or any communicative power.
I can’t photograph architecture without understanding it before. Photographs are the vehicles that synthesize in images the essential elements that make unique a new architecture project.
I believe that communication is born from an informed and deliberate eye of the photographer on the project to select a consistent set of points of view that make it attractive first and intelligible later. And I also believe that architecture is the central body that dominates the composition of a photograph of architecture and to that any other elements in the frame are subordinated to build the communication of the project.
Read the full article here.
See more ARCHy here.
The Parallel Worlds of Guido Gutiérrez Ruiz
In the words of the artist Guido Gutiérrez Ruiz:
With my Instagram @guigurui I attempt to demonstrate that you don’t need a professional camera to take a nice picture. With the use of a smart phone, one can take a beautiful picture that tells its own story. Many people don’t like rain, but the puddles left behind can be more than magical. Every time I see a puddle I take out my smartphone and put my camera lens as close as I can to the water and capture its parallel world. Via
A post by ARCHatlas
Paulo Ossião
Harry Potter Gabriel Picolo
A series of illustrations based on the Harry Potter books created by Gabriel Picolo a freelance illustrator based in Brazil. A new take on the fantastic beasts, potions and spells from the magical Harry Potter book series. You can support this artist efforts on Patreon.
Check out this tumblr!
Desserts Ciuco Gutiérrez
T.K. Justin Ng
Happy Holidays!
by writer/storyboard artist Aleks Sennwald
Star Wars: The Blueprints
Die hard Star Wars fans will be thrilled to learn about this soon to be released limited collector’s edition from Epic Ink. The oversized volume, Star Wars: The Blueprints, features tons of the never before seen meticulously designed blueprints, drawings and photographs from George Lucas’ Star Wars series by J. W. Rinzler, executive editor at Lucasfilm Ltd.
Images and text via
Angela Kelly
Was ist Metaphysik? [pt.III] d-Arkroom
Another chapter of ‘Was ist Methapysik?’ focused on patterns. Check out other projects by d-Arkroom featured on archatlas:
Once Upon a Time
Was ist Metaphysik?
[Orange Square]
Micro Matter Rosa de Jong
Tiny little miniature worlds that are made by hand.
Check out the progress of this ongoing project at dribble or instagram.
After working on this 3'x4’ painting all summer I have finally completed Whale Hymn. Please share if you like!
Oil on Braced Baltic Birch, 2015
When working on a large painting like this one, the long process allows me ample time to conceptually formulate my thoughts on the work. Continuing my Streams in the Wasteland series, this painting fits the theme of wild animals in abandoned spaces. Gothic architecture fascinates me for its intentional diversity, which also reflects the variety and lack of rigidity in the natural world. According to 19th Century art critic John Ruskin, the history of Gothic reveals a gradual discovery of the beauty found in natural forms, which could be transferred into stone edifices. I imagined the concept for this painting over a year earlier, then later found architectural reference from the ruins of a 12th century cathedral in London, England. It had been transformed into a peaceful garden intertwined with ivy, red roses and fallen petals, historically symbolic of the Passion of Christ in European art. This would provide an intriguing exterior for an ocean scene emanating through stained glass. I had become interested in Humpback Whales watching the BBC series “Ocean Giants,” which recorded epic sights and sounds of the largest mammals to ever live on the planet. The behaviour of whales, specifically their vocalization, remains somewhat of a mystery to scientists. Many believe their ‘songs’ may be more than mating calls, for the non-utilitarian act of expressing emotions. In contemplating this I looked back to the gothic cathedral, a space for praise where parishioners sang hymns to their Creator. So also metaphorically the haunting chants from the giants of the deep bring honour to their Maker.
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