Soir / Evening.1911. Oil on Canvas. Oval: 160 x 111 cm. (63 x 43.70 in.) Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris, France.
Art by Gabriel Joseph Marie Augustin Ferrier.(1847-1914).
sheepfilms
Mike Driver

bliss lane

oozey mess

gracie abrams
Jules of Nature
official daine visual archive
RMH
todays bird

blake kathryn
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵

No title available

PR's Tumblrdome
NASA

izzy's playlists!
Claire Keane
art blog(derogatory)

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
cherry valley forever
No title available

seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Sweden

seen from China

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Indonesia

seen from Thailand

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@starlight-and-silence
Soir / Evening.1911. Oil on Canvas. Oval: 160 x 111 cm. (63 x 43.70 in.) Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-arts de la Ville de Paris, France.
Art by Gabriel Joseph Marie Augustin Ferrier.(1847-1914).
Roman fresco, Flora, Pompeii, 1st Century A.D., National Archaeological Museum, Naples, source
“Public libraries are such important, lovely places!” Yes but do you GO there. Do you STUDY there. Do you meet friends and get coffee there. Do you borrow the FREE, ZERO SUBSCRIPTION, ZERO TRACKING books, audiobooks, ebooks, and films. Have you checked out their events and schemes. Do you sign up for the low cost courses in ASL or knitting or programming or writing your CV that they probably run. Do you know they probably have myriad of schemes to help low income families. Do you hire their low cost rooms if you need them. Have you joined their social groups. Do you use the FREE COMPUTERS. Do you even know what your library is trying to offer you. Listen, the library shouldn’t just exist for you as a nice idea. That’s why more libraries shut every year
If this post persuades even one person to get a free library account and use it, my time on this hellsite will not have been spent in vain
Rabbit amid Ferns and Flowering Plants - William J. Webbe - 1855 - via MFA Boston
The Night Sky, a Ladybird Book, published in 1965 with illustrations by Robert Ayton.
“The Unicorn” by Christine Price, 1965
Franz Traunfellner (1913 - 1986) - Young Deer. 1943. Wood engraving on paper.
Rabbits between the staves. Cambrai BM 125-128, c. 1540-50
Source
october will be kind
october will be fun
october will be good
october will bring peace
october will bring happiness
october will bring love
Rashit Safiullin Winter
Sun Dreams - Poul Anker Bech , 1973.
Danish, 1942–2009
Oil on canvas,
Ed Gordeev
paolo-streito-1264: Fukuoji Kazuhiko Moon and Window Light, 1994
* * * *
“[…] for it was the approaching dawn that held him in its spell, that ‘promise kept each morning’ that the earth, along with the town and his own person, would emerge from beneath the shadow of the night, and that the delicate glimmer of dawn would yield to the bright light of day…”
― László Krasznahorkai, The Melancholy of Resistance