A drop of red blood with a few specks of bacteria. Scientific Ideas of Today. 1909.
Internet Archive
Not today Justin

Janaina Medeiros

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Jules of Nature
art blog(derogatory)

oozey mess
trying on a metaphor
Keni

pixel skylines
Cosimo Galluzzi
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Game of Thrones Daily

Andulka
wallacepolsom
🪼

titsay
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

blake kathryn
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PR's Tumblrdome
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seen from Maldives
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@startlingthing
A drop of red blood with a few specks of bacteria. Scientific Ideas of Today. 1909.
Internet Archive
Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep By: Cleveland P. Grant From: Life Nature Library: The Mountain 1962
COLORS Magazine, Issue 3.
Belt with metal pockets made of brass and bronze from the book Sculpture to wear by Marjorie Schick, 2007.
Slides were used to teach history of art and architecture since around 1880s until they were replaced by digital modes such as PowerPoint. Since the founding of the Fogg Art Museum in 1895, the Fine Arts Library has served the needs of teaching faculty, art museum staff, undergraduate and graduate students, researchers, and historians at Harvard and around the world. By 1920s, many universities had slide libraries, including Harvard. Since then, over the decades, FAL has acquired over 600,000 slides, mainly from the courses taught by Harvard faculty for teaching.
In the past couple years, the Fine Arts Library’s Digital Images and Slides Collection has been engaged in a large-scale move of our 35 mm slides to off-site storage at the Harvard Depository.
This collection of over 600,000 slides documents the history of world art and architecture up to the early 2000s. Access for retrieval of items needed by future researchers is being provided through creating HOLLIS records. We have digitized most of the slides, but the archiving of this significant teaching format, nearly in its original arrangement, will serve as a valuable record both of the past art historical interests of faculty and students, and as a tangible reminder of bygone classroom teaching practices.
These are some samples from our slide collections. We’ll be showing some of these slides at our Open House on September 18th.
And I fed on the rancid sin
Possibly Lena Tidemand (1882-1957). Zanong (Zawony?) & Damperdortje [uncertain spelling], Mongolia, 1927.
Michele Gabriele
http://www.ofluxo.net/clumsy-and-milky-encoding-the-last-quarter-of-a-pose-by-michele-gabriele-at-white-noise-gallery/
Lucifer Rising (Kenneth Anger, 1972)
medieval girlblogger looking at an illumination of a young martyr: ugh she shouldst be in the tavern
Quentin Blake (b. 1932) Nude woman struck by arrow, 2018
Christie's
songs to crash your car to
colette lumiere, "i'm a work of art" t-shirt dress, 1978-79
anne bancroft