Posted @withregram • @driverminnie ♻️ @ronnychieng @addisonodea America, the most patriotic thing you can do is your homework.
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Posted @withregram • @driverminnie ♻️ @ronnychieng @addisonodea America, the most patriotic thing you can do is your homework.
Posted @withregram • @sitnlift I literally just can't get enough of @lesfoplafonds
Left me cackling! Very Pythonesque.
Posted @withregram • @memeverse_org Let's try booting it gets me every time
Who here actually remembers the blackberry?
Posted #withregram • @claudinebleublonderouge Henri Fantin-Latour is known by many for his beautiful still lifes of flowers and his group paintings. Not as well known internationally as his Batignolle buddies Manet, Monet, Bazille and Emile Zola but he should be. Born in Grenoble he studied art from his father Theodore who was also an artist before attending the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1854. His fellow classmates Alphonse Legros and James Whistler would become lifelong friends and would also study in the studio of Gustave Courbet at 53 Rue Notre Dame des Champs. Like many of the artists at the time he would also spend his days in the Louvre as a copyist studying the Old Masters. Henri and Edouard Manet would prop their easels in front of Titian and I’m sure Manet went on and on about how he was going to reinterpret Titian’s painting into one of Manet’s most controversial pieces. It was on one of these visits that Fantin-Latour would introduce Manet to Berthe Morisot, one of his early muses. From his very early days he was attracted to the reproduction of reality that would be a constant theme in his art. While his still lifes of flowers are some of my favorites, his group paintings filled with history always make me smile when I see them. Last week I shared his Homage to Delacroix, however that isn’t the only one he did. In 1870 Fantin-Latour captured the group centered around Manet in his studio at Batignolles in the Atelier aux Batignolles on display at the Musée d’Orsay. And in Un Coin de Table, Fantin-Latour captures the poets and writers including Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud and if you don’t know their scandalous relationship you must search back in my feed. Fantin-Latour died on August 25 1904 of Lyme disease in Buré Normandy where he would spend summers with his wife Victoria Dubourg and her family. Buried in Montparnasse in a rather plain grave. He was just 68 years old but would do his part to extend the lives and memories of the painters, writers and poets of his time. #paris #parishistoryavecahemingway #fantinlatour #orsay https://www.instagram.com/p/CTMMzDvqu8_/?utm_medium=tumblr
Posted #withregram • #cooperhewitt Raised on a farm near Buffalo, New York, artist and textile designer Suzie Zuzek was a lifelong animal lover. At various times she kept cats, peacocks, rabbits, a goat, and a monkey named Trinket in the backyard of her home in Key West, Florida. Capturing their gestures and expressions with her pencil was a daily practice. Suzie’s creatures brought life and humor to her designs, and here are just a few of them—which is your favorite? My vote goes to the llamas 🦙 To see @suziezuzek's designs in real life, visit our exhibition "Suzie Zuzek for Lilly Pulitzer: The Prints That Made the Fashion Brand" on view now. Find out more and reserve your free ticket at our website, link in bio. All designed by Suzie Zuzek for Key West Hand Print Fabrics, Inc., © The Original I.P. LLC 🐒 Drawing, Trinket © May 20, 1971 🦙 Drawing, Lilly’s Llamas © July 18, 1967 🦛 Drawing, Hippo © July 5, 1975 🐦 Drawing, Ostrich © May 22, 1976 🦒 Drawing, Nairobi © November 11, 1974 https://www.instagram.com/p/CTMEmE3KXm_/?utm_medium=tumblr
Posted #withregram • @nirakknif It is here! My book called "The Anthroponaut's Wordbook - Art, science and a vital Anthropocene" is published by @postmediabooks @gianniromano ! 🌟 Link in Bio! 🌟 The book is responding to the call of the epoch we live in, declared by science as #anthropocene. It responds to a call to change models of thought, habits and patterns that lead to the depleation of nature. I think that most often, change is happening when different mindsets meet - this is why the books aims at creating connections and conversations between scientific concepts or findings and art and artistic practice. The illustrations are made by the greatest community I can imagine- the @anthroponauts #anthroponautdoodles 💛💛💛💛💛💛 Thank you dear friends, colleagues all over! 💛💛💛 @mikasiaefi @gianniromano @john.a.thackara @stefi_idlab @pianpicollo @filipporomanophoto @valerioroccoorlando @bienebee @nomen_est_omen__ @virginiobriatore @anny.lory @lanicos @isabelleayel @zizza_vero @ladulcinella @caristimario @marcellacilona @barbaracrimella_artist @lara_bluelapis @pooja @danielagambolo @seadrella @reginaberlin7 @anthroponaut_peki @anthoskosmos @fishivy @clareuna @anelim77lm @paulinamunozg @kristinaneral @stathoulap @lizz.robb @lizzielalayellow @sonianrc @poppylarouge @tatjana1o1 @dbdoo05 @seagull2101 @relationaldesign @lucigiu @sartoriaeditoriale #book #publishing #postmediabooks #anthropocene #art #science #relationalart #mindsets #dreams https://www.instagram.com/p/CRDjdJLBe3K/?utm_medium=tumblr
Repost #withregram https://www.instagram.com/p/CQcvfcPhAAR/?utm_medium=tumblr
Repost #withregram https://www.instagram.com/p/CQcuVBzBePD/?utm_medium=tumblr