Are Shakespeare’s tragedies all structured in the same way? Are the characters rather isolated, grouped, all connected?… If you want to know take a look to this post by Martin Grandjean:
Network visualization: mapping Shakespeare’s tragedies
hello vonnie
Cosmic Funnies
wallacepolsom
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Keni
noise dept.

JBB: An Artblog!

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trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art

blake kathryn
One Nice Bug Per Day
YOU ARE THE REASON
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
we're not kids anymore.
Three Goblin Art
occasionally subtle
Sade Olutola
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Andulka
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Belarus
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Peru

seen from France

seen from Germany

seen from Ireland

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from Türkiye
@unproventheorem
Are Shakespeare’s tragedies all structured in the same way? Are the characters rather isolated, grouped, all connected?… If you want to know take a look to this post by Martin Grandjean:
Network visualization: mapping Shakespeare’s tragedies
Who has been to the moon? Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, Barney the Dinosaur, Todd Ingram…
We tried to identify all the characters throughout history that have made it to the moon’s surface. Take a look, and download the printable poster here. Did we miss any?
(mostly because my legs seem to have disappeared)
pencil & digital
I’m really pleased with how this turned out, I think I might focus on cell shading more often…! It’s super fun and looks dramatic~ Plus you can play around with incorporating extra things within the shading itself. Always good.
I spent some time on this while I was still excited by the first episode of The Bletchley Circle. If you didn’t watch it yesterday, I urge you to give it a go. The characters are brilliant and the story is exciting! It’s about four frustrated women in post-war Britain who used to be codebreakers at Bletchley Park*, and reunite years later to use their great intellect to find and catch a serial rapist killer. It’s equally awesome and rage inducing to see how these women battle the people around them who are sceptical (or just plain ignorant) of their mental abilities. Can’t wait for episode 2 :D
*I live round the corner from Bletchley Park, and I’m a little obsessed with the place hehe. It’s fascinating to think that its huge team of geniuses were possibly responsible for ending the war 3 years early. Shame that these people were not applauded for their efforts for something like 30 years, until the Official Secrets Act was ended. Instead we have the sad stories of people like Alan Turing and these fictional women, all not recognised for their efforts and in poor Mr. Turing’s case, horrifically punished.
Aaanyway, enough history. I hope you all like this illustration!
(The Bletchley Circle (c) ITV etc, Illustration (c) Jade Sarson)
This is brilliant.
The varying wavelengths of different colors
"Why be a mere tardigrade when you could be a TARDISGRADE?"
This doodle happened.
i just want an episode where the villain turns out to be an adorable tardigrade ok?
These are a few of my favorite things.
TARDIGRADES
TARDIGRADES EVERYWHERE
Waterbears can go without food or water for more than a decade. They can survive temperatures from zero to above the boiling point of water, pressure six times stronger than the deepest ocean trench, radiation hundreds of times higher than the fatal dose for a human, and the vacuum of space.
TARDIGRADES - pinnacles of evolution. Among the very best of creatures. Yes tardigrades yes.
The Common Room was a space founded by Stefan & Franciszka Themerson, which they hoped would serve as a mixing space artists and scientists, operating between 1957 and 1959. It facilitated weekly discussions on art, science, film, poetry, philosophy and links between art and science.
More: http://blogs.plos.org/attheinterface/
(via About At the Interface: Where Art and Science Meet)
This sounds like all kinds of awesome.
We made this animation for our December 2013 advent calendar - a journey through our chromosomes in 24 short films.
Watch the whole series here.
You cannot stir things apart.
A line from Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia. Considered to be one of the best and pithiest explanation of the second law of thermodynamics from the humanities. (via the-greenrose)
Alice Through the Microscope: The Power of Science Over Women’s Lives (Brighton Women and Science Group) 1980
Athena Unbound: The Advancement of Women in Science and Technology (Etzkowitz) 2000
Athena Meets Prometheus: Gender, Science And Technology—a Selected Bibliography (Eldredge) 1988
now this is just silly.
more at Petrichorus
A diagram of the movement of the Moon around the Earth (seen here) and a recipe for invisible ink await you in Mary Smith’s Commonplace Book. Help us make Mary’s journal of scientific inquiry more accessible by becoming a digital volunteer at the Smithsonian Transcription Center.
Mary Smith demands accuracy (and pure air) in this week’s Transcribe Tuesday.
Each week, on #TranscribeTuesday, we share work created by digital volunteers in the Transcription Center. That’s not a mystery, but who was Mary Smith? We’re not entirely sure! Transcribe this project, shared by smithsonianlibraries and perhaps we’ll learn more about whether she was a wealthy or well-connected British woman. Mary Smith’s Commonplace Book Concerning Science and Mathematics is a two volume hand-written manuscript, which dates from around 1769-1780, and summarizes science, math, medicine, religion and more.
New hero: the mysterious Mary Smith. (She's rightly compared to Thomasina Coverly in this blog post.)
ON THE SHOULDERS OF GIANTS: The science all-stars poster.
Visit Zen Pencils to read who all these great people are.
This is great. (And you can't tell, but Emilie du Chatelet is hidden behind Newton's speech bubble. Probably.)