Salvador Dali
Raphaelesque Head Exploding
(via @lonequixote)
No title available
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

#extradirty
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Three Goblin Art
h
KIROKAZE
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Mike Driver

★

pixel skylines
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Origami Around
Stranger Things

titsay
Game of Thrones Daily

No title available

Discoholic 🪩
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
🪼
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@v212
Salvador Dali
Raphaelesque Head Exploding
(via @lonequixote)
Eugène Leroy (French, 1910 - 2000)
The seated couple, N/D
Oil on canvas, 100 x 73 cm
The Walchensee with a Larch Tree, Lovis Corinth
https://www.wikiart.org/en/lovis-corinth/the-walchensee-with-a-larch-tree-1921
They say a black cat crossing your path is bad luck, but we beg to differ. Happy National Cat Day.
“Pussycat,” around 1954, by Abraham P. Hankins
“The Family (Cat and Kittens),” 1928, by Mabel Dwight
“Three Cats,” 1880s, attributed to Thomas Eakins
“Cat Reliquary,” around 1995, by George Johnson
“George Is Not Home,” around 1936–38, by Leroy Walter Flint
Vincent van Gogh
The Night Cafe (detail)
(via @lonequixote)
Claude Monet
View of Vetheuil (detail)
(via @lonequixote)
Rene Magritte Treasure Island 1942
NOT DETECTED, Jean-Michel Basquiat
Medium: crayon,paper
https://www.wikiart.org/en/jean-michel-basquiat/not_detected_203870
René Magritte - La baigneuse (1935)
RENÉ MAGRITTE Spring [1965]
René Magritte (Belgian, 1898-1967), Paysage [Landscape], c.1920. Tempera on cardboard laid down on panel, 82.1 x 63.6 cm.
Julius LeBlanc Stewart - Les chasseuresses
Frieze Masters: We’re all set for Frieze Masters, which opens this Thursday, October 4. Here is a preview of our booth, which presents paintings, objects, lithographs, rayographs, and photographs by Man Ray.
Preview the booth on Artsy. __________ Artworks © Man Ray Trust/Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY/ADAGP, Paris 2018
Julius Hübner, 1829 detail
The Scornful Woman 1910
Egon Schiele
Noël-Nicolas Coypel - The Rape of Europa (1727)
“If you want to improve health and quality of life, and decrease the stress, for the average person in a society, you do so by spending money on public goods—better public transit, safer streets, cleaner water, better public schools, universal health care. The bigger the income inequality is in a society, the greater the financial distance between the wealthy and the average. The bigger the distance between the wealthy and the average, the less benefit the wealthy will feel from expenditures on the public good. Instead, they would derive much more benefit by spending the same (taxed) money on their private good—a better chauffeur, a gated community, bottled water, private schools, private health insurance. As Evans writes, ‘The more unequal are incomes in a society, the more pronounced will be the disadvantages to its better-off members from public expenditure, and the more resources will those members have available to them to mount effective political opposition.’”
— Robert Sapolsky