These pictures from Faye Wong’s Sing and Play (1998) are so fucking solarpunk. Queen of trends; queen of ecofuturism; queen of aesthetic tbh.
Xuebing Du
occasionally subtle

#extradirty
cherry valley forever

pixel skylines
Misplaced Lens Cap
almost home
tumblr dot com

Andulka
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

shark vs the universe

oozey mess

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Keni
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
Three Goblin Art
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Sade Olutola
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
we're not kids anymore.
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@weii-en
These pictures from Faye Wong’s Sing and Play (1998) are so fucking solarpunk. Queen of trends; queen of ecofuturism; queen of aesthetic tbh.
Wong Kar-wai
- Chungking Express
1994
Faye Wong
“Wendy, I’m Home”. Photographed by Dorian Ulisses for Vogue.it
Candy-eating French Bees - Bees in France eating sugar from a nearby M&M factory began producing blue honey
“It wasn’t a secret. The first day we met I told her I was bisexual, and that I’d been with men and women my entire life. At the time she shrugged it off. And it wasn’t an issue for the first ten years of our marriage. The relationship was perfectly loving and stable. But then I don’t know, something happened. It wasn’t a particular man. I never cheated on her. It was something abstract. I just missed relationships with men. So I told her. I was honest. But when I uttered that thing it was like a bomb went off. She turned away her face like she’d been slapped very hard. It caused her so much pain. She lost a lot of weight. We cried and cried and cried about it. For three years we cried. We’d meet at Starbucks every day and cry in front of everyone. We didn’t live together after that. And we were never sexual again. But we were still intimate. We still took a lot of naps together. I always held her. We’d go shopping and walk arm-in-arm. She kept my last name and called me her gay husband. Her health began to deteriorate in 2007. It was a nerve disease. She lost her hearing. Then her sight. And I took care of her. She always told me to forget about her. To go out there and find a good guy. But I stayed by her side. We’d never officially gotten divorced, which helped in the end. They let me in the hospital room as her husband. I wasn’t allowed to touch her, but I was right next to her as she died, breathing with her. It’s been two years now. I’ll move away soon. There’s nothing left in this city for me. But first I’m going to have a ceremony in Central Park, and give an envelope of her ashes to everyone who loved her. I don’t know whether to call her my wife. It’s not important to me. Alexandra was the love of my life.”
Mitski for Crack Magazine
source
September Affirmation (Don’t Be Afraid) by Keaton St. James
Masato Seto | picnic
An amateur orchid grower works in the window of his greenhouse in Silver Spring, Maryland, April 1971.Photograph by Gordon Gahan, National Geographic
LIVING FOR TODAY | Karen Fisher ©1972
https://www.instagram.com/neol_magazine
Anna Akhmatova (tr. Jane Kenyon), Twenty Poems of Anna Akhmatova
by Stanley Kubrick