Blue sunrise on the Oregon Coast
Mike Driver
i don't do bad sauce passes
Cosimo Galluzzi

titsay
No title available
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
d e v o n
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Misplaced Lens Cap
cherry valley forever

Origami Around
DEAR READER
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

PR's Tumblrdome
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
YOU ARE THE REASON

shark vs the universe

if i look back, i am lost
NASA
Claire Keane
seen from United States
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seen from Türkiye
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seen from Belgium
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seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

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@wilderwood
Blue sunrise on the Oregon Coast
A View Through a Window, with Vine Leaves - Maximilian Albert Hauschild
German , 1810-1895
Oil on paper , 13,4 x 12.3 cm. 5 1/4 x 4 7/8 in.
Robert Tatin (1902-1983) — Maryvonne Fille de Lune (oil on canvas, 1969)
There's something so deeply calming about watching megafauna prance and gambol about like they're little lambs
Bison pronking is already so magical, and then the double rainbow and the happy birdsong just put it way over the top
Fatimah Chik (Malaysian, 1947-2023), Untitled, 2015. Batik, 131 x 79 cm.
mid-atlantic martha: december 2010
What she says: im fine
What she means: the average age of conception over the past 250k years is apparently 26.9. Let's round it down to 25. Think of your birth mother. Hold her hand. Imagine her holding hands with her mother. Within 4 people, you're back in time 100 years, and it's an intimate family dinner. Just after WWI. Add another 16 people, a small party of 20, and you're in the 1500s. Double it, twice, and you're at 80 people. Your family would fill a restaurant, and you're at the height of the Roman empire. At 100 people, Confucius is alive but Socrates has not yet been born. 100 people. That's a medium sized wedding. A small lecture theatre or concert. 200 people, probably the biggest party i could ever hope to host, takes you back 5000 years. The guests at your soirée of parents would be contemporaries of the Egyptian and Indus Valley civilisations, although you'd probably be too busy fixing drinks and nibbles to talk to all of them. Just imagine it. 200 of you. That's all it takes to get back 5,000 years. And we could go further. 1000 people, a decent sized concert, a large high school, and we're at the end of the last ice age. Your ancestors are comparing their pink floyd vinyl with music played on instruments carved from wood or bones of long vanished species. Wander through the crowd. See your own features and phrases and gestures refract out like a kaleidoscope. What would they make of you? What do you make of them? Why does it feel so unfair that even that first 100 years --that small family dinner of four--is out of your grasp? Maybe it's because questions of spatial distance have become negligible to us now. why, oh why, does time hold out against us so stubbornly
elliot mcgucken
A monument to lab mice
Built in park near the Institute of Cytology and Genetics in Novosibirsk, Russia.
Malwine Stauss (German, b. 1993)
Untitled, 2022
Watercolor on paper
Xomatok.
Astonishingly gorgeous mural work on staircases from Peruvian artist Xomatok across Lima, Peru.
The works are explorations in the alteration of space focusing on color and its relationship with humanity.
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Bonfire. 1914.
Butterfly Repopulation Station in Portland
Free seeds, information and also a patch of milkweed for Monarch Butterflies
Source
Moonlight - Donald Jurney , 2022.
American, b. 1945 -
Oil , 10 × 10 in 25.4 × 25.4 cm.