Photo 18 Jun 771 notes nuuro:

A photographer and a geologist photograph the Taal volcano erupting in the Philippines, April 1912

nuuro:

A photographer and a geologist photograph the Taal volcano erupting in the Philippines, April 1912

(Source: natgeofound)

Photo 18 Jun 95 notes
via BRAINSAVER.
Quote 18 Jun 45 notes
Too often we underestimate the power of a touch, a smile, a kind word, a listening ear, an honest compliment, or the smallest act of caring, all of which have the potential to turn a life around.
— Leo Buscaglia, author (1924-1998)
Photo 18 Jun 39 notes daydreamsonvinyl:

(via Pinterest)
Photo 18 Jun 200 notes paperimages:

Wayne Thiebaud, Levee Farms, 1998

paperimages:

Wayne Thiebaud, Levee Farms, 1998

Photo 18 Jun 49 notes bobofeed:

Tuesday Travels
lemanoosh: http://www.casakimball.com/
Photo 18 Jun 195 notes

(Source: pin-upbitch)

Photo 18 Jun 138 notes

(Source: b0d)

Photo 18 Jun 383 notes thecountryfucker:


Dust Bowl Farm, 1938
Dorothea Lange

thecountryfucker:

Dust Bowl Farm, 1938

Dorothea Lange

Photo 18 Jun 86 notes cavetocanvas:

Grace Hartigan, Frank O’Hara, 1966
From the Smithsonian American Art Museum:

Frank O’Hara and Grace Hartigan were close friends in New York’s postwar art scene. She was a young painter finding her way among the giants of abstract expressionism, and O’Hara was a poet, critic, and later a curator at the Museum of Modern Art. Like O’Hara, Hartigan looked for everything that was “vulgar and vital” in American culture to fuel her abstract paintings. In the early 1960s, however, the two parted ways over Hartigan’s decision to include recognizable figures and symbols in her work. This was considered an act of betrayal in their avant-garde crowd, and the two were estranged for several years.
Hartigan and O’Hara had recently reconciled when the poet was killed in a beach accident, and Hartigan painted this work as a memorial to him. The hot and cold colors and slashing black lines capture the tangled emotions of their friendship and the tensions of the creative world they shared. O’Hara may have believed that painting should be purely abstract, but Hartigan had the last word. She included a figure of the poet, striding through the thicket of strokes on the canvas.

cavetocanvas:

Grace Hartigan, Frank O’Hara, 1966

From the Smithsonian American Art Museum:

Frank O’Hara and Grace Hartigan were close friends in New York’s postwar art scene. She was a young painter finding her way among the giants of abstract expressionism, and O’Hara was a poet, critic, and later a curator at the Museum of Modern Art. Like O’Hara, Hartigan looked for everything that was “vulgar and vital” in American culture to fuel her abstract paintings. In the early 1960s, however, the two parted ways over Hartigan’s decision to include recognizable figures and symbols in her work. This was considered an act of betrayal in their avant-garde crowd, and the two were estranged for several years.

Hartigan and O’Hara had recently reconciled when the poet was killed in a beach accident, and Hartigan painted this work as a memorial to him. The hot and cold colors and slashing black lines capture the tangled emotions of their friendship and the tensions of the creative world they shared. O’Hara may have believed that painting should be purely abstract, but Hartigan had the last word. She included a figure of the poet, striding through the thicket of strokes on the canvas.

Photo 18 Jun 505 notes

(Source: tassels)

Photo 18 Jun 11 notes
Photo 18 Jun 4,051 notes indigenousartofaustralia:

Mary Roberts Nakamarra   Yalka Tjukurrpa (Bush Onion)  2011

indigenousartofaustralia:

Mary Roberts Nakamarra   Yalka Tjukurrpa (Bush Onion)  2011

Photo 18 Jun 40 notes

(Source: eli-beth)

via My Fotolog.
Photo 18 Jun 379 notes photoelastica:

Sitting Lonely 

photoelastica:

Sitting Lonely 


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