January 17, 2012
anti-realism:

Charcoal and Bone VIII

anti-realism:

Charcoal and Bone VIII

January 17, 2012

alecshao:

Andy Denzler

January 17, 2012

ssdmmfr:

Artist:

Robin Kosnas

“Nip in the Bud / Csírájában”

   “The concept is around the ruthless nature of consumerism. The Fetus in the womb is being consumed by us: the consumers of present day. Even  if unintentionally, but we do destroy our future with the harum scarum behavior of our societies. The umbilical cord curled up on a fork may seem disturbing, but on occasions our way of life is shocking as well.disturbing, but on occasions our way of life is shocking as well.”



January 17, 2012

(Source: followeed, via delicateheartsanddiabolicalminds)

January 17, 2012
maxcapacity:

this is another still from a video i’m working on

maxcapacity:

this is another still from a video i’m working on

January 17, 2012
fyeahwomenartists:

Kathryn ClarkFrom the Foreclosure Quilt series 
“My previous work as an urban planner made me acutely aware of how big an impact the foreclosure crisis would have on our cities and towns throughout the United States. However, very little was mentioned in the news.
It was important to me to present the whole story in a way that would captivate people’s attention and make a memorable statement. Making map quilts seemed an ironic solution. Quilts act as a functional memory, an historical record of difficult times. It is during times of hardship that people have traditionally made quilts, often resorting to scraps of cloth when so poor they could not afford to waste a single thread of fabric.
The neighborhoods shown are not an anomaly; they are a recurring pattern seen from coast to coast, urban to suburban neighborhoods across the US. The problem has not been solved, it is still occurring, just changing shape, affecting more of us.”
(via Foreclosure Quilts - Kathryn Clark )

fyeahwomenartists:

Kathryn Clark
From the Foreclosure Quilt series 

“My previous work as an urban planner made me acutely aware of how big an impact the foreclosure crisis would have on our cities and towns throughout the United States. However, very little was mentioned in the news.

It was important to me to present the whole story in a way that would captivate people’s attention and make a memorable statement. Making map quilts seemed an ironic solution. Quilts act as a functional memory, an historical record of difficult times. It is during times of hardship that people have traditionally made quilts, often resorting to scraps of cloth when so poor they could not afford to waste a single thread of fabric.

The neighborhoods shown are not an anomaly; they are a recurring pattern seen from coast to coast, urban to suburban neighborhoods across the US. The problem has not been solved, it is still occurring, just changing shape, affecting more of us.”

(via Foreclosure Quilts - Kathryn Clark )

January 16, 2012

visual-poetry:

“i got sunshine” by farhad moshiri

January 16, 2012
fyeahwomenartists:

Lisa EnxingHe Loved Her More Than the Revolution Gouache on antique paper

fyeahwomenartists:

Lisa Enxing
He Loved Her More Than the Revolution
Gouache on antique paper

January 15, 2012
Dominic Lamirand“Dominic”27x32Mixed Media

Dominic Lamirand
“Dominic”
27x32
Mixed Media

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