unique rain disaster
You are most likely to die at 11 am.

nippled:

no mom, I can’t make my bed, I’m too busy being a wicked cool bad ass rebel punk also can you make me a grilled cheese

(via lunarlungs)

Yusuf Sevincli

(via fleurare)

sfmoma:

SUBMISSION:
Nicholas Sullivan
Myth, 2013
Steele, Silicon, 168”x96”
pikeys:

The Veiling, 1995 by Bill Viola

Images of a man and a woman moving through a series of nocturnal landscapes are projected into parallel layers of loosely suspended translucent cloth. They each appear on separate opposing video channels, and are seen gradually moving from dark areas of shadow into areas of bright light. The cloth material diffuses the light and the figures dissipate in intensity and focus as they penetrate further into the scrim layers, eventually intersecting each other on the central veil.

papertrumpets:

Hikosaka Woodblock Print Workshop 

by Yuki Hikosaka and Izumi Morito of Hikosaka Woodblock Print Workshop

All around the world, perhaps the art works that says “Japan” more than any other are the famous ukiyoe woodblock prints. As you all know, to make ukiyoe, you carve an image into wooden boards, and print it onto paper — woodblock printing. This time we’re going to show you one example of how wood prints are carried on today, at Hikosaka Woodblock Print Workshop. But instead of kabuki actors and giant waves, the motifs Hikosaka use are, bread. Yup, delicious looking, freshly printed, bread. via pingmag 

(via lustik)