— Courtney Love (via tipsywench)
(via fuckyeahcourtneylove)
— Courtney Love (via tipsywench)
(via fuckyeahcourtneylove)
“I used to think I was the strangest person in the world but then I thought there are so many people in the world, there must be someone just like me who feels bizarre and flawed in the same ways I do. I would imagine her, and imagine that she must be out there thinking of me too. Well, I hope that if you are out there and read this and know that, yes, it’s true I’m here, and I’m just as strange as you.”
Frida Kahlo
(via shenaniganswillensue)
I Love Your Work - Johnathan Harris
“I LOVE YOUR WORK is an interactive documentary about the realities of those who make fantasies.
It is a raw and intimate portrait of the everyday lives of nine women who make lesbian porn.
It consists of 2,202 10-second video clips, taken at five-minute intervals over 10 consecutive days.
There is an interactive environment for exploring this material (around six hours of footage).
It is limited to just 10 viewers per day, and tickets cost $10 each.”
Fiona Maclean
New York City
NZ born Artist and Painter resides between Sydney, London and NY.
Her Paintings hang in private collections & her Illustrations appear in several International publications.
Fiona’s work has been described as “hauntingly beautiful” and that her portraits “have traces of glamour and intrigue beneath their honesty. Her subjects are intensely engaging extracting and translating fragments of secrets of the soul.”
As an Artist I’m fascinated by the fleetingness of youth, beauty and sexuality and the elusiveness of these particular elements, trying to capture those elements within my work.
(via paperimages)
These beautiful sculptures are part of an ongoing figurative series by Japanese artist Mihoko Ogaki entitled Milky Ways. This awesome fusion of the the beauty and mystery of the night sky with the mortal human form is an exploration of the ideas of life, death, and rebirth.
The fibre-reinforced plastic sculptures depict people either dying or already dead. Their forms have been embedded with bright LEDs that project fields of stars against the walls, floor, and ceiling of a darkened space.
“In a bright room, the dying bodies appear morbid and in pain, but, when the lights go off, the suffering seems to disappear into a delightful, twinkling display. One review states, “Ogaki takes the emotions of our human condition and gives them a physical presence.” The sparkling figures create an environment of tranquility, in which viewers are encouraged to calmly, and without distress, contemplate the human condition of life and death.”
Visit Mihoko Ogaki’s website for more images of these marvelous installations.
[via My Modern Metropolis and Colossal]
(via shenaniganswillensue)
Picture this: quite possibly the most important street photographer of the 20th century was a 1950s children’s nanny who kept herself to herself and never showed a single one of her photographs to anyone. Decades later in 2007, a Chicago real estate agent and historical hobbyist, John Maloof purchased a box of never-seen, never-developed film negatives […]
And the final edit of HARD TIMES -
see - http://www.reverbnation.com/CrowsParliament for more
For Yyellowbird - tumbler page - http://cariwayman.tumblr.com/
crows parliament - http://stmop.net/crows-parliament/index.html
track available as download -