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shinyslingback:

Anish Kapoor, Moon Shadow, 2005 .

shinyslingback:

Anish Kapoor, Moon Shadow, 2005 .

(via toomuchart)

Season 3: Episode 4 Who Watches the Watchers

This episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation is totally proving that everything from history channel’s Ancient Aliens is completely true.

Zippers vs. pubic hair, a battle as old as zippers.

Zippers vs. pubic hair, a battle as old as zippers.

Daily comic #2

2012

Daily comic #2

2012

Living in Athens, Ga

Watercolor and pen

2012

Living in Athens, Ga

Watercolor and pen

2012

Hands Wallpaper
2012
MINE! copyright

Hands Wallpaper

2012

MINE! copyright

Me Wallpaper
2012
copyright ME!

Me Wallpaper

2012

copyright ME!

cavetocanvas:

Joseph Beuys, Witches Spitting Fire, 1959
From the Tate Collection:

Witches are often seen in German art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The interest in witches at that time was linked to the larger issue of society’s attempt to understand women’s bodies and their fertility, a subject which still concerns the artist in this 1959 drawing. Although these images from traditional German art would have been known to Beuys, his presentation of women as witches also refers to his own particular fascination with ancient and mysterious characters. Shown against a background suggestive of flames, Beuys’s depiction of these two figures as fearsome and powerful shows his respect for a world where primitive, spiritual powers take precedent.

cavetocanvas:

Joseph Beuys, Witches Spitting Fire, 1959

From the Tate Collection:

Witches are often seen in German art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The interest in witches at that time was linked to the larger issue of society’s attempt to understand women’s bodies and their fertility, a subject which still concerns the artist in this 1959 drawing. Although these images from traditional German art would have been known to Beuys, his presentation of women as witches also refers to his own particular fascination with ancient and mysterious characters. Shown against a background suggestive of flames, Beuys’s depiction of these two figures as fearsome and powerful shows his respect for a world where primitive, spiritual powers take precedent.

shinyslingback:

Anish Kapoor, Moon Shadow, 2005 .

shinyslingback:

Anish Kapoor, Moon Shadow, 2005 .

(via toomuchart)

Season 3: Episode 4 Who Watches the Watchers

This episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation is totally proving that everything from history channel’s Ancient Aliens is completely true.

Zippers vs. pubic hair, a battle as old as zippers.

Zippers vs. pubic hair, a battle as old as zippers.

Daily comic #2

2012

Daily comic #2

2012

Living in Athens, Ga

Watercolor and pen

2012

Living in Athens, Ga

Watercolor and pen

2012

Hands Wallpaper
2012
MINE! copyright

Hands Wallpaper

2012

MINE! copyright

Me Wallpaper
2012
copyright ME!

Me Wallpaper

2012

copyright ME!

Me in Cloud
2012

Me in Cloud

2012

cavetocanvas:

Joseph Beuys, Witches Spitting Fire, 1959
From the Tate Collection:

Witches are often seen in German art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The interest in witches at that time was linked to the larger issue of society’s attempt to understand women’s bodies and their fertility, a subject which still concerns the artist in this 1959 drawing. Although these images from traditional German art would have been known to Beuys, his presentation of women as witches also refers to his own particular fascination with ancient and mysterious characters. Shown against a background suggestive of flames, Beuys’s depiction of these two figures as fearsome and powerful shows his respect for a world where primitive, spiritual powers take precedent.

cavetocanvas:

Joseph Beuys, Witches Spitting Fire, 1959

From the Tate Collection:

Witches are often seen in German art of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The interest in witches at that time was linked to the larger issue of society’s attempt to understand women’s bodies and their fertility, a subject which still concerns the artist in this 1959 drawing. Although these images from traditional German art would have been known to Beuys, his presentation of women as witches also refers to his own particular fascination with ancient and mysterious characters. Shown against a background suggestive of flames, Beuys’s depiction of these two figures as fearsome and powerful shows his respect for a world where primitive, spiritual powers take precedent.

Season 3: Episode 4 Who Watches the Watchers

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