Kim Hu, Illustrations.
Absolutely epic illustration work from artist Kim Hu who lives and works in Germany and Japan.
Discovered thanks to Katherine Donovan.
(Source: supersonicart.com)
Kim Hu, Illustrations.
Absolutely epic illustration work from artist Kim Hu who lives and works in Germany and Japan.
Discovered thanks to Katherine Donovan.
(Source: supersonicart.com)
Milos Korecek, 1987
—
Alain de Botton, who knows a thing or two about doing what you love, quoted by Megan McArdle, author of The Up Side of Down: Why Failing Well Is the Key to Success.
Pair with Debbie Millman’s indispensable Fail Safe.
(via explore-blog)
(Source: explore-blog, via affably)
Remember those kids in grade school who always said “it’s a free country, I can do what I want” as a defense for doing something really shitty?
Those kids are conservative libertarians now.
(Source: socialist-anxiety, via bubonickitten)
If you had enough money to buy the Barilla pasta, I think it’s safe to say you have enough money to pitch that shit, now that the company says they’re a bunch of homophobes.
You can’t cry po mouth now. -__-
(Source: deserted-paradise, via beyoursledgehammer)
(Source: madeupmonkeyshit, via simonefiasco)
I am sick of writing cover letters.
I just want to end every one of these with, “…cause my life is dope, and I do dope sh*t so hire me.”
there’s a little kanye in each and every one of us…and that sounds like a seamen joke, but no, no it is not
(Source: genericlatino-blog)
Illustrations by Jaroslav Serych for Tales Of The Uncanny, 1976.
More Serych at 50 Watts.
(via simonsayer)
(Source: gabriellamarcella, via simonsayer)
—Matt Mira (via j0phus)
(via progressivefriends)
15 Brand New Queer Lady Teevee Characters Defying Expectations This Summer
From time to time this summer, it’s felt — even just for one moment — like the television goddesses…
Well hey there
(via affably)
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The Pixies Enter the Realm of the Man-Child - In These Times (via bacon-and-glitter)
So, uh, we’re not going to talk about how The Pixies don’t have a problem glamorizing misogyny and/or racism, huh? I guess because it’s indie rock and it’s art? Guess that exception doesn’t apply for hip-hop, right? I mean, this video is basically Dr. Dre and Ice Cube’s “Natural Born Killaz,“ but with a white kid terrorizing a black woman…but hey, it’s like, art, man. There’s no double-standard if it’s art, right? Ughhhhhh…
(via nathanieljams)
(Source: inthesetimes.com, via nathanieljams)