1973 cover art by Jack Gaughan
BIG FUN
Belcher
LV, SoHo
https://instagram.com/afrocentricfilmscollaborative
Rest well King!
Rachel Sussman, The Oldest Living Things in the World, 2004-present.
Since 2004 artist Rachel Sussman has been researching, working with biologists, and traveling all over the world to photograph continuously living organisms 2,000 years old and older. The work spans disciplines, continents, and millennia: it’s part art and part science, has an innate environmentalism, and is driven by existential inquiry. She begins at ‘year zero,’ and looks back from there, photographing the past in the present. Together, her portraits capture the living history of our planet – and what we stand to lose in the future.
Dr. Lee, PHD
long live.
Nighttime, Enigma and Nostalgia, 1932, Arshile Gorky
Medium: ink,board
Still Life with Spherical Mirror, 1934, M.C. Escher
oh my gdO CAN YOU DRAW GODZILLA MOMMA CARRYING LIKE A HUNDRED LIZARD BABIES ON HER BACK FOR TAKE YOUR CHILD (lizard) TO WORK DAY
oh SHOOT well i cant swing 100 but how bout
If I don’t always reblog this assume I am dead
SHES SO PROUD OF HER BBY
Dawwww!!!! Momma’s Little City Destroyed!! * sniffles * They grow up so fast…
I love it!!
We did an opera-singing scene, and there was a dancing one too… I don’t know why it was never used. Maybe it was too funny.
Maggie Cheung & Tony Leung in a deleted scene for In the Mood For Love (2000) dir. Wong Kar-wai
Stay at Home is a personal series of my life living under the lockdowns implemented by the Ontario government that began in March 2019 and is still ongoing at this time of this project. These photos were all taken within my house, filled with the memories and objects I have accumulated over the last two and half years as a temporary resident in Toronto. With the onset of restrictions of daily life, social interactions and travel due to the pandemic have manifested feelings of nostalgia created from these lost connections. Being a temporary resident, I became homesick while being stuck at my home in Toronto, living with bits and pieces of a past life before Covid 19. Each object brings back memories of family gatherings, reminders of Trinidad, and the emotional struggles that the pandemic had on my body. Within the feelings of emptiness and nostalgia, there is hope for a better life even though we can’t see it at the moment.