angstlich:

.

(via pity--sex)

ohsonaomi:

hkangela:




acid on film


this is fucking trippy omg


this made my eyes water for some reason 
imtiazk:

febr13 004 by wiljansen on Flickr.

Mixed crystal precipitation | William Mark
Mixed crystal precipitation, (diphenhydramine HCl, Chlorpheniramine maleate, Benzoic acid). Polarized light with multiple wave plates and phase objectives. With optical staining and oblique illumination.

bombing:

Lucas Simoes - Quem Brinca Com Fogo, 2010

“to burn pictures, to physically erase a memory by burning it, so with time, the image that is burnt will disappear from your memory.”

(via bombing-deactivated20130413)

It’s hard to sleep when you know someone hates and wants nothing to do with you.

sosuperawesome:

Kevin Russ, Traveling And Paying The Bills With iPhoneography

A couple years ago I discovered Kevin Russ on Flickr. I love his portrait work and his use of natural light. I hadn’t seen much from him on Flickr in a while and just the other day I found out why. Kevin has been traveling the United States, shooting landscape photography with just his iPhone, and living off the print sales.

I must admit I am jealous of Kevin’s current life. He hops in his car, looks at a map of places he wants to go in this country, and takes off. When he gets there he photographs what he sees, predominantly landscapes and nature, and most of which he shoots on his iPhone. He is a contributor to iStockphoto as well as sells his prints on his Society 6 page. Check out his work, in my opinion it is absolutely beautiful. He also has a new flickr for his mobile photos, check it out! I think his work is a prime example of the fact that it isn’t about the camera, it’s about the photographer.

(via themountainblues)

touquetouque:

Kika Thorne, Magnetic Drawing, 2008
Artist of the day: Kika Thorne
1000scientists:

Plank Piece, 1973Charles Ray
“Ray was part of a wave of artists during the 1970s who addressed sculpture as an activity rather than as an object. In the iconic two-part photographic work Plank Piece the artist documents the use of his own body as the sculptural component. The static photograph belies the performative nature of the activity presented. Contrived through a complex balance between weight and gravity the artist suspended his body using only a plank of wood, creating a minimal, graphic image that is at once humorous and unsettling.”