mrdiv:

TRIGON

mrdiv:

TRIGON

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Anthony McCall. Between You and I, 2006. Sixteenth Minute.
Installation at Peer/The Round Chapel, London, 2006.
Photo by Hugo Glendenning
© Anthony McCall 2006.

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Anthony McCall. Between You and I, 2006. Sixteenth Minute.

Installation at Peer/The Round Chapel, London, 2006.

Photo by Hugo Glendenning

© Anthony McCall 2006.

devidsketchbook:

Gregory Colbert - Ashes and Snow [Video] 

On Tumblr:  gregorycolbert.tumblr.com

ashesandsnow.org  via )

ianbrooks:

Private Moon by artist Leonid Tishkov and photographer Boris Bendikov

These romantic images depict the relationship between a man and a fallen celestial object, an affair that would last the rest of their… well his life, at least.

(via: My Modern Met)

dayraven:

Photographs by Thomas Jackson

taxonomynow:

There are giant feathered tyrannosaurs now… right?
Regular readers might have noticed that I’m not all that keen on covering stories that get massive, global exposure across the blogosphere. Consequently, sexy dinosaur news is mostly ignored here. Sometimes, though, I suppose I have to make an exception. Maybe I have a duty to, since the Tet Zoo audience includes more than an average number of dinosaur specialists (meaning that comments and discussions can often be pretty in-depth; more in-depth than they are elsewhere on the web). Furthermore, Tet Zoo is unlike many other sites that cover Mesozoic dinosaurs in that it appeals to many readers who, while zoologically informed, aren’t Mesozoic specialists and hence don’t necessarily get barraged by the same amount of ‘new dinosaur’ announcements that I (and other dinosaur workers) do. Anyway, enough with the preamble…
Today sees the publication of Yutyrannus huali Xu et al., 2012 in the hallowed pages of Nature. Known from three well-preserved specimens, it’s yet another feathered theropod dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of Liaoning Province, China. But it isn’t a dromaeosaurid, early bird or other maniraptoran – it’s a giant tyrannosauroid.
Read More

taxonomynow:

There are giant feathered tyrannosaurs now… right?

Regular readers might have noticed that I’m not all that keen on covering stories that get massive, global exposure across the blogosphere. Consequently, sexy dinosaur news is mostly ignored here. Sometimes, though, I suppose I have to make an exception. Maybe I have a duty to, since the Tet Zoo audience includes more than an average number of dinosaur specialists (meaning that comments and discussions can often be pretty in-depth; more in-depth than they are elsewhere on the web). Furthermore, Tet Zoo is unlike many other sites that cover Mesozoic dinosaurs in that it appeals to many readers who, while zoologically informed, aren’t Mesozoic specialists and hence don’t necessarily get barraged by the same amount of ‘new dinosaur’ announcements that I (and other dinosaur workers) do. Anyway, enough with the preamble…

Today sees the publication of Yutyrannus huali Xu et al., 2012 in the hallowed pages of Nature. Known from three well-preserved specimens, it’s yet another feathered theropod dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of Liaoning Province, China. But it isn’t a dromaeosaurid, early bird or other maniraptoran – it’s a giant tyrannosauroid.

Read More

carolinepercello:

Photographer Lee Jeffries worked as a sports photographer before having a chance encounter one day with a young homeless girl on a London street. After stealthily photographing the girl huddled in her sleeping bag, Jeffries decided to approach and talk with her rather than disappear with the photograph. That day changed his perception about the homeless, and he then decided to make them the subject of his photography. Jeffries makes portraits of homeless people he meets in Europe and in the US, and makes it a point to get to know them before asking to create the portraits. His photographs are gritty, honest, and haunting.

black-tangled-heart:

Double exposure photography by Jeen Na

devidsketchbook:

Artist Léopold Rabus  ”Arc-en-foin / hay rainbow”  2008 

Mixed media Installation. dimensions variable. When fears become form, Installation view CAN - Centre d’art Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland

therhumboogie:

By Tim Nobel & Sue Webster, taking piles of rubbish as abstract art works is something that I perhaps wouldn’t ordinarily find as interesting as these pieces, but there’s just something about the shadow images that are almost secret. The fact that you would never know the sculptural figures were there without the beams of light makes them even more appealing.