DNA23



Reblogged from blistersonmyfinger
Reblogged from jetpackbackpack
Reblogged from idreamofwords
socialiteinept:

Reminds me of the house in the book “The Bone People”

socialiteinept:

Reminds me of the house in the book “The Bone People”

Reblogged from owlsahoot
petitpoulailler:

Little Mr. Hootie Pants ♥

petitpoulailler:

Little Mr. Hootie Pants ♥

Reblogged from thesearepeopleyouknow
We all grow up with the weight of history on us. Our ancestors dwell in the attics of our brains as they do in the spiralling chains of knowledge hidden in every cell of our bodies. Shirley Abbott via thesearepeopleyouknow (via petitpoulailler)

(via petitpoulailler)

Reblogged from petitpoulailler

petitpoulailler:

On July 24, 2010 thousands of people around the world uploaded videos of their day to YouTube to take part in Life in a Day, an historic cinematic experiment to create a documentary film about a single day on Earth.

Oscar winning director Kevin Macdonald whittled down over 4,500 hours of footage into a 90-minute film that wowed audiences at the Sundance, Berlin, and SXSW Film Festivals earlier this year.

On July 24, 2011, Life in a Day will continue its journey when it premiers in theaters across the U.S.

Reblogged from elnellis

(Source: elnellis)

Reblogged from preposterousness
preposterousness:

Walton Ford - Nila.
Maybe probably my favorite artist. His work is visually and conceptually so fascinating — it grapples with imperialism, politics, the human-land relationship, folktales, and more, all with the aesthetic of a natural history illustration. Kind of like a surreal, satirical John James Audubon, with tongue firmly planted in cheek. So good.

preposterousness:

Walton Ford - Nila.

Maybe probably my favorite artist. His work is visually and conceptually so fascinating — it grapples with imperialism, politics, the human-land relationship, folktales, and more, all with the aesthetic of a natural history illustration. Kind of like a surreal, satirical John James Audubon, with tongue firmly planted in cheek. So good.

Reblogged from pennedin-deactivated20110616
No great mind has ever existed without a touch of madness. Aristotle via anarchyofthemind (via petitpoulailler)

(via petitpoulailler)

Reblogged from girlofistanbul