Text
40K notes
·
View notes
Photo





I just wanna live here in this quiet space. let the world pass me over.
40K notes
·
View notes
Photo

Daniel B. Horowitz aka D. B. Horowitz aka Daniel Horowitz (American, b. 1978, New York, USA, based Brooklyn, NY, USA) - Drawing of the Day 360, 2012, Collage and Enamel on Paper
584 notes
·
View notes
Photo

Concentrate to the Quiet by Dennis DeHart, 2013
126K notes
·
View notes
Text
You’re teleported to 44 BCE Rome in your everyday street clothes. You’re brought before Caesar and he believes you might be from the future, hoping to bring him fortune. One day he questions you, asking “How Do I Die?”
388K notes
·
View notes
Text
unfortunately for everybody i will keep doing whatever i want
242K notes
·
View notes
Photo



Phillip K. Smith is an American artist who explores perceptions of light, color, and space and he found the best place to do it. Smith installed nearly 250 mirrored posts on a coast in Laguna Beach, California, ensuring that they reflect the waves instead of being “swallowed” by their force.
The outdoor work is a quarter mile long and has been commissioned by the Laguna Art Museum. “Stretching along much of Main Beach, the arc forms a visible marker between the man-made and natural worlds,” Smith said. “[It] reflects the changing colours of the ocean, sky, and shoreline throughout the day and night.”
The reflective poles were made from stainless steel and stand about 10 feet (3 metres) high, evenly spaced along the coast. “Viewers may experience ¼ Mile Arc both from a distance, with vantage points all along the cliffs and street, and from close up on the beach.” There have been concerns that these poles might be dangerous to birds, but it was displayed only a couple of days and no reports about bird harm were released. Finally, the sunset got to see how beautiful it really is. (Source)
4K notes
·
View notes
Photo


“In modern life we are surrounded by hard surfaces, the ground and vertical walls, and in our daily lives we we have lost consciousness of our bodies, we have forgotten them. In natural forests flat ground does not exist. This installation is a space to remind us of the body that we have forgotten in everyday life, and to make us more conscious of our body mass. All that you can touch you sink into. The darkness of the space eliminates the borders of floors, walls, and ceilings. As people enter the space of the artwork, the space itself is changed and affected by the weight of their bodies. In turn, their bodies are subsequently affected by the changing space, and the visitors have an impact on each other in the space of the artwork.” (Source)
13K notes
·
View notes
Photo


A graceful creature of the seafloor, a sea pen resembles a plump, old-fashioned quill pen. Its colors range from dark orange to yellow to white. Each sea pen is a colony of polyps (small anemonelike individuals) working together for the survival of the whole. (Source)
21K notes
·
View notes