René Burri (1933-2014)
Tokyo train to Kamakura with young lovers - 1961
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Kaveh Akbar, from "Calling a Wolf a Wolf (Inpatient)", Calling a Wolf a Wolf
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‘The Eternal Idol’ Auguste Rodin, 1893.
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Diana Gärtner backstage @ John Galliano Spring/Summer, 2004 Ready-to-Wear
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Sheep on the Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland
by Bill Robertson
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View from Dùn Na Cuaiche, Inverary Castle, Argyll, Scotland by adambulley
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..🤍
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Светлана Балынь
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Adélia Prado - Denouement, tr. by Ellen Doré Watson
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Last day of summer
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“The very least you can do in your life is figure out what you hope for. And the most you can do is live inside that hope. Not admire it from a distance but live right in it, under its roof.”
— Barbara Kingsolver, Animal Dreams. (Harper Perennial June 21, 1991) (via The Vale of Soul-Making)
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Toor’s scenes possess a kind of solemnity or quietude that does not suggest equilibrium so much as tender regard. Toor’s protagonists, obvious stand-ins for the artist himself, at least at an earlier moment in his life, seem held in suspension between two worlds, Old and New, never entirely at home in either. But he also holds them at emotional arm’s length, as if these images were tempered by time, less observations than memories, and they begin to assume the lineaments of archetype, despite their depiction of technology à la mode.
(Many of the pictures have an overall green palette, appropriate, perhaps, for the nocturnal illumination of bars or apartment parties—although more readily suggesting fin de siècle gaslight—but also reminiscent of the discoloured varnish of old paintings hanging for generations in smoke-filled drawing rooms.)
on Salman Toor
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White-tail Fawns
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aging is not something to escape if it happens to you you will be very very lucky you must learn to aspire to it and then love its evidence
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