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“To be always what I am - and so changed from what I was.” ― Samuel Beckett, Happy Days
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The London is Changing project is bringing the voices of those affected by the housing crisis to the city’s billboards – and our readers have been involved. Here are some of their stories: from the optimistic to the heartbroken
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(1) President Abraham Lincoln, who had depression (2) Writer Virginia Woolf, who had bipolar disorder (3) Artist Vincent Van Gogh, who had bipolar disorder (4) Writer Sylvia Plath, who had depression (5) Mathematician John Nash (from A Brilliant Mind), who had schizophrenia
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An Awesome Neon Map Of Paris
Francophiles and cartographers would probably agree that it’s impossible to adequately convey the magic of Paris on a flat, lifeless map. But French designer Antoine Corbineau has come close in his newest print—a neon vision of the City of Light that resembles pop-art stained glass. With a tangle of streets in white against buildings in bold pinks, yellows, and reds, you can try to use this map for navigation, but you’d probably be better off hanging it on the wall.
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codex seraphinianus
in the late 70s italian architect, illustrator and industrial designer Luigi serafini made a book, an encyclopedia of unknown, parallel world. It is written in an unknown language, using an unknown alphabet
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Life is a shitstorm, in which art is our only umbrella
Mario Vargas Llosa
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Anselm Reyle german artist, loves and works in Berlin. Untitled 2012 Contemporary-Art-Blog
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What Makes Up the Moon In 1992, the Jupiter-bound Galileo spacecraft made a pass by our planet’s closest companion, the moon. This mosaic of 53 images shows the different composition of rocks on the moon’s surface. Blue and orange colors represent lava flows, bright pink areas are highlands, and light blue colors indicate recent impact material with the youngest craters showing blue rays extending away from them. Image: NASA/JPL
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