“Don’t worry about things. Don’t push. Just do your work and you’ll survive. The important thing is to have a ball, to be joyful, to be loving and to be explosive. Out of that comes everything and you grow.”
"Looking back over a lifetime, you see that love was the answer to everything."
“You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.”
“I don’t believe in being serious about anything. I think life is too serious to be taken seriously.”
"If you write a hundred short stories and they are bad, that doesn’t mean you’ve failed. You fail only if you stop writing."
"May you be in love every day for the next 20,000 days."
- Ray Bradbury (Aug 22, 1920 – June 5, 2012)
(Lumonics Light and Sound Gallery)
25 notes
·
View notes
Ray Johnson, Ice, 1966 [Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center, Asheville, NC. Courtesy of the Craig F. Starr Gallery and Ray Johnson Estate / ARS, New York]
33 notes
·
View notes
I hate graves,
But I love graveyards—
//The only constant, the only absolute.//
Yesterday, as I wandered through my favorite graveyard,
every bit of it washed in weeds and wild dandelions,
I saw a single rose by a forsaken grave,
The only one neglected.
Its stone, covered in moss,
Bugs crawling under and over,
No name, no designation—
Just the grave, just death.
And there it stood, a rose, blood red,
Amidst the sea of weeds.
Not that it mattered—
The spectators long dead,
And soon, the rose will follow too.
I wished I could go in,
To craft a small grave for that rose—
Not that it counts,
Not that it matters.
In the heart of the city,
Each time I pass this resting place,
I realize my chaos means nothing—
For in the end, it’s all just mud.
But since yesterday,
I hope that I, too, might have a flower.
And perhaps someone will see it as I did—
No name, no designation,
Just a sunflower,
Preferably a sunflower,
In the wild, unattended,
Without hope, without reward.
24 notes
·
View notes
I'm a huge fan of the fact that there is a facility with a massive arsenal of world ending weapons and a huge collection of dangerous doohickeys, and Nightwing knows that the location isn't secure and Nightwing knows that any one of these devices could be devastating in the wrong hands and Nightwing knows that this is a ticking time bomb.
But he doesn't do anything.
Because we're talking about the Flash museum. He wouldn't go behind his back and steal all the stuff. Dick respects Wally.
And it's because he respects Wally that he tells him that he's being a dumbass to his face. Like a friend.
But no matter how much he says this ↓
Wally isn't putting this stuff in Gotham. He wants it where he can keep an eye on it.
206 notes
·
View notes
The Thing, officially licensed posters will be available exclusively from Vice Press on Thursday the 8th of February at 6pm GMT (UK) 1pm NYC time. The Timed X-Ray Edition will be available until Midnight on the 11th of February
Blue version: Edition Of 200, 24x36 inches, Hand Numbered Screen Print
Sepia Variant: Edition Of 100, 24x36 inches, Hand Numbered Screen Print
X-Ray variant is archival pigment on 5mil clear acetate film to give it that authentic X-Ray feel and will be available as a timed edition from Thursday until Sunday. This thing (narf) is going to look CRAZY in a light box!
Here's a few sketches of unused ideas.
https://vice-press.com/
38 notes
·
View notes
LADY GAGA LEAVES VENICE IN GALLERY DEPT.
After a busy few days in Venice, Lady Gaga was seen leaving the Cipriani Hotel and heading to the Marco Polo Airport en route to Paris where her European journey continued.
Celebrity-loved LA-based brand Gallery Dept. is the name behind Gaga's new pair of re-worked Levi's flare indigo denim jeans.
Founded by artist Josué Thomas, the brand transforms old jeans into unique, hand-distressed pieces with bold designs, blending street style with art. Each item is one-of-a-kind, making Gallery Dept. a favorite for its edgy, creative approach to fashion.
Gaga completed the look with a black tee, a pair of new Ray-Ban RB0840 wayfarer style sunglasses...
...and her Pleaser Flamingo-1020 black vinyl platform lace-up ankle boots.
9 notes
·
View notes
Paul Éluard, Poésie et Vérité, 1942, Portrait de l'auteur par Man Ray / Poetry and Truth, 1942, Translated By Roland Penrose and E.L.T. Mesens, London Gallery Editions, London, 1944 [Between the Covers, Gloucester City, NJ]
46 notes
·
View notes