My namesake band pumps out my favorite song from their first album.
SONG OF THE DAY - Friday, April 26, 2024
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Thank you bttflyblu. This song and video is an absolute gem.
SONG OF THE DAY - Thursday, April 25, 2024
Dedicated to Luke & Layla :)
Oliver Wood - Light and Sweet (Official Video)
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Love Annie. Love Pitchfork.
Pitchfork Music Festival 2014
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Weirdly cool
going absolutely feral over this collection of items that washed up on Cornish beaches
Lego Lost At Sea on twitter
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Brassaï • Le Pont Neuf, 1930's
Do you know what Picasso said when he looked at my drawings in 1939 ? “You’re crazy, Brassai. You have a gold mine and you spend your time exploiting a salt mine !”
The salt mine was – naturally – photography !
— Brassaï
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I’m moved by these photos as this country was so cruel to these beautiful people.
Carl E. Moon (American, 1878 – 1948) learned his craft as an apprentice to a photography studio. Subsequently he moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, and opened his own studio, where he made pictorial studies of Indians that were living in the region.
In the early 1920's Moon established a studio in Pasadena, California, where he continued to photograph and paint. During the last three decades of this career, the Photographer produced works for Henry E. Huntington, published "Indians of the Southwest", and contributed illustrations for children's books written by his wife, Grace Purdie Moon.
The Pottery Maker, 1910
The Meeting Place, Taos: Border of New Mexico Near Colorado Line, 1908
Arrow Maker. Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. ca. 1904
The Flute Song, Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, 1900
A Taos Pueblo runner, 1914
Up the Acoma trail, Acoma Pueblo, New Mexico, ca. 1904
"The Black Jar", 1900
The Scout, Taos Mountains, New Mexico, 1904
Pedro Begay, Navajo, 1907
Hopi Mirror, Pool near Walpi, Arizona, 1900
Lotta Atsye, the chief’s daughter of the Laguna Pueblo, 1904
Haz-Pah, Navajo, 1914
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Jenny H.
Pictures of an exhibition: Jenny Holzer in Duesseldorf, Germany, Museum K21. Last Pic: Jenny Holzer form Truisms, 1983. T-Shirt worn bei Lay Pink. Photo Lisa Kahane, NY, 1983.
Holzer’s Düsseldorf exhibition ranges from posters to paintings and stone-works, touching on subjects such as war, absurdity, and populism. In keeping with Holzer’s deeply democratic approach and artistic practice, her works challenge viewers to grapple with conflicting perspectives and find their own empathic, open minded positions in complex debates.
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Typography is high art.
Christof Gassner, brochures for theatrical programming of german TV Channel ZDF, 1980s. Scan: Florian Hardwig. Collection of Letterform Archive. More to see: fontsinuse
“I have two big ideals (sic) for my typographical works: First, the calligraphers and book artists before Gutenberg: second, Herb Lubalin, who gave back, with his epochal work, the lost imagination to typography.”
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Stunning BXW
Juan Borja, Spiriti della Foresta (Forest Spirits). Upcoming exhibition 12th of september – 31st of october 2023, Fcf Gallery, Milano.
Juan is a photographer and environmentalist from Peru. "My inspiration comes from photographers like the Vargas brothers and Martín Chambi in the southern andes, the mexicans Graciela Iturbide, Juan Rulfo and Gabriel Figueroa, Felice Beato in Japan, the brazilian Sebastiao Salgado and Karl Blossfeldt from Germany, as well as pictorialists like Misonne."
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Happy Record Birthday Ramones. I was told April 24th marked the day that the RAMONES released their first record. It is still magnificently simple loud and sonically beautiful. GABA GABA HEY. This video is a riot.
SONG OF THE DAY - Wednesday, April 24, 2024
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Remember this band…BNNY…exceptional. Love hard.
SONG OF THE DAY - Tuesday, April 23. 2024
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SONG OF THE DAY - Monday, April 22, 2024
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Happy birthday James Osterberg. You are the GOAT of all rock stars.
SONG OF THE DAY - Sunday, April 21, 2024
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Worth noting.
Diane Arbus by Allison Adams
Diane Arbus (1923-1971) was an American photographer, who is best known for her black-and-white portraits of marginalized people, often thought as bizarre or unattractive by mainstream society. Diane and her husband were a successful team in fashion photography before she branched out on her own, wandering around the city, photographing the interesting New Yorkers she found on the fringes. She went to great lengths to meet her subjects and get the shot thats that she wanted, and her hard work paid off. She became admired as an artist as well as a photographer as she exhibited her work at the Museum of Modern Art and others. Diane Arbus is considered the most important female photographer of her generation and her work remains as groundbreaking and beloved today as it was then.
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Happy birthday Mr. Pop.
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