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meohmyohmyohme · 1 year
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Edward Weston
Poe-Esque(Portrait of Ricardo Gomez Robelo With The Witch)
1921
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meohmyohmyohme · 1 year
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George Montard Woodward
Gravedigger and a Ghost
1795
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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We haven’t moved an inch, and everything has changed.
John Ashbery, from “More Pleasant Adventures,“ A Wave (Open Road Media, 2014; first published 1984)
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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The New Yorker
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Peter Schuyff (NL 1958) Flush (2019) oil on canvas (100 x 100 cm)
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Patricia Urquiola -Mangas Space Plait Module and Pillow
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Car H E L L
© Adam
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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The Winchester Star, Kansas, July 6, 1928
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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JOHANN BESSE
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Michele Chiossi
Feeling ZigZag
Marble Tray/Cutting Board
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Kirk Douglas poses with a painting of Vincent van Gogh for a publicity still for the 1956 biopic Lust for Life
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Oscar Murillo, catalyst #28, 2018, Oil and graphite on canvas, 260 × 235 cm
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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Miyako Ishiuchi – Hiroshima, 2008, c-prints of the belongings left behind by the victims of the 1945 bombing of Hiroshima. From Ishiuchi:
These are objects irradiated by the great fireball that appeared suddenly one summer morning, and personal effects left behind by those who perished because of it. I catch my breath at their vivid hues and textures, surfacing from the long shadows cast by their extreme circumstance. They seem much too ordinary, the very stuff of daily life, to belong to an Atomic archive […] I found Hiroshima in the gentle, everyday textures surviving in the silhouette of a one-piece dress, worn, perhaps clandestinely, by an unknown woman, and in the deep folds of a gathered skirt, in a fabric woven of silken threads.
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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“Feet of penguin.” William Beebe. The bird, its form and function. 1906.
Internet Archive
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meohmyohmyohme · 4 years
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A Chinese bronze lobed double gourd vase.  Qing Dynasty, 18th/19th century, 24.1 cm. high.  
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