yousetmysoulalight:

healthylivinhereicome:I LOVE this.
Everyone succumbs to it sometimes though. 
Control is an illusion? I’d rather think otherwise, but it’s hard to argue against it sometimes. I mean, a fair amount of things are predetermined for us that we can’t really change, like our age, our genetics, but at the same time, there are things we can take into our own hands, even if it’s just how we react to the things we cannot control. …Okay I’m off on a tangent procrastinating again.

yousetmysoulalight:

healthylivinhereicome:I LOVE this.

Everyone succumbs to it sometimes though. 

Control is an illusion? I’d rather think otherwise, but it’s hard to argue against it sometimes. I mean, a fair amount of things are predetermined for us that we can’t really change, like our age, our genetics, but at the same time, there are things we can take into our own hands, even if it’s just how we react to the things we cannot control. …Okay I’m off on a tangent procrastinating again.

(Source: livingbetterfeelingbetter)

ryandonato:

Cartograph, Jacob van Loon
  1. Camera: Nikon D80
  2. Aperture: f/20
  3. Exposure: 1/250th
  4. Focal Length: 22mm
tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via
tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via
tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via
tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via
tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via

tacticalshoyu:

Faces on Strainer by Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. Sculpted faces onto metal cooking strainers, which cast beautiful shadows. via

danceabletragedy:

 Ceramic autopsy by Beccy Ridsdel
danceabletragedy:

 Ceramic autopsy by Beccy Ridsdel
danceabletragedy:

 Ceramic autopsy by Beccy Ridsdel
danceabletragedy:

 Ceramic autopsy by Beccy Ridsdel

danceabletragedy:

 Ceramic autopsy by Beccy Ridsdel

alecshao:

Nick van Woert - Disappear, 2012
alecshao:

Nick van Woert - Disappear, 2012

alecshao:

Nick van Woert - Disappear, 2012

artruby:

Fred Sandback, Untitled (1968). 

this feels like some sort of graphic rendering error from a computer game or something :D 

artruby:

Fred Sandback, Untitled (1968). 


this feels like some sort of graphic rendering error from a computer game or something :D 

actegratuit:

The sculptural installation titled Nasutamanus depicts an elephant once again performing a balancing act with its trunk, but this time the creature is featured from a rotated view. Instead of simply doing an elephant’s version of a handstand, it appears to have suctioned its trunk to a wall adjacent to the floor. The remarkable result is this enormous animal seemingly hovering over the ground
Daniel Firman, Nasutamanus, 2012, Courtesy Galerie Perrotin, Paris © Daniel Firman, Foto/Photo: Guillaume Ziccarelli

This is really trippy hehehe, but it makes me feel really uneasy that the elephant might fall actegratuit:

The sculptural installation titled Nasutamanus depicts an elephant once again performing a balancing act with its trunk, but this time the creature is featured from a rotated view. Instead of simply doing an elephant’s version of a handstand, it appears to have suctioned its trunk to a wall adjacent to the floor. The remarkable result is this enormous animal seemingly hovering over the ground
Daniel Firman, Nasutamanus, 2012, Courtesy Galerie Perrotin, Paris © Daniel Firman, Foto/Photo: Guillaume Ziccarelli

This is really trippy hehehe, but it makes me feel really uneasy that the elephant might fall

actegratuit:

The sculptural installation titled Nasutamanus depicts an elephant once again performing a balancing act with its trunk, but this time the creature is featured from a rotated view. Instead of simply doing an elephant’s version of a handstand, it appears to have suctioned its trunk to a wall adjacent to the floor. The remarkable result is this enormous animal seemingly hovering over the ground

Daniel Firman, Nasutamanus, 2012, Courtesy Galerie Perrotin, Paris © Daniel Firman, Foto/Photo: Guillaume Ziccarelli


This is really trippy hehehe, but it makes me feel really uneasy that the elephant might fall