If I ever get a tat, it might look something like this. Or exactly like this.
Source: cool-kids-cant-dieee
Sitting still with time to spare. Med students don’t have to all be analytical. Art is such a great release.
The manifesto for visual culture from Rencontres d’Arles. (via Les Rencontres d’Arles - Rencontres d’Arles: expositions, stages photo /exhibitions, photo workshops.)
Source: rencontres-arles.com
Source: Laughing Squid
My surf inspired designs for Graey, shot at the Manhattan Plaza Health Center Climbing Gym
Model: Rachel Geiman
Photographer: George Evan Andreadis
These are quite amazing shots.
Source: janetleekim
Stunning, precisely timed shots of water drops by Maianer on Flickr
(via wordsthatididntsay)
Source: Flickr / maianer
Luminous Field by LuftWerk Installed at Chicago’s Cloud Gate
I’m so visiting this while it’s still on - Feb 10-Feb 20! A perfect study break.
(via kari-shma)
Source: thisiscolossal.com
From the Chicago Tribune —
‘Luminous Field’ will show Millennium Park in a new light:
“Luminous Field” is the name of the interactive video/sound installation that Luftwerk, (Petra) Bachmaier and (Sean) Gallero’s ongoing art collaboration, will mount on AT&T Plaza Feb. 10-20 just east and west of — and underneath — Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate. Ten projectors mounted on four towers looming 15 to 21 feet above the plaza will beam five minute-long loops onto an 80-feet-by-30-feet rectangle on the east side, while more patterns, including one that resembles a disco dance floor and another that suggests an animated Slinky, are projected to the west of and beneath the shiny sculpture.
You can watch Explore Chicago’s video about the project here.
Credit: Luftwerk
This looks amazing. I will go to this! Who’s with me??
Source: chicagotribune.com
(via Spectacular Aurorae Erupt Over Norway: Big Pic : Discovery News)
This is like a phoenix being born again. Absolutely breathtaking.
Source: news.discovery.com
The 1% on the Shoulders of the 99%
Korean sculptor and installation artist Do Ho Suh created this awesome installation, entitled Floor, that might not look like much until you get good and close to it. Glass plates rest on thousands of multicolored miniature plastic figures who are crowded together with their heads and arms turned skyward. Together, they support the weight of the individual visitor who steps onto the floor.
Currently showing at Lehmann Maupin’s pop-up gallery at the Singapore Tyler Print Institute (STPI) until February 11th, Floor is a wonderfully thought-provoking installation.
[via archiemcphee :: My Modern Metropolis]
The coolest imagery of the day. And it’s only 10 a.m.
photo sets like these make the morning so much better.
(via eddyizm)
Source: mymodernmet.com





