Holy Warbles was the most beloved music blog to be silenced in the wake of the megaupload police action. It was a (democratic, available to all,...
The Owls of Boredom
Redditor bicuriousdolphin wrote: “My coffee got cold, so I made an owl out of it”, drawing the first picture by coffee...
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Double G; Green and Gray
Urban Miniatures by Isaac Cordal
Sculpted from cement, the figurines in Isaac’s series: “Cement Eclipses” navigate the perilous monstrous-sized...
Where’s Wall-E? by Richard Sargent
Wall-E’s lost in a parade of all-star robots! You better find him quick too because Bender is totally...
by Beatriz S. González Jiménez
(via mycontradiction)
por Adrees Latif
“Liu [Di], represented by Pekin Fine Arts, is known for his work which deals with conflicting relationships between nature and human society, generated by the rate of Chinese urban development.”
(via modernmath)
(via adrianharwood)
Check out these incredible “mummified” monuments of excess.. I wonder what Dubai will look like when the oil runs out? And everyone flees?
“In 1913, up-and-coming car manufacturer Henry Ford perfected the first large-scale assembly line. Within few years, Detroit was about to become the world capital of automobile and the cradle of modern mass-production. For the first time of history, affluence was within the reach of the mass of people. Monumental skyscapers and fancy neighborhoods put the city’s wealth on display. Detroit became the dazzling beacon of the American Dream.”
Check out their 2 projects, “The Ruins of Detroit” and “Theaters”.
THE PILLARS ARE TUMBLING