Muerto Mouse (via calaca)
That’s what we in the industry call clever (via vi-rosenrot)
dig? (via smokeweederrday)
this video is called “walls are dancing” you should watch it
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s 1892 painting, In Bed: The Kiss, captures two prostitutes from a brothel in a lip-locked moment of lesbian love. After painting several female couples getting cozy in bed, Toulouse-Lautrec supposedly said, “This is better than anything else. It is the very epitome of sensual delight.”
This piece was done by Louis Wain, a mental patient who suffered from schizophrenia. He did a lot of these trippy-looking cat drawings in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Louis Wain was an accomplished and successful artist before the onset of his schizophrenia. He began painting cats to amuse his wife, who was dying of breast cancer, and for a while his paintings were extremely popular in Victorian England. To my mind, his pre-schizophrenic paintings are somehow much creepier and more demonic:
agreed
ohfrabjuousday3333333333333333:
I hear Mr. Mackey
in other news, this is pretty wwwwwwwwild
holy shit that elephants a better artist than most people
(Source: eraextrana333)
Christina’s World is a work by U.S. painter Andrew Wyeth, and one of the best-known American paintings of the middle 20th century. The woman crawling through the grass was the artist’s neighbor Christina Olson. Aged 55, Christina was crippled by polio, and “was limited physically but by no means spiritually.” Wyeth explained, “The challenge was to do justice to her extraordinary conquest of a life which most people would consider hopeless.” He recorded the arid landscape, rural house, and shacks with great detail, painting minute blades of grass, individual strands of hair, and nuances of light and shadow.
holy shizzle! thats a painting (via kalopsiadesigns)