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@final-frontier

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anon requested:Â favourite animal from a ghibli movie
âYour voice sounds completely different in different languages. It alters your personality somehow. I donât think people get the same feeling from you. The rhythm changes. Because the rhythm of the language is different, it changes your inner rhythm and that changes how you process everything.When I hear myself speak French, I look at myself differently. Certain aspects will feel closer to the way I feel or the way I am and others wonât. I like thatâto tour different sides of yourself. I often find when looking at people who are comfortable in many languages, theyâre more comfortable talking about emotional stuff in a certain language or political stuff in another and thatâs really interesting, how people relate to those languages.â
â François Arnaud, for Interview Magazine
itâs over the garden wall season
(this is my first cintiq draw!!! ! !!)
i need to get this out of my chest, man i love you so much jimin. abs and shit this is all shallow, youâre you and nothing can be better than you being what you are. youâre probably never gonna get this message, but i hope someone else delivers. iâm glad you exist, everyone loves you, thank you for being you.

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This is Wirt and Gregory from âOver the Garden Wall.â Itâs show I worked on at Cartoon Network, and itâs coming out on November 3rd! Check out some clips over here! It also has a page on Tumblr. I hope you check it out!
I love this so much and Iâm so freaking excited about OtGW
spock roasting tf outta mccoy
Green-blooded hobgoblin.
Marchesa at New York Fashion Week Spring 2017

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So somebody on my Facebook posted this. And Iâve seen sooooo many memes like it. Images of a canvas with nothing but a slash cut into it, or a giant blurry square of color, or a black circle on a white canvas. There are always hundreds of comments about how anyone could do that and it isnât really art, or stories of the time someone dropped a glove on the floor of a museum and people started discussing the meaning of the piece, assuming it was an abstract found-objects type of sculpture.
The painting on the left is a bay or lake or harbor with mountains in the background and some people going about their day in the foreground. Itâs very pretty and it is skillfully painted. Itâs a nice piece of art. Itâs also just a landscape. I donât recognize a signature style, the subject matter is far too common to narrow it down. I have no idea who painted that image.
The painting on the right I recognized immediately. When I was studying abstraction and non-representational art, I didnât study this painter in depth, but I remember the day we learned about him and specifically about this series of paintings. His name was Ad Reinhart, and this is one painting from a series he called the ultimate paintings. (Not ultimate as in the best, but ultimate as in last.)
The day that my art history teacher showed us Ad Reinhartâs paintings, one guy in the class scoffed and made a comment that it was a scam, that Reinhart had slapped some black paint on the canvas and pretentious people who wanted to look smart gave him money for it. My teacher shut him down immediately. She told him that this is not a canvas that someone just painted black. It isnât easy to tell from this photo, but there are groups of color, usually squares of very very very dark blue or red or green or brown. They are so dark that, if you saw them on their own, you would call each of them black. But when they are side by side their differences are apparent. Initially you stare at the piece thinking that THAT corner of the canvas is TRUE black. Then you begin to wonder if it is a deep green that only appears black because the area next to it is a deep, deep red. Or perhaps the âblueâ is the true black and that red is actually brown. Or perhaps the blue is violet and the color next to it is the true black. The piece challenges the viewerâs perception. By the time you move on to the next painting, youâre left to wonder if maybe there have been other instances in which you believe something to be true but your perception is warped by some outside factor. And then you wonder if ANY of the colors were truly black. How can anything be cut and dry, black and white, when even black itself isnât as absolute as you thought it was?
People need to understand that not all art is about portraying a realistic image, and that technical skills (like the ability to paint a scene that looks as though it may have been photographed) are not the only kind of artistic skills. Some art is meant to be pretty or look like something. Other art is meant to carry a message or an idea, to provoke thought.
Reinhartâs art is utterly genius.
âBut anyone could have done that! It doesnât take any special skill! I could have done that!â
Ok. Maybe you could have. But you didnât.
Give abstract art some respect. Itâs more important than you realize.
Ad Reinhart did some great comics about interpreting art too
You canât tell me this wouldnât be Bonesâ internal monologue.
Bob Ross used to get 200 fan letters a day. When people who regularly wrote him fell out of touch, he would call them just to see if they were OK. Source
when ur mental health issues start acting up and someone tells you to just get over it

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when ur mental health issues start acting up and someone tells you to just get over it
Another myth that is firmly upheld is that disabled people are dependent and non-disabled people are independent. No one is actually independent. This is a myth perpetuated by disablism and driven by capitalism - we are all actually interdependent. Chances are, disabled or not, you donât grow all of your food. Chances are, you didnât build the car, bike, wheelchair, subway, shoes, or bus that transports you. Chances are you didnât construct your home. Chances are you didnât sew your clothing (or make the fabric and thread used to sew it). The difference between the needs that many disabled people have and the needs of people who are not labelled as disabled is that non-disabled people have had their dependencies normalized. The world has been built to accommodate certain needs and call the people who need those things independent, while other needs are considered exceptional. Each of us relies on others every day. We all rely on one another for support, resources, and to meet our needs. We are all interdependent. This interdependence is not weakness; rather, it is a part of our humanity.
AJ Withers, âDisability Politics and Theoryâ (via vulturechow)