he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Cosimo Galluzzi

Origami Around

JVL

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
noise dept.
tumblr dot com
Peter Solarz

blake kathryn
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

Kaledo Art

if i look back, i am lost
dirt enthusiast
Misplaced Lens Cap
Today's Document
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

shark vs the universe
Three Goblin Art

seen from United States
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@shamanyy

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âI no longer wait, I live.â
â Rosario Castellanos, tr. by Magda Bogin, from âThe Joyful Mysteries,â
Put me on your wish list đ
Driving I-65 from Louisville to Bowling Green on a summer night
Taken August 2018
âIt is vain to wish for happiness this year, but essential to work to construct it. Wish for nothing, but accomplish something. Do not wait for a destiny built from start to finish by others, when that destiny is still in our hands. Maintain the force and the lucidity necessary for forging your own well-being and dignity.â
â Final editorial from Le Soir RĂŠpublicain, a paper Albert Camus wrote for, dated January 1st, 1940. Quote taken from Looking for the Stranger by Alice Kaplan. (via acknowledgetheabsurd)

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Okay like I know this is controversial but some transmasc ppl (including myself) actually dress feminine/in drag as a defense mechanism/coping tool. Like yeah, in an ideal world Iâd dress as and pass as male but I donât have the resources to do that - I probably never will - and so I almost solely try and dress masc in the comfort of my own home where I donât have to worry about every detail and feminine feature being scrutinized for it.Â
But like, when I go out or post online I am gonna be scrutinized for my gender presentation regardless of what it is, and sometimes (most of the time) itâs a lot easier to deal w ppl thinking Iâm girl and be able to say âOh itâs because Iâm wearing lipstick. Theyâre just closed minded about gender roles.â rather than having to tear my body and being apart even more than usual to guess what the tell was and deal with all the emotional hell I put myself through for not being able to do anything to fix it
Like yeah I like fashion but itâs also a defense mechanism the same way when someone says âoh weâre out of blueberry muffinsâ a lot of people go âoh I didnât really want them much anywaysâ or the same way if someone asks you if you were going to a costume party it sucks a lot more if youâre wearing an outfit you really like and tried to look good in than yknow, a costume. And yeah, thereâs lots of reasons trans people can dress like their assigned birth gender (safety, comfort, money, survival, just for fun) but this is another to add to the list many people forget about and/or choose to ignore
My heart is so tired.
Markus Zusak, The Book Thief (via wordsnquotes)
Eric Lee-JohnsonÂ
Peter Lee-Johnson and Jenny Lee-Johnson, Northland, c1958
The creative person is both more primitive and more cultivated, more destructive, a lot madder and a lot saner, than the average person.
Frank Barron (via wordsnquotes)

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oh my fucking god
Everyone go home. The internet is over.
Okay, you know what? I just reblogged this but I wanna get geeky over it. âCause this is some high-class humor right here, and if you donât get that you need to be educated so here I am about to do the thing youâre not supposed to do and explain the joke, because Iâm just really impressed by this jokeâs construction, okay?
So back in Paris in the 1920s, the surrealist movement in art was just starting to take off. The surrealist movement was born from the dadaist movement, which was a response to strict societal ideas of what was âartâ and what wasnât. The dadaists made a lot of works to try and challenge societyâs ideas of what art even was in the first place, and this continued on into the more sophisticated abstract works of surrealism.
One such artist, Rene Magritte (also known for his paintings of people with invisible heads, or with fruit for heads), painted a work called âThe Treachery of Images,â depicting a pipe, and underneath the words (in french) âThis is Not a Pipe.â The words were meant to refer to the fact that the painted pipe was literally not a real physical pipe that a viewer could smoke out of, it was just a painting of a pipe.
The painting was extremely meta, and really challenged the habit of allowing oneself to get so immersed in a work of art that one forgets it is a created representation of life, and not actual life. Understanding that alone takes a good deal of abstract thinking ability. And really appreciating and enjoying it requires a certain amount of oneâs own frustration with societyâs habit of trying to put limits on the definition of art; and being unable to think outside the box and really see something from all possible perspectives, including the perspective of being completely outside the thing.
Now whatâs even more fascinating to me is that modern art movements (and I donât mean âmodern art,â I mean actual contemporary art movements that are being led by our peers) are kinda doing the same thing the dadaist movement was doing, but in reaction to the art that came out of the dadaist movement. Things have circled back around again, and abstract surrealist art is now what society has decided âartâ is. And our generation doesnât accept that. Comics, video games, TV shows and movies, graffiti art, web series, even flash mobs, all of these are our generationâs way of saying, âno, society, you donât get to define art as strictly as âif it doesnât make sense to me it must be brilliant.â Art can be simple to understand, art can be accessible to all people, art can make you beg to find out what happens next!â And thatâs really interesting to me.
Flash forwards to 2006, when rapper Gucci Mane writes a song called âPillzâ in which the phrase âbitch I might beâ was coined and used several times. In the song, itâs used as a sarcastic, somewhat indignant but not wholly angry way to say âitâs none of your business,â in response to a beautiful woman in a club accusing the rapper of being high. The phrase became a meme in 2013, following Gucci Maneâs indictment for assaulting a soldier, when a redditor photoshopped a screencap of news coverage of the trial to reference the song. The photoshopped image changed the previous on-screen text to read âRapper Gucci Mane responds with âbitch I might beâ when asked if guiltyâ. Again, the usage of the phrase is a sarcastic and indignant ânone of your business.â The phrase then quickly gained popularity and was added to numerous other photoshopped images.
Now, memes are really cool as a concept anyways, when you think about them hard enough (I mean, the speed at which an entire world full of young people are able to latch onto something as simple as a phrase that they all mutually find funny, and within a matter of days explore every possible usage and implication of that phrase, including how it might relate to other complex systems of knowledge and understanding such as the rich character and plot developments of stories that generate fandoms), but lets put that aside for now and talk about sarcasm, instead.
Because sarcasm is a very sophisticated, complex, and subtle form of wit. Itâs a difficult thing to be able to understand, through tone of voice alone, that what someone says, and what they mean, are two different things. And to be able to discern the actual meaning when the words were not said. As wikipedia says, âdifferent parts of the brain must work together to understand sarcasm.â Itâs even harder when those words are typed and not spoken audibly, as the reader must imagine the tone in the first place. Thatâs a lot of brain work involved in even understanding the true meaning behind that simple little phrase.
And sarcasm is popular right now. More than popular, itâs a hallmark of our generation. People have been writing lengthy articles and psychological, sociological, and anthropological studies and musings on why weâre so sarcastic. As this article suggests, itâs because weâre so angry. Weâre a generation that was promised a lot and the world didnât deliver. Weâre disenchanted, and jaded, and mad. And we vent that through sarcastic humor. We laugh at things older generations donât think are funny. We have come to expect so much disappointment, that we no longer afford âseriousâ things the respect weâre told they deserve. Because we no longer believe they deserve it. As the article states, âWe are a generation that believes nothing is sacred. And if nothing is sacred everything becomes profane.â
One could even go so far as to make the argument that the popularity of the statement on the above image is due partially to the attitude amongst todayâs youth (especially on tumblr) that oneâs own life and choices are oneâs own, and not the business of anybody else. This attitude can be seen in everything as simple as the âbe yourselfâ and âfollow your dreamsâ statements many of us were raised on, to the more serious issues we deal with today of discrimination against the LGBTGA+ community, fat shaming, slut shaming, prejudice against muslim people, etc., to political issues like free speech and government invasion of privacy, and even into more subtle ideas present in social media of privacy settings, controlling who gets to see what posts, block and ignore features, and even the philosophy of ânobody can tell you what to post in your own space. If somebody doesnât like it, they can unfollow.â
None of this would be happening consciously, of course, but we canât help but be influenced by the world around us. And a phrase whose meaning is essentially âitâs none of your businessâ is very likely to resonate strongly with a group of people whose fundamental philosophies of polite interpersonal conduct revolve roughly around the same concept.
Taking all this into consideration, this joke is taking a lot of pre-knowledge and putting it all together to kind of say, in a funny way, âstop acting like you have it all figured out, because you donât. And some things are just not for you to figure out anyway.â
So to sum up, to understand the above image, you must:
have a descent grasp on art history to recognize the original painting.
have good abstract and/or creative thinking skills to understand and appreciate the original painting.
have a good grasp on modern pop culture, internet culture, and current slang and memes (basically, be an active participant in the wider world).
have the complex emotional and interpersonal understanding necessary to understand the subtleties of sarcasm.
understand enough of whatâs going on in the world around you that you are disenchanted enough to appreciate sarcastic humor.
participate in our generationâs general philosophy of life and how to interact with other human beings in the world at large.
So basically, if you laughed, youâre smart. :3
I want you but In a new way It feels like some Things will never Change
Sometimes the memory of someone is better than the reality of them.
Steve Maraboli (via thelovejournals)
Now that I have nothing to lose, I have nothing left to say.
sashimiplatter, âempty & fearlessâ (via wordsnquotes)
Fuck you
I hate love. Wish id never even heard that stupid word.

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Robert Rauschenberg, Erased De Kooning Drawing, 1953. Recto and verso. âFrame is part of drawing.â