195 posts
By Beatriceong
MODULO by CP Parquet
http://bit.ly/1jTzS8z
This is the new maxi format in the Antico Asolo 2 layer Natura collection; boards invaluable wood species, 720mm long by 240 wide. #wood#parquet #design
absolutely lovely.
Humorously Relatable Illustrations Display the Reality of Living with Anxiety and Depression
Mountain Stone House VUDAFIERI SAVERINO PARTNERS
The project involves the restoration and reuse of two traditional buildings located in a small mountain village in northern Italy. The project is an exercise of “correct practice” intervention in a strongly historical and traditional context.
Images and text via
Wannabe
Swing by the Perelman Building and check out “Mythography: Sources for Classical Myth,” on view in the Museum Library now through February 19. With a selection of classically-inspired works from the 1300s to the 1800s, the installation explores changing perspectives on the work of Homer and his peers.
“Homer, His Iliads,” translated by John Ogilby in 1660, engraving by Cornelis van Caukercken after Abraham van Diepenbeeck
Anyone up for a road trip?
Jeanette MacDonald explains why she’s quite an eligible bachelorette in The Love Parade (1929).
Michael Wolgemut, Views of Constantinople, Nuremberg Chronicle, c. 1493.
Drawing of the Year (Highly Commended) 2015
Naima Callenberg
naimacallenberg@gmail.com
Artists in the Wild
For the Spring 2015 issue of The Southampton Review.
You can order a poster at my shop.
Bending Trail from John Kyler DigitalColorado on Fivehundredpx
Matthew Wiebe
Thewolfe Jim window 3, 2011
2/ 30 days of noirvember
The Third Man (1949)
Edouard Boubat
The Latin Quarter
Paris 1968
Le Corbusier, Villa Jeanneret-Perret (Maison Blanche), La Chaux-de-Fonds, 1912 sources: Girard-Perregaux at Watchonista Association Maison Blanche
Having a huge number of books is not exactly about reading them all — it’s about having the possibility of reading them all. — Michael Lipsey
Buster gets a taste of the good life in Hard Luck (1921).
Buster gets a taste of the good life in Hard Luck (1921).
“The history of the typewriter is, as with the history of the personal computer after it, rife with collaboration, ingenuity, betrayal, setbacks, lucre, acrimony, misguided experimentation, and bickering white men.”
The history of the first successful typewriter, patented 146 years ago today.
Loretta Young, by George Hurrell