FUUUcck WOOORK

FUUUcck WOOORK

Omg today is so stressful!!!! It doesn’t help that I haven’t gotten laid in a week and a half either…

More Posts from Ohyeaman and Others

8 years ago

You can't unsee it. It done been seent.

ohyeaman

Tags
8 years ago

How do people make new friends? Like seriously I'm lacking in those skills.


Tags
8 years ago

Awww snap , blast from the past!!!

ohyeaman

Tags
9 years ago

There is literally an office box full of cookies next to me a work…….it’s gonna be a very filling day. (I need a glass of milk)


Tags
8 years ago

This is the last week I'm going to be working at my current job ,and I think this will also be last week I'm alive. It's only Tuesday and I am beyond stressed.


Tags
9 years ago
Battlestar Galactica (1978-1979) “War Of The Gods”

Battlestar Galactica (1978-1979) “War of the Gods”

9 years ago

Save for later

Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945

Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945

By: Maria Popova

WATCH THE VIDEO after this text:

‘A magical display of the problem of life in the labyrinth of time.’

After last week’s discovery of Salvador Dalí’s little-known 1969 Alice in Wonderland illustrations, I followed the rabbit hole to another confluence of creative culture titans. In 1945, Dalí and Walt Disney embarked upon a formidable collaboration — to create a six-minute sequence combining animation with live dancers, in the process inventing a new animation technique inspired by Freud’s work of Freud on the unconscious mind and the hidden images with double meaning. The film, titled Destino, tells the tragic love story of Chronos, the personification of time, who falls in love with a mortal woman as the two float across the surrealist landscapes of Dalí’s paintings. The poetic, wordless animation features a score by Mexican composer Armando Dominguez performed by Dora Luz.

As fascinating as the film itself is the juxtaposition of the two creative geniuses behind it, each bringing his own life-lens to the project — Dalí described the film as “A magical display of the problem of life in the labyrinth of time” and Disney called it “A simple story about a young girl in search of true love.”  Source:mentalfloss

Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load

198 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags