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malaspulgas:

what happened in france is horrible, depressing, and not acceptable at all. but it is situations like this that are EXACTLY what happen every single day in syria, iraq, and other war-torn areas. a similar attack happened today in beirut, lebanon that killed 50+ people. why does it take people being murdered in a first world, largely white country for anyone to care? why are syrian refugees blamed for this attack when attacks like this are precisely what they are fleeing from? i’m sending all of my love and thoughts to the people of paris and all of my friends currently studying there right now, but this isn’t an uncommon incident in many other countries of the world. humanity should be outraged at this attack, and rightfully so, but they should be JUST as outraged about the attacks occurring in war-torn countries and countries not as developed as france.

also sending my thoughts to the french muslims, people who have zero association to the attackers, who will suffer from extreme islamophobia as a result of this attack.

In one day

maswartz:

Paris- Terrorist Attacks
Japan- Earthquake
Baghdad- Funeral Bombed
Beirut- Suicide Bombing
Mexico- Earthquake

demithorin:

while were all praying for Paris, it should also be know that within the same 24 hours there has been:

• in Japan: category 7 earthquake and tsunami warnings
• in Lebanon: a suicide bomber has left 43 dead and who knows how many injured

it’s getting rough out there and we have to stick together to get through this. keep everyone in your prayers and thoughts and stay safe!

sealpremacy:

sweatbloodmoldanddamp:

les parisiens, checkez le hashtag #porteouverte sur les réseaux sociaux pour trouver des abris sur Paris, protégez-vous, ne sortez pas !

TO EVERYONE IN PARIS PLEASE CHECK #porteouverte ON SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS TO FIND SHELTERS

saindoux:
“ Séance de Travail 1993-1999, Helmut Lang
Kunsthalle Wien: Louise Bourgeois. Jenny Holzer. Helmut Lang, 1998
”

saindoux:

Séance de Travail 1993-1999, Helmut Lang

Kunsthalle Wien: Louise Bourgeois. Jenny Holzer. Helmut Lang, 1998

penamerican:

“The greatest lie ever told about love is that it sets you free” — Zadie Smith In celebration of Zadie Smith’s birthday this week, we revisit Smith reading from her novel “On Beauty” at the 2006 World Voices Festival in today’s #PENpodcast.

(if u) cant help but do daft hand poses and ur waiting on a text bcos u dont wanna arrive early so yr just sitting ready (clap ur hands)

13daysiniceland:


Fjaðrárgljúfur. South Iceland.

v-eck:
“ It’s Never Too Late to Prove Your Mother Wrong xvii
Meghan Collison by Colin Dodgson for i-D Magazine Spring 2014
”

v-eck:

It’s Never Too Late to Prove Your Mother Wrong xvii

Meghan Collison by Colin Dodgson for i-D Magazine Spring 2014

"Those male artists were simply imitating my illness."

-

Yayoi Kusama on Warhol, Samaras, and Oldenburg (among others)

From this interview:

Grady Turner: The serial imagery seems similar to what Andy Warhol was beginning to do with his Flowers series, covering walls with an image repeated over and over.

Yayoi Kusama: Andy was a person who incorporated everything indiscriminately in his art as if he were running a wholesale business of imitations. Before he started doing his Flowers, he came to the opening of my One Thousand Boats Show and said with a stunned look on his face what a wonderful show it was.

GT: Involving the gallery walls in a sculpture exhibition was not very different from the installation art you would come to make. In 1965, you built a mirrored room and filled it with stuffed fabric shapes covered in polka dots, entitled Infinity Mirror Room—Phalli’s Field, orFloor Show. That made actual the implied infinity of your drawings and paintings.

YK: The original idea for this work dates back to my childhood. I was making paintings in small, medium, and large sizes then, without sleeping at night sometimes. Those paintings, 2 or 3,000 in total, were rapidly sublimated within myself and developed into sculptures. In other words, underlying the mirror room were my early paintings. To create an endless mirror room had been my long-cherished dream.

GT: What did you think of Lucas Samaras’s mirrored rooms when you saw them two years later?

YK: My reaction was, “He did it again.” I hope Lucas pursues the path of creativity and pain inherent in artists from now on, instead of following what Kusama has done.

GT: For your retrospective, the Museum of Modern Art recreated examples of your art that are no longer extant, such as the mirror room. What was it like to see your lost art after three decades?

YK: I am disappointed that more than half my artwork is no longer. Now I want to create greater artwork to leave behind for future generations.

GT: You’ve been compared to Pop artists by those who detect a Pop Art sensibility in pieces like Airmail Stickers, in which you covered a large canvas with hundreds of red, white and blue airmail stickers. Did you feel any affinity with Pop?

YK: Yes, I was in the vanguard of Pop Art, and regarded as a Pop artist by the people around me. I felt that America’s energy was trying to change its history. I was part of the movement.

GT: While you did reasonably well as a young artist in New York, you were eclipsed by male artists whose work was similar—one thinks immediately of Claes Oldenburg’s soft sculptures and Samaras’s mirrored environments, not to mention Warhol’s serial images. How did their success affect you?

YK: Those male artists were simply imitating my illness. I participated in a group show held at the Green Gallery in June 1962 with Robert Morris, Warhol, George Segal, James Rosenquist, and Oldenburg who I hold in high regard. Oldenburg showed a papier-maché sculpture then. The Green Gallery offered me a chance to hold a solo show in September of the same year, but unfortunately I had to decline due to lack of money. During that summer, Oldenburg was working fast to create soft sculptures similar to mine using machine-sewn forms. When I went to the opening of his solo show held at the Green Gallery the same year, his wife led me to his piece Calendar and said to the effect, “Yayoi, I am sorry we took your idea.” I was surprised to see the work almost identical to my sculpture.

(via at-the-violet-hour)

yayoi kusama

(via critischism)

Song : Change
Artist : Alex G
Album : TRICK

certainpredispositions:

i don’t like how things change

s-c-r-a-p-b-o-o-k:
“ Malin Gabriella Nordin
”

s-c-r-a-p-b-o-o-k:

Malin Gabriella Nordin

Anonymous asked: and ur sweet too u seem to be a very considerate person i hope u get to where u want to be

❤❤

(to both : if there’s a space that feels a bit like Mine i tend to fill it, it would be gd to be going along quieter but i guess irl yes true me too. n thank you n goodnight and i hope the same fr you)

Anonymous asked: its not a gd feeling, paranoia but id hope u dont know me i like to keep my existence on here very plain which is something id wish todo irl but its nice to have friends and talk to people u havent seen since last xmas/skwl and show youve changed

Anonymous asked: its ok i found what i was looking for thanks and true blue is a gd night time shower which i found thru ur blog so thanks :) and i hope tomorrow is a kinder day for u if not the next cos the sooner the better .. take care

ah good,  dirty beaches, goodgood, thank you ur sweet im alright really maybe xx