somewhere in between rage and serenity,
seeking paradise in a dream


buy posters and art prints

 

likeafieldmouse:

Daehyun Kim

1. I Always Go Back to Me (2010)

2. Please Take Care of This (2009)

3. Be With and Without Me (2009)

4. Face the Whole (2011)

5. Blow your Mind (2010)

6. Bright Darkness (2010)

7. You are Now (2013)

8. Faces that I Have to Face Before I Sleep (2010)

9. The Inner Inside (2009)

10. Weight of You (2009)

rfmmsd:

Artist:

PHLEGM

“Automaton”

Chichester, UK

2013

reginasworld:

Ballroom Luminoso is a series of six chandeliers designed by artists Joe O’Connell and Blessing Hancock currently installed in San Antonio, Texas.  Made from custom made structural steel, custom LEDs and recycled bicycle parts, the lights project colorful silhouettes of sprockets and other pieces onto the otherwise drab cement underpass.

erikjonesart:

Erik Jones / “Discoverer” / Watercolor, Pencil, Pastel, Acylic, Oil, on Rives bfk  / 20”x16” / 2013

erikjonesart:

Erik Jones / “Discoverer” / Watercolor, Pencil, Pastel, Acylic, Oil, on Rives bfk  / 20”x16” / 2013

marcomazzoni:

“The Head of Marie Antoinette” 2013, colored pencils on paper, cm 30x30
“ANIMANERA”, Jonathan LeVine Gallery, NY

marcomazzoni:

“The Head of Marie Antoinette” 2013, colored pencils on paper, cm 30x30

“ANIMANERA”, Jonathan LeVine Gallery, NY

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Sharon Harper. Moon Studies and Star Scratches, No. 6, June – September 2004 Saratoga Springs, New York; Middlesex, Vermont; Johnson, Vermont; Eden Mills, Vermont; Greensboro, North Carolina.


Website

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Sharon HarperMoon Studies and Star Scratches, No. 6, June – September 2004 Saratoga Springs, New York; Middlesex, Vermont; Johnson, Vermont; Eden Mills, Vermont; Greensboro, North Carolina.

Website

reginasworld:

Benjamin Eidem shows you how to look in college in the latest issue of Man About Town.

Photographer: Lachlan Bailey
Styling: Clare Richardson
Models: Benjamin Eidem & Cameron Russell

darksilenceinsuburbia:

Diana Al-Hadid.

The Syrian artist Diana Al-Hadid creates massive, room-filling scuptures that explore and suspend our reality, using various materials like chicken wire, polyurethane foam, steel, wood or paint. ‘I want to explore the limits of my own thinking’ says Al-Hadid. The process of creating her artwork often starts without exactly knowing what she does. Thereby she carefully studies her material, like wax, clay, fiberglass or anything else. Al-Hadid doesn’t make art to show something, but to become interested in something. Now she is living and working in Brooklyn, NY.

 

Website