Mònica Subidé (Spanish, b. 1974), La casa, 2018. Oil, pencil and collage on wood, 36 x 50 cm
Pipeline, Oahu, Hawaii, 1974 by Jeff Divine
Sometimes you forget other people are having bad days too, other people are crying in private, not everyone is as happy as they want you to think. When I’m upset I forget how normal it is and I think I’m alone in it.
Landmark, Robert Rauschenberg, 1968, MoMA: Drawings and Prints
Gift of the Celeste and Armand Bartos Foundation Size: composition (irreg.): 41 3/8 x 27 13/16" (105.1 x 70.6 cm); sheet: 42 5/8 x 30 1/8" (108.2 x 76.5 cm) Medium: Lithograph
http://www.moma.org/collection/works/77333
Photography by Xuebing Du
Instagram: xuebing.du
Moonrise
Joshua Tree National Park
December 2017
instagram: @juliana_johnson
Sonora House, Estado Libre y Soberano de Sonora, Mexico,
by Davit Jilavyan & Mary Jilavyan
Fredrik Paulsen :: Mikado
Sunrise at Zabriskie Point, Death Valley
Ron van der Werf
Esteban del Rio’s house in San Diego, CA.
Largs, Scotland 2020
Shushu/ Tong SS 20 backstage photo by @padd414
Stephen Kenn & Simon Miller :: The Inheritance Armchair
Foam Magazine, Issue 55, Images from the series Tatsuniya, ph: Rahima Gambo
Harwich: The Low Lighthouse and Beacon Hill (detail), c. 1820, John Constable
Sauquet Arquitectes - Lacy studio, Barcelona 2014. Photos © José Hevia.
Keep reading
Echo Park, Los Angeles
© Sinziana Velicescu
Nova Carinae Region [and] Reg. of Antares with Comet, [1898] Harvard College Observatory, Cambridge
Hill House, Walter Pierce, 1957
KNIVES OUT (2019)
Like the films that inspired it, this story unfolds almost entirely within a Gothic mansion. In this case that building was a composite of an 1890 revival property outside Boston, a soundstage, and Ames Mansion, an historic site in Massachusetts (Also used in SHUTTER ISLAND (2010)). But we do get a brief taste of Modernism, via the home of Chris Evans’ Hugh Ransom Drysdale. The International Style property was built by Walter Pierce as his family home, and he lived in it for 55 years.
Dallol Volcanic Acid Pools
Geological one of the most active spots on Earth, the Dallol valley is a volcanic explosion crater in the Danakil Depression of Ethiopia–some 328 feet below sea level. A combination of subterranean basaltic magma (ie new sea floor) and salty water has created phreatic explosions–the latest one in 1926. These steam explosions create pockets of volcanoes, bubbling hot water pots, bright yellow sulfur fields, and expansive salt flats. Numerous hot springs are discharging brine and acidic liquid here. Widespread are small, temporary geysers which are forming cones of salt.
Dallol offers an opportunity to see the first signs of new ocean basin forming. South of the dormant Dallol volcano, rectangular salt slabs are cut and transported up into the highlands in a near endless procession of camel caravans. The salt canyons south of Dallol Mountain are some of the most impressive geological features in the area. But with the heavy geothermic activity, the basin shape, and the lack of wind, it’s also one of the hottest areas on earth. The mineral-rich pools avoid evaporation only by continuous feeding from thermal springs.
Tiger Jones
Multicolored Library of the World’s Ochre Pigments,
Archived by Heidi Gustafson