(Source: art42)

fullerart:

Tim’s First Day At the Pancake Palace
Tim’s career at the Pancake Palace was tragically ended by the freak explosion of a tank of hot syrup. Three people, and one tax auditor, were killed. Tim survived—an oversized waffle deflected much of the blast—but sustained severe brain damage, leaving him incapable of coherent thought. He is now an abstract artist.

fullerart:

Tim’s First Day At the Pancake Palace

Tim’s career at the Pancake Palace was tragically ended by the freak explosion of a tank of hot syrup. Three people, and one tax auditor, were killed. Tim survived—an oversized waffle deflected much of the blast—but sustained severe brain damage, leaving him incapable of coherent thought. He is now an abstract artist.

lunarfossil:

Mayan vision serpent, with its deity emerging from the mouth.

lunarfossil:

Mayan vision serpent, with its deity emerging from the mouth.

(via workman)

ebonybanks:

Ulonda
Sunhat sans restrictions…
Photo by MKnight
tumblr:    http://Mknight77.com

ebonybanks:

Ulonda

Sunhat sans restrictions…

Photo by MKnight

tumblr:    http://Mknight77.com

(via leecadens)

noonesnemesis:

Katya Ulitina art

noonesnemesis:

Katya Ulitina art

(via leecadens)

(via leecadens)

ymutate:

Diego Rivera,(1886-1957), Woman at a Well, 1913 found at onework.ru

ymutate:

Diego Rivera,(1886-1957), Woman at a Well, 1913 found at onework.ru

(via leecadens)

peira:

Lyubov Popova:  Still Life with Instruments (1915)

peira:

Lyubov PopovaStill Life with Instruments (1915)

paperimages:

laflaneuse8:

Pablo Picasso, The Dreamer, 1932

“Picasso met Marie-Thérèse Walter (1909-1977) on a sidewalk in Paris in January 1927; he was forty-five and she was seventeen. They became lovers soon after, and Marie-Thérèse gave birth to their daughter, Maya, in 1935. Marie-Thérèse’s voluptuous figure inspired innumerable pictures, many of them erotic. Picasso based this composition on Ingres’s famous “Odalisque and Slave” but during extensive revisions condensed the figure into something resembling an ancient fertility object.” MET collection

paperimages:

laflaneuse8:

Pablo Picasso, The Dreamer, 1932

“Picasso met Marie-Thérèse Walter (1909-1977) on a sidewalk in Paris in January 1927; he was forty-five and she was seventeen. They became lovers soon after, and Marie-Thérèse gave birth to their daughter, Maya, in 1935. Marie-Thérèse’s voluptuous figure inspired innumerable pictures, many of them erotic. Picasso based this composition on Ingres’s famous “Odalisque and Slave” but during extensive revisions condensed the figure into something resembling an ancient fertility object.” MET collection