svdp:

self Portrait - acrylic on canvas painting by Chuck Close

svdp:

self Portrait - acrylic on canvas painting by Chuck Close

(via artisandoflove)

unexotic:

unimportant:

best-bitch-doin-it:

Photoshop In life.
reblog then click the photo
I’m sorry but this is just cool.
what the hell?! why doesn’t this have more notes?!
Oh my god.
what
I WANTED TO KNOW WHAT THE FUSS WAS ABOUT D:

IT FINALLY WORKED, YOU HAVE TO STAY ON THE PAGE FOR MORE THEN 10 SECONDS THEN IT REDIRECTS YOU OMG SO COOL

this is cool

unexotic:

unimportant:

best-bitch-doin-it:

Photoshop In life.

reblog then click the photo

I’m sorry but this is just cool.

what the hell?! why doesn’t this have more notes?!

Oh my god.

what

I WANTED TO KNOW WHAT THE FUSS WAS ABOUT D:

IT FINALLY WORKED, YOU HAVE TO STAY ON THE PAGE FOR MORE THEN 10 SECONDS THEN IT REDIRECTS YOU OMG SO COOL

this is cool

(via artisandoflove)

horocue:

Horocue. París, 2005.

horocue:

Horocue. París, 2005.

(via artisandoflove)

maddieonthings:

Coffee with Maddie. Atlanta, GA

maddieonthings:

Coffee with Maddie. Atlanta, GA

(via blankcanvus)

weepling:

Andy Warhol, Suicide, 1964.

weepling:

Andy Warhol, Suicide, 1964.

(via artpedia)

fuckyeahgustavklimt:

Marie Moll
Date: 1902

fuckyeahgustavklimt:

Marie Moll

Date: 1902

cavetocanvas:

Vanessa Bell, Iceland Poppies, c. 1908-09
From Art Fund:

This rare example of Bell’s early work hung at Charleston from the 1930’s until 1978. Considered one of her finest paintings, the artist’s biographer Frances Spalding has commented on the ‘cool silvery tonality and concentrated mood’ of the composition. Bell would have been aware of the association of poppies with opium and sleep, reinforced in the painting by the presence of the medicine bottle. There may also be an autobiographical reading in the symbolic arrangement of the three vessels, and the two white poppies slightly distanced from the third, red flower.

cavetocanvas:

Vanessa Bell, Iceland Poppies, c. 1908-09

From Art Fund:

This rare example of Bell’s early work hung at Charleston from the 1930’s until 1978. Considered one of her finest paintings, the artist’s biographer Frances Spalding has commented on the ‘cool silvery tonality and concentrated mood’ of the composition. Bell would have been aware of the association of poppies with opium and sleep, reinforced in the painting by the presence of the medicine bottle. There may also be an autobiographical reading in the symbolic arrangement of the three vessels, and the two white poppies slightly distanced from the third, red flower.

TJ Eckelberg, anyone?

TJ Eckelberg, anyone?

(via thingsorganizedneatly)

A blog about art, and life, and sometimes both together.

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