yama-bato:

Sarah E. Wood, Untitled (Memorial Balloon Chime), 2011Brass, plaster, paper3 feet in diameter, 8 feet in length  
here
21.05.12/08:50/ 85
~   Michelangelo, 1560, at age 85 (via dearscience)

alecshao:

Andrea Galvani - The Intelligence of Evil, 2007

alecshao:

Antony Gormley - Domain Field, 2003

pulmonaire:

Mauro Perucchetti work unites Pop aesthetics with social comment, addressing some of the most pressing and difficult issues in today’s society.

artruby:

Do-Ho Suh, Home Within Home. (2009-2011) 

simplypi:

Social Services Center by dosmasuno arquitectos
11.05.12/00:30/ 167
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
Neutral Milk Hotel
Where You'll Find Me Now
ymutate:

David Moreno, Zig Zag, 2010; ink on paper; 16.5 x 13.5, found at featureinc.com
11.05.12/00:28/ 48
~   Janelle Monae (via tobia)
2headedsnake:

tendreams.org
Rafal Olbinski
11.05.12/00:28/ 411
11.05.12/00:28/ 1497
longreads:

Q&A with the man who created Mosaic and Netscape, and has since funded some of the biggest companies on the web:

The future was much easier to see if you were on a college campus. Remember, it was feast or famine in those days. Trying to do dialup was miserable. If you were a trained computer scientist and you put in a tremendous amount of effort, you could do it: You could go get a Netcom account, you could set up your own TCP/IP stack, you could get a 2,400-baud modem. But at the university, you were on the Internet in a way that was actually very modern even by today’s standards. At the time, we had a T3 line—45 megabits, which is actually still considered broadband. Sure, that was for the entire campus, and it cost them $35,000 a month! But we had an actual broadband experience. And it convinced me that everybody was going to want to be connected, to have that experience for themselves.

“The Man Who Makes the Future: Wired Icon Marc Andreessen.” — Chris Anderson, Wired
11.05.12/00:28/ 16
black-and-white:

metamorphosis III | by nykolai
11.05.12/00:27/ 139
Canvas  by  andbamnan