Everyone Is Asleep In The House And I'm Over Here Like... Somebody Entertain Me

Everyone is asleep in the house and I'm over here like... somebody entertain me

Everyone Is Asleep In The House And I'm Over Here Like... Somebody Entertain Me

More Posts from Ohyeaman and Others

8 years ago

Fuuuuuuuck

9 years ago
By 翔雲

by 翔雲

9 years ago

Story of my life!!

ohyeaman
9 years ago
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   
A Woman’s Work Is Never Done By Eliza Bennett   

A Woman’s Work Is Never Done by Eliza Bennett   

“A series of photographic works titled ‘A Woman’s Work is Never Done’ Using my own hand as a base material, I considered it a canvas upon which I stitched into the top layer of skin using thread to create the appearance of an incredibly work worn hand. By using the technique of embroidery, which is traditionally employed to represent femininity and applying it to the expression of its opposite, I hope to challenge the pre-conceived notion that ‘women’s work’ is light and easy. Aiming to represent the effects of hard work arising from employment in low paid ‘ancillary’ jobs, such as cleaning, caring and catering, all traditionally considered to be ‘women’s work’.

Source:culturainquieta

8 years ago
Peach Cobbler Ice Cream
Peach Cobbler Ice Cream

Peach Cobbler Ice Cream

9 years ago

Save for later

Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945
Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945

Destino: A Salvador Dalí + Walt Disney Collaboration Circa 1945

By: Maria Popova

WATCH THE VIDEO after this text:

‘A magical display of the problem of life in the labyrinth of time.’

After last week’s discovery of Salvador Dalí’s little-known 1969 Alice in Wonderland illustrations, I followed the rabbit hole to another confluence of creative culture titans. In 1945, Dalí and Walt Disney embarked upon a formidable collaboration — to create a six-minute sequence combining animation with live dancers, in the process inventing a new animation technique inspired by Freud’s work of Freud on the unconscious mind and the hidden images with double meaning. The film, titled Destino, tells the tragic love story of Chronos, the personification of time, who falls in love with a mortal woman as the two float across the surrealist landscapes of Dalí’s paintings. The poetic, wordless animation features a score by Mexican composer Armando Dominguez performed by Dora Luz.

As fascinating as the film itself is the juxtaposition of the two creative geniuses behind it, each bringing his own life-lens to the project — Dalí described the film as “A magical display of the problem of life in the labyrinth of time” and Disney called it “A simple story about a young girl in search of true love.”  Source:mentalfloss

9 years ago
Enki Bilal

Enki Bilal

8 years ago

You can't unsee it. It done been seent.

ohyeaman

Tags
9 years ago
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils
Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils

Tom Lynall Carves Little Sculptures Into The Tips Of Pencils

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My name is  and I carve small pencil sculptures for a hobby. I am from Birmingham, UK and have been a jeweler for 11 years. In November last year I was sitting in my workshop and picked a pencil and thought I’d carve a little heart into the tip, little did I know this would start me off on one of the most engrossing hobbies I have ever had.

I love art but I have never been able to draw so this is a good way for me to create things with the limitations of my skill. The main tool I use is the scalpel blade shown in the pictures as well as a few pins which I have altered the end of to give me different blades. source: boredpanda

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