Photoset

likeafieldmouse:

Annie Leibovitz - Pilgrimage (2011) - Leibovitz’s documentation of the homes and traces of some of her favorite historical figures

1. Elvis Presley’s TV (Memphis, Tennessee)

2. Georgia O’Keeffe’s Pastels (Santa Fe, New Mexico)

3. The Gloves Worn by Abraham Lincoln on the Night of his Assassination (Springfield, Illinois)

4. Skeleton of a Pigeon Studied by Charles Darwin (Hertfordshire, England)

5. Ansel Adams’s Darkroom (Carmel, California)

6. Virginia Woolf’s Bedroom (Charleston, England)

7. Emily Dickinson’s Herbarium (Cambridge, Massachusetts)

I got this book for my birthday. It is so gorgeous.

(Source: likeafieldmouse, via oldfilmsflicker)

Photo
plaisirdelire:

Ralph Gibson

plaisirdelire:

Ralph Gibson

Photo
yama-bato:

ABELARDO MORELL
Pencil, 2000

yama-bato:

ABELARDO MORELL

Pencil, 2000

Photo
gacougnol:

Pierre Soulages, Peinture 162x127cm, 14 avril 1979

gacougnol:

Pierre Soulages, Peinture 162x127cm, 14 avril 1979

(via yama-bato)

Photo
whitehotel:

Ralph Gibson, The somnambulist (1970)

whitehotel:

Ralph Gibson, The somnambulist (1970)

Photoset

firsttimeuser:

Sea of clouds by Jakob Wagner

Photo
Tags: yup.
Photo
iago-rotten:

John Hurt on the set of Alien (1979)

iago-rotten:

John Hurt on the set of Alien (1979)

(via thediaryofadisappointingman)

Photo
a-r-t-history:

John Singer Sargent, El Jaleo, 1882, oil on canvas (via Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum)

I love this painting. There is nothing like seeing it in person. The way Sargent captured the light is unreal.

a-r-t-history:

John Singer Sargent, El Jaleo, 1882, oil on canvas (via Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum)

I love this painting. There is nothing like seeing it in person. The way Sargent captured the light is unreal.

Photo
bonging:

fuckyeahspaceexploration:

Photographers always talk about perspective. It doesn’t get more perspective than this: first ever photo of the Earth and the Moon in the same frame, 1977. Taken by Voyager 1.

first ever

bonging:

fuckyeahspaceexploration:

Photographers always talk about perspective. It doesn’t get more perspective than this: first ever photo of the Earth and the Moon in the same frame, 1977. Taken by Voyager 1.

first ever

(via le-bra)