1. poboh:

    St. Cecilia, ca 1885, Gustave Moreau. French Symbolist Painter (1826 - 1898)

    (via thorsteinulf)

     

  2. poboh:

    Forest brook, Ferdynand Ruszczyc. Polish (1870 - 1936)

     

  3. (Source: mordmardok)

     

  4. paintingbox:

    John Singer Sargent (1856-1925). Pumpkins, c. 1878-1880. 25.4 x31.8 cm 10 x 12.52 in

    (via bblacha)

     

  5. Canal with Women Washing, Vincent van Gogh, 1888

    (Source: 1indsey, via kouta-sasai)

     

  6. parabola-magazine:

    “To speak of wilderness is to speak of wholeness.  Human beings came out of that wholeness.”

    –Gary Snyder

    We come from wilderness historically and as children.  Spring reminds me childhood.  As trite and obvious as that statement can seem, it points to something important and not-at-all obvious.   The gorgeous leafing and blooming and greening now happening in the greater New York area, the scent of fresh cut grass and lilacs, can literally take us back—back in time, back inside ourselves to the wild pure joy of being in a body, part of a vast and mysterious living world.

    –Read PARABOLA editor, Tracy Cochran’s latest blog post here.

     

  7.  


  8. de-salva:

    ESBJÖRN SVENSSON TRIO (EST) - Behind The Yashmak

    Alb. “Live in Hamburg” (2007.)

    Esbjörn Svensson Trio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esbj%C3%B6rn_Svensson_Trio

    Esbjörn Svensson: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esbj%C3%B6rn_Svensson

     

  9. wyethia, 

    neocolor

     mariah o’neill

     

  10. justanothermasterpiece:

    Helen Frankenthaler.

     

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  12.  


  13. Yahoo bought tumblr, i hear

    FLickr has just  sounded the death knell for me, so please , yahoo,  don’t change what’s good here. The almighty marketplace is  doing a great job of ruining everything that has the least bit of humanity  and community in it, as they pursue their goals of more money and fuck the people. It will kick them in the ass sooner or  later.

     

  14. poboh:

    Paris, ca 1926, Konstantin Korovin. Russian (1861 - 1932)

     

  15. post-impressionism:

    Melancholia or Breton Eve c. 1890

    Paul Serusier

    (via kouta-sasai)