andrea kevichüsa by prerna nainwal
Under Satya Nadella, Microsoft has more subscribers than Netflix, more cloud computing revenue than Google, and a near-trillion-dollar market cap.
!! IMPORTANT UPDATE !! [5/8/2024] please credit me on my art instagram (@xxcandy_chemicalxx) if you use it, i originally didnt care but now its everywhere and i realize its massively hurt my potential visibility as an artist. i won't force you to credit me or be mad if you dont since i know that's annoying, but it does mean a lot to me if you do. =] thanks for reading! Make ur own scene/emo pfp! :D I see a lot of alt picrews that don't have a lot of scene/emo clothing or hair, so I wanted to make something that does. This is my first ever picrew so it may have some mistakes [Most recent update: 7/28/22 1:56 PM PST]
Keep the air in your home healthy during the winter months. HGTV shares how to add moisture to the air without the expense of a humidifier.
The mysterious lady in her many forms.
A new website called Kitten Covers features famous album sleeves remade with cats replacing stars like Kiss, the Beatles and Nirvana. New York-based artist Alfra Martini says Kitten Covers is a personal tribute to the classic rock albums that influenced her own career.
Richard Tuschman is a fine art photographer, whose works has appeared on a number of book covers. His latest project, Hopper Meditations, has him recreating famous Edward Hopper paintings in an unconventional way. When I first saw his images, I was struck by the quality in them. They appear to be a composites, but it also looks like he may have been using a tilt-shift lens.
Jane Goodall is best known as the world's foremost expert on chimpanzees, after spending more than 55 years studying wild chimps.
While penning thousands of stories, the writer also famously clashed with Frank Sinatra.
Naib Mian writes about Shahzia Sikander’s “Extraordinary Realities,” an exhibit that includes the Pakistani American artist’s illuminated manuscripts, which often contain commentaries on the ways in which the West views the Muslim world.
Exhibition Histories, Volume 4An exhibition history of the 24th Bienal de São Paulo, 1998 The 1998 Bienal de São Paulo remade art history from a Brazilian perspective, and presented a new model for exhibition-making in the era of postcolonial globalization. The show employed the Brazilian notion of anthropophagy as both concept and method, encouraging "contamination" and "cannibalization" of the canon. By doing so it proposed a new model for large-scale curatorial projects that could effectively address nonspecialist audiences. Photographs and gallery plans reconstruct this important project, and an essay by Lisette Lagnado provides critical analysis and historical context. Additional texts by Renato Sztutman, Mirtes Marins de Oliveira and Carmen Mörsch and Catrin Seefranz are complemented by recent interviews with curator Paulo Herkenhoff and participating artists. With an introduction by Pablo Lafuente. The Exhibition Histories series offers critical analysis of exhibitions of contemporary art that have changed the way art is seen and made. Each title addresses a different set of concerns, with reference to a particular exhibition or cluster of exhibitions in the last sixty years. All books include newly commissioned essays and interviews, key texts from the time (such as reviews) and compelling visual documentation. Designed by A Practice for Everyday Life Published by Afterall Books, 2015 Softcover, 216 pages, 95 color and 7 b&w images, 6 × 8.5 inches ISBN: 978-3-86335-554-8
The philosophers he influenced set the stage for the technological revolution that remade our world.
Remade 2
March 31 marks the anniversary of Korney Chukovsky’s birth, and despite passing away almost half a century ago, the gifted writer’s words touch the hearts of adults and children alike.
The site offers rare evidence of interactions between de Soto and Indigenous people.
Some of these postcards are a touch strange. Others are fascinating glimpses into American culture between 1950 and 1975. All are taken from the single-serving tumblr "Bad Postcards," which offers vintage snail mail gems on a regular basis.
A new website called Kitten Covers features famous album sleeves remade with cats replacing stars like Kiss, the Beatles and Nirvana. New York-based artist Alfra Martini says Kitten Covers is a personal tribute to the classic rock albums that influenced her own career.
The mysterious lady in her many forms.
If you've never heard the buzzword ‘upcycle,’ you’ve probably been off to the moon. The trend of creative reuse is all about transforming products that would otherwise end up in the trash.
Who’s Afraid of Gender? is written for a general audience and may change the way you think forever.
Nineteen-fourteen was not a propitious time to announce a new artistic movement. In July of that year, however, the first edition of the artistic-literary magazine Blast appeared, declaring the birth