ianbrooks:

Poe Visualized by Harry Clarke

From the 1919 deluxe edition of Edgar Allen Poe’s Tales of Mystery and Imagination, Harry Clarke reached deep into those dark, flinching corners underneath the bed and ripped out the grotesque horrors that lurked within, creating these macabre illustrations that accompanied Poe’s disturbing classics like “The Pit and the Pendulum” and the “The Telltale Heart” perfectly. In the same vein as Stephen Gammell’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark monstrosities decades later, these illustrations are sufficient evidence that while some stories can be even more frightening when left to your imagination, it takes a truly visceral artist to give those shadows form and really scare the bejeezus out of you.

(via: fastcodesign / io9)

eye-inspire:

“Dutch artist Berndnaut Smilde installs miniature clouds in empty gallery spaces. But these are neither digital manipulations nor fluffy Poly-fil sculptures strung from the ceiling. The cloud works are, in fact, real, with Smilde using smoke, moisture, and spot lighting to conjure up his momentary creations. His latest work, Nimbus II repeats the artist’s first experiment (Nimbus, 2010) in which he spun a rain cloud in the center of an immaculate studio gallery, whose blank, polychromatic walls further underpinned the Surrealist imagery.”

domics:

Even if you don’t get hired, make sure you gain something from the experience.

domics:

Even if you don’t get hired, make sure you gain something from the experience.

inevitablefragments:

Matt Mullican - Untitled (Evolution of Man) (2012)

inevitablefragments:

Matt Mullican - Untitled (Evolution of Man) (2012)

beautythatsaves:

The Triumph of Death 
c. 1562
Oil on panel, width of detail 43 cm
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Pieter the Elder Bruegel

actegratuit:

Conor Harrington

jesuisperdu:

sasha kurmaz

expose-the-light:

Moonrise and the temple of Poseidon at Sounio, Greece

filmspiration:

(by Daniel Polidori)