the_Private_eye

To live content with small means- to seek elegance rather than luxury and refinement rather than mass fashion- to be worthy, not respectable, and wealthy, not rich, with open heart, to study hard, to think loud, act frankly, talk gently and hurry never.. Because Fashion is not something that exists in dresses only. Fashion is in the sky, in the street, fashion has to do with ideas, the way we live, what is happening.. Fashion - Photography - Conteporary Art - Coffee- Cigarretes - Blue Nail Polish

showslow:

Adam Martinakis creates 3d enviroments that resemble sculptures or installations. His work ranges form photorealism to surreal and abstract. Human figures in front of strange buildings, huge faces in pieces, abstract lines in space and couples made of wire kissing are some of the themes he uses. 

hifas:

Pop Out Painting by Viktoria Stutz

(via alinatsvor)

showslow:

Tod Kapke,Color Splash.

showslow:

ruineshumaines - The 500 Colored Pencils Set is a monthly subscription for color: you get 25 pencils a month for 20 months, shipped directly to your house for an endless menagerie of colors running wild along your walls (if you buy the displays). The variety of colors alone is astounding, but check out some of the imaginative names that they’ve chosen for the colors: lettuce, mermaid’s gown, drizzly afternoon, mild curry, tragedy, norwegian sky.

kylejthompson:

Untitled by Kyle Thompson
explore-blog:

Russian-born, German-based, Harvard-educated bioinformatician-turned-artist May K. creates wonderfully imaginative artwork based on protein folding patterns, finding whimsical, irreverent shapes in the molecular swirls – a biological equivalent of what Ingrid Dabringer does with maps.
More biology-inspired art here, here, and here.
(↬ It’s Okay To Be Smart)

Well i got to say as a chemist, that this is hell of a work, a very imaginative idea throught the eyes of a scientist!well done May K. :)

explore-blog:

Russian-born, German-based, Harvard-educated bioinformatician-turned-artist May K. creates wonderfully imaginative artwork based on protein folding patterns, finding whimsical, irreverent shapes in the molecular swirls – a biological equivalent of what Ingrid Dabringer does with maps.

More biology-inspired art here, here, and here.

( It’s Okay To Be Smart)

Well i got to say as a chemist, that this is hell of a work, a very imaginative idea throught the eyes of a scientist!
well done May K. :)