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A fireman from the London Fire Brigade, wearing a smoke helmet. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images). Circa 1908
(Source: muratdemirelli, via vanished)
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A fireman from the London Fire Brigade, wearing a smoke helmet. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images). Circa 1908
(Source: muratdemirelli, via vanished)
(Source: tequiero-puta, via eclipse-)
(Source: andcutyourhair, via eclipse-)
(Source: whitechai)
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NIKI DE SAINT PHALLE
SKETCH FOR THE “HON” (= “SHE”) SCULPTURE IN STOCKHOLM, mid-60s
… oh my god, i’m posting niki de saint phalle. btw, you enter the sculpture through the vagina.
(Source: betonbabe)
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BRIGITTE AND MARTIN MATSCHINSKY-DENNINGHOFF
SCULPTURE IN FRONT OF THE CHEMISTRY BUILDING AT FREIE UNIVERSITÄT BERLIN, 1983
(Source: betonbabe)
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A collection of patterns and graphical landscapes kept in pure black and white.“Guilloché patterns are spirograph-like curves that frame a curve within an inner and outer envelope curve. They are used on banknotes, securities, and passports worldwide for added security against counterfeiting.”
Bubbles of Radio is a project developed by Ingeborg Marie Dehs Thomas based on the idea of our sensory perception of the electromagnetic space. Inspired by richly illustrated books of botany, zoology and natural history, the artist created in 2008 a selection of fictional species drawings that visualize the ways in which technologies like Wifi, RFID or GSM inhabit space. She used a critical visual design for the bubbles and related them to different visual scales that indicates proportions of the “invisible space” occupied by these technologies. She compared scales between people, mobiles and buildings.
(Source: purestform)
(Source: lofichick)