Web of life

@webknot / webknot.tumblr.com

“We are what we are because we have been what we have been.”
Sigmund Freud
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Japanese artist Akie Nakata turns stones and rocks into adorable animal paintings you can hold in the palm of your hand

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Sunga Park is a Korean artist, graphic designer and freelance illustrator who is based in Bangkok. Many of her illustrations have been included in magazines. She is currently visiting Europe painting watercolours and sketching the architecture. She is a self-taught artist who enjoys the ‘unpredictable’ nature of watercolours to show natural aspects of the environment. She states in a recent interview “Watercolours taught me about life, because I created tons of failures over repeated attempts.” Much of her work is inspired by the architecture of the places she has travelled, from India to Europe, every place she visits seeps into her work and allows her to develop her style. She states in a recent interview with Japan Cinema, “I always focus on showing my feelings through the common architectural features. When people look at an oriental painting their ideas can float along with the objects in the piece. I intend to attract the participation of viewers in this way. For me, art is completed by people’s imagination or appreciation.”

More unique art:

Posted by Andrew

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thomascookuk-deactivated2witwg

The first personally-escorted air tour, from New York to a world heavyweight boxing contest in Chicago, was organised by Thomas Cook in 1927.

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Beluga whales could have been misunderstood as mermaids... Possible??? Yesss

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Beautiful teamwork by a raccoon mother and her babies. [video]

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[Images: Fourteen gifs of writer Ivan E. Coyote, a non-binary transgender person, speaking in front of a crowd. The captions read: “There are a few things that all of us need. We all need air to breathe. We need clean water to drink. We need food to eat. We need shelter and love. You know. Love is great, too.  And we all need a safe place to pee. As a trans person who doesn’t fit neatly into the gender binary, if I could change the world tomorrow to make it easier for me to navigate…The very first thing i would do is blink and create single stall, gender neutral bathrooms in all public places. I know a little girl. She’s the daughter of a friend of mine. She’s a self-identified tomboy. I’m talking about cowboy boots and Caterpillar yellow toy trucks and bug jars, the whole nine yards. One time I asked her what her favorite color was. She told me, “Camouflage.” So that awesome little kid, she came home from school last October from her half day of preschool with soggy pants on. Because the other kids at school were harassing her when she tried to use the girls’ bathroom. And the teacher had already instructed her to stay out of the boys’ bathroom. And she had drank two glasses of that red juice at the Halloween party, and I mean, who can resist that red juice, right? It’s so good. And she couldn’t hold her pee any longer. Her and her classmates were four years old. They already felt empowered enough to police her use of the so-called public bathrooms. She was four years old. She had already been taught the brutal lesson that there was no bathroom door at preschool with a sign on it that welcomed people like her. She’d already learn that bathrooms were going to be a problem, and that problem started with her and was hers alone. So let’s just build some single stall, gender-neutral bathrooms with a little bench for getting changed into your gym clothes. We can’t change the world overnight for our children, but we can give them a safe and private place to escape that world, if only for just a minute. We can do it. So let’s just do it.“]

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