FIXE

May 28

“Stress is an ignorant state. It believes that everything is an emergency. Nothing is that important.” —

Natalie Goldberg (via holdentumblr)

absolutely

(via dadoranonimo)

(via dadoranonimo)

sinatrablue:

lisbon

sinatrablue:

lisbon

(Source: shelbot, via auxiliofaux)

(Source: yimmyayo)

May 27

[video]

[video]

May 26

[video]

How I Fell for Lisbon -

I didn’t expect romance, but this city had other ideas. No must-see list or hard-fought reservations. It lets you in.

via supercalli

also check No Reservations with Anthony Bourdain in Lisbon

May 25

Who? Who doesn’t want to wear the ribbon?

©SenhoritaSpencer

Who? Who doesn’t want to wear the ribbon?


©SenhoritaSpencer

joanalinda:

No Intendente, o antigo Teatro Laura Alves/Cinema Rex, conhecido agora como Pensão Noite Cristalina, arde…

joanalinda:

No Intendente, o antigo Teatro Laura Alves/Cinema Rex, 
conhecido agora como Pensão Noite Cristalina, arde…

“You’ll never know why you exist, but you’ll always allow yourselves to be easily persuaded to take life seriously.” —  Tristan Tzara (via fuckyeahexistentialism)

May 24

jtotheizzoe:

Greg Dunn: Neurons Painted As Japanese Scrolls
Greg Dunn paints neurons. He uses brushless methods that allow the ink to roll spontaneously across the paper, recreating the ordered randomness of neural projections. He also uses smooth brush strokes that he says “…capture the natural molecular unfolding of nature.”
Here’s what he has to say about what artists can learn from science (and maybe vice versa):

Fundamentally art and science are ruled by the same principal. You must start any project with a clear idea of what your question is. You start with a clear idea and you follow it up with a clear hypothesis. You are trying to get to the root of this question. And when you start painting you are trying to get to the resolution of this question. If you don’t have a clear foundation you will never produce something that is great. 

(via Huffington Post)

jtotheizzoe:

Greg Dunn: Neurons Painted As Japanese Scrolls

Greg Dunn paints neurons. He uses brushless methods that allow the ink to roll spontaneously across the paper, recreating the ordered randomness of neural projections. He also uses smooth brush strokes that he says “…capture the natural molecular unfolding of nature.”

Here’s what he has to say about what artists can learn from science (and maybe vice versa):

Fundamentally art and science are ruled by the same principal. You must start any project with a clear idea of what your question is. You start with a clear idea and you follow it up with a clear hypothesis. You are trying to get to the root of this question. And when you start painting you are trying to get to the resolution of this question. If you don’t have a clear foundation you will never produce something that is great. 

(via Huffington Post)

May 23

Is she?
©SenhoritaSpencer

Is she?

©SenhoritaSpencer

nevver:

— Stendhal

nevver:

Stendhal

<3

<3

(Source: fuckyeahtattoos)