Install this theme
Robert Creeley: The Tunnel
 Tonight, nothing is long enough— time isn’t. Were there a fire, it would burn now. Were there a heaven, I would have gone long ago. I think that light is the final image. But time reoccurs, love—and an echo. A time passes love in the dark.
—
Photo: Elsa Dorfman’s Polaroid captures Creeley at his most Shamanic

Robert Creeley: The Tunnel


Tonight, nothing is long enough—
time isn’t.
Were there a fire,
it would burn now.

Were there a heaven,
I would have gone long ago.
I think that light
is the final image.

But time reoccurs,
love—and an echo.
A time passes
love in the dark.

Photo: Elsa Dorfman’s Polaroid captures Creeley at his most Shamanic

Static Movement
Experimental work by WE ARE NOT YOU, a a multi-disciplinary design studio, based in Los Angeles.
“These are the outcome of a simple experiment, to give static images the feeling of movement.”
via: WE AND THE COLORFacebook // Twitter // Google+ // Pinterest

Static Movement

Experimental work by WE ARE NOT YOU, a a multi-disciplinary design studio, based in Los Angeles.

“These are the outcome of a simple experiment, to give static images the feeling of movement.”

Scott Hazard, Endless Sea, detail

Scott Hazard, Endless Sea, detail

archiveofaffinities:

Ellsworth Kelly, Maillot Jaune, 1957

archiveofaffinities:

Ellsworth Kelly, Maillot Jaune, 1957

In Kubrick, the world itself is a brain. There is identity of brain and world, as in the great circular and luminous table in Doctor Strangelove, the giant computer in 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the Overlook Hotel in The Shining. The black stone of 2001 presides over both cosmic states and cerebral stages. It is the soul of the three bodies; earth, sun and moon, but also the seed of the three brains; animal, human, machine. Kubrick is renewing the theme of the initiatory journey because every journey in the world is an exploration of the brain.
Deleuze, Cinema II (via oscillating-infinity)
awesomepeoplehangingouttogether:

Martin Luther King Jr. and Marlon Brando, 1968

awesomepeoplehangingouttogether:

Martin Luther King Jr. and Marlon Brando, 1968