Because sometimes what you need most is a ceramic Shiba Inu, especially one that can double as a planter or a dish or even a pencil holder.
These kawaii canines are made by Japanese artist Tetsuya Iseda of the Sirosfunnyanimals Etsy shop.
But wait, Iseda makes lots of cute kitty cats too!
[via Incredible Things]
theladyintweed: Fayum Mummy Portraits, dating from around 30 BC…
Fayum Mummy Portraits, dating from around 30 BC to the mid 3rd century AD.
The portrait heads were attached to Egyptian mummies of the Roman period, covering the faces of the deceased In the top pictures, you can see now they were bound to the mummy. Dating from the time of the Roman occupation of Egypt, they are closest to Graeco-Roman artistic traditions. Around 900 are known to survive and they are some of the only surviving evidence of Classical panel painting traditions. Due to their burial in hot, dry conditions with the bodies, many have survived in excellent condition.
The term Fayum comes from an area of graveyards (necropoli) where they were found in large numbers, buried in communal catacombs.
Painted on wooden board (and sometimes on cloth), either in encaustic (wax) or egg tempera.
Photo
redlipstickresurrected: Ryan Hewett (South African, b. 1979,…
Ryan Hewett (South African, b. 1979, Kwazulu Natal, South Africa) – Jacob aka Reflecting, 2012 Paintings: Oil on Canvas
“Your bees are slightly drunk.”
– DM to the Druid (via outofcontextdnd)
sciencefictionworld: Art by John Wallin.
Art by John Wallin.
archatlas: The Art of Elsa Bleda Elsa Bleda was born into…
The Art of Elsa Bleda
Elsa Bleda was born into movement, crossing continents in the turning tides of her mother, the artist. What does it mean to form connections through the heightened beauty of transience? To be half-way down the mercurial street before the light can gather to hold you? Some things may get left behind, remain as spectral after-effects of a vital acceleration into the world, but other things congregate and move with you at your pace; sights and sounds and textures, multiple influences to draw upon in self-definition.
Perhaps these rhythms are why she is so drawn to the spaces of Johannesburg’s night- the way they hold the traces of encounters in their quietening reverberations; speak to the tensions of leaving and arriving, and to all the different ways that a life can be lived.
Follow the Source Link for images sources and more information.
echiromani: The philosophical hall at Strahov Monastery…
The philosophical hall at Strahov Monastery library, Prague.
Did Harry Thaw shoot the wrong architect?
Who knows!
Thaw shot and killed Stanford White as a result of his jealousy over the relationship between his wife, Evelyn Nesbit, and White. After one hung jury, he was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Years later, White’s son Lawrence Grant White would write, “On the night of June 25th, 1906, while attending a performance at Madison Square Garden, Stanford White was shot from behind [by] a crazed profligate whose great wealth was used to besmirch his victim’s memory during the series of notorious trials that ensued.” via
Stanford White was an American architect and partner in the architectural firm McKim, Mead & White, the frontrunner among Beaux-Arts firms. He designed a long series of houses for the rich, and numerous public, institutional, and religious buildings. His design principles embodied the “American Renaissance”.
Here are some of Stanford White’s most famous designs:
Second incarnation of Madison Square Garden
now part of Bronx Community College
art-of-swords: Rapier Maker: Antonio PiccininoDated: mid-16th…
Rapier
- Maker: Antonio Piccinino
- Dated: mid-16th century
- Culture: Italian
- Measurements: overall length 128 cm
The sword has a long blade, of hexagonal section, with a deep central groove at the forte with an inscription, and an outlined tang with the signature of the Milanese swordsmith “ANTONIO PICCININO”. The iron hilt is chiselled with floral motifs counter-curved quillons, two-branches guard enlarged at the ends, and a large pommel chiselled in the shape of a blossom. The iron-wire grip features a moor’s heads. A similar rapier can be found in “Le Armi Odescalchi”, no. 237 and 239 and another one in the Wallace collection, inv. no A590.
Source: Copyright © 2017 Czerny’s International Auction House S.R.L.