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ELVIS CAT
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Don’t wake me.
(via itsfullofstars)
Posted on April 2, 2013 via kateoplis with 4,801 notes
Source: yatzer.com
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Posted on April 2, 2013 via 2headedsnake with 418 notes
Source: arabellaproffer.com
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putting aside the wish, that which is wished for, and the wisher one arrives directly at the mind just as it is naturally, organically, spiritually.
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12strandardization:::
Posted on April 2, 2013 via Essy May with 5,311 notes
Source: essymays
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pi
(via somepsychedelia)
Posted on April 2, 2013 via with 526 notes
Source: wicked-transparency
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An era can be said to end when its basic illusions are exhausted.
Arthur Miller(via fearistheword)
Posted on January 24, 2013 via kateoplis with 480 notes
Source: kateoplis
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121228 (dream: merging together, reality: spinning in place)
this is life.
(via lavenderlilylolita)
Posted on December 29, 2012 via dvdp with 4,287 notes
Source: dvdp
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2009
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(via thisisnothappiness)
Posted on November 14, 2012 via WHITE BLACK GREY with 2,997 notes
Source: whiteblackgrey
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(via periousia)
Posted on October 10, 2012 via human planemo with 993 notes
Source: xxxrays
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Posted on September 24, 2012 via Colors of Life with 2,563 notes
Source: october-glory
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Paul Chan: “Art is the field that makes things not work”
[H]uman beings create bioelectricity. Our pulses inside our bodies have a small charge to them. In fact, all living organisms generate some bioelectricity. The starkest example is the fish that glow in the dark in the water, or electric eels. Human beings don’t have that much electricity, but we generate some. But apparently, there are some people in the world who generate so much electricity that they interfere with the working order of electronic devices like mobile phones or laptops.
A couple of years ago, a British scientific journal did a study on these people and found that the phenomenon was real—that some people when they are agitated generate enough electricity that there is a magnetic field around them. This magnetic field interferes with the working order or your laptop or your iPad.
So it gave credence to the idea that sometimes when we’re agitated or nervous, and machines break down or your mobile phone doesn’t work, it may not be the device. It actually maybe you. I find this to be an incredibly potent metaphor for what I imagine art is. That in many ways, art is that person, the field that makes things not work, that disrupts the order of things.
So in a way, I am more attracted to and more sensitive to the image of art as something that is so powerless that it makes other things and people lose power too.
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AETHER
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(via unaborted)
Posted on July 20, 2012 via Andrew James Jones with 7,165 notes
Source: andrewjamesjones







