(anything) feat. Pitbull
(via joegarton)
it's still figuring itself out
Sometimes the back of my building is all “why would you ever cover the porches?” Or “that looks like the set of a musical about a whorehouse in a Chinese shanty town” or “please don’t make me go there” or “oh my god ew no what” but if you catch it when it’s dressed up like this, it looks pretty Sudio Ghibli and I like it (at Ukrainian Village)
Ruby Rhod is one of my favorite characters in sci-fi ever because he is Luc Besson’s vision of the hetero sex symbol of the future: a flamboyant, emotionally labile man who wears skin-tight leopard print or decks himself in roses, a man who accessorizes with big jewelry and dabbles in cosmetics. And the ladies love him. Everything about him screams “gay” according to our stereotypes, but he’s portrayed as a 100% straight sexual dynamo.
Besson is one of the few directors I’ve seen who actually recognizes that our ideas of sexuality and gender performance might have changed drastically in the future.
Albrecht Durer
A Young Hare
1502
Happy Birthday, bud.
(Source: mode-freak)
Albrecht Durer
Exit from a Quarry
(Source: missy-smelliot, via batmanbasically)
(Source: alexleefitz, via thatsmoderatelyraven)
Went back to grab a few things from my old apartment and @lilyhgt seems to have built some kind of fortification… (at Bucktown)
Marling’s songs dig well beyond the everyday, with each sung in a wise, dusky, brooding voice that always seems in control of its surroundings. The U.K. folksinger’s fourth album, Once I Was an Eagle, takes a remarkable journey over the course of 16 hypnotic, subtly inventive songs.
El Grace at my studio #5