-

-
Plays: 20
The Notorious BIG-I Got A Story To Tell
RIP Biggie
#VibeToThis
-
(via elizanyan)
-
(via musicisadrug)
-
“We’re recording demos for our new record “Indigo”! Hope you dig the rough sound <3”
-NSN -
Bruce Munro light sculpture at Pennsylvania’s Longwood Gardens
-

-
Light Catcher
Nescopeck State Park 2010
Photographed by: me
-
Phillip Stearns & the Year of the Glitch
This month, Tumblr took part in a project called Art Takes Times Square, where Artists Wanted gave us the opportunity to feature a Tumblr artist on a Times Square billboard. We chose Phillip Stearns from Year of the Glitch. Tonight (Monday, June 18, 7-11pm), check out Stearns’ “DCP Series” far larger than life above the Times Square crowds (plus a performance by Twin Shadow). Stearns lives in Brooklyn and works out of a studio in Bushwick. He currently has work available at Eyebeam and showing at Camera Club New York. Before you go though, wouldn’t it be enlightening to learn just how Stearns creates his work?
Posted on June 18, 2012 via Storyboard with 5,184 notes
-
by alec soth
Posted on June 18, 2012 via (b)unshi with 3,156 notes
-
SARCASTIC STREET ART
UK-based artist, Mobstr is leaving snippy little messages on London’s walls. They’re mostly simple sentences minimalist in nature and loaded with attitude.
Posted on June 18, 2012 via HAHAMAG with 34,156 notes
-
This Landsat image of 3 October 2011 shows the Mississippi River Delta, where the largest river in the United States empties into the Gulf of Mexico.
In this false-colour image, land vegetation appears pink, while the sediment in the surrounding waters are bright blue and green. The delta is known as the ‘bird-foot’ delta because of the shape created by the channels extending outward.The size of the Mississippi River Delta built over millions of years owing to sediment deposition. The tons of sediment carried by the river system created the wetlands in southern Louisiana, which are home to many endangered species and help to protect the mainland from hurricane winds by acting like speed bumps.
Over the last several decades, however, the delta’s sediment load has been drastically reduced by natural and man-made factors. Extensive oil and gas extraction causes the subsidence of the delta and wetlands, and rising sea levels increase erosion as the fresh water vegetation dies due to the influx of salt water.
Currently, a chunk of land the size of a football field is lost about every half an hour.
(via inspirezme)
Posted on June 4, 2012 via Inspirez with 7,135 notes
-
More from Eric Cahan’s Sky Series
-
Posted on June 4, 2012 via Adrifts with 7,698 notes
-
‘Pandamonium’ Group show @ Signal Gallery, London. http://www.signalgallery.com/






