I’ve got a new site design and more food for you over at Minimally Invasive. Check it out!
I’ve got a new site design and more food for you over at Minimally Invasive. Check it out!
A diver has a very personal moment of dejection at the bottom of the pool during the 2012 CCCA Swimming and Diving State Championships at East Los Angeles College Swim Stadium on Thursday, April 26, 2012 in Monterey Park, CA. (Photo by Suzanne Tylander © 2012) This particular photo represents an emotional moment rarely caught underwater. This particular diver was expected to win the entire event. The diver knew as soon as he hit the water his form was flawed and that he might have just lost it all. I was fortunate enough to witness this moment as it was unfolding underwater. I captured the sequence of emotion just a split second after he hit the water and began to sink to the bottom with a sense of defeat written in his body language This was the image I chose from the series. I have felt this emotion and disappointment before as many athletes do. My chance to capture it underwater was rare but beautiful. It is a moment no competitive athlete wants to relive but something important that many of us can relate to. It is raw and human and real.
(via luellaloves)
The massive neck of Otis B. Driftwood Roth. More pics of our greyhound boys here.
Stunning.
Illustrations by Karl Mårtens
(Source: lohrien, via bunburysbees)

Uncedited Photographer Mark Rothko’s First UK Solo Show, the Whitechapel Gallery, London 1961
“I paint very large pictures. I realize that historically the function of painting large pictures is painting something very grandiose and pompous. The reason I paint them, however – I think it applies to other painters I know – is precisely because I want to be very intimate and human. To paint a small picture is to place yourself outside your experience. However you paint the larger picture, you are in it.” Mark Rothko
Female Posing by Richard Feynman
Other works by Feynman here.
dive
(Source: crazycritterlife)
Aaaah, Gregory Peck.
From wehadfacesthen
(Source: transiberiana)

Found here.