Zachary Quinto and Chris Pine
Adolph Gottlieb, Labyrinth No. 2, 1950
From the Tate Gallery:
Gottlieb continued to make pictographs until 1953. (See ‘The Alchemist’, also in this room.) Many of them resembled early forms of communication, for example Egyptian hieroglyphs. One pictograph was titled ‘Letter to a Friend’. Gottlieb’s later pictographs show the influence of Paul Klee and a move away from an interest in myth. He stated that during the Second World War he ‘just dropped the whole idea of classical mythology as subject matter and decided that the proper subject for me was subjective free-association of images and symbols which I couldn’t explain.’
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One of my friends got chased by little piggies during his bike ride
this is the opposite of a problem
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Adolph Gottlieb, Blast I, 1957
(via pulverisingpelvis)
If this doesn't give you a boner, you're lying.
Unless you’re a
you know what
definitely a boner.
fuck
You pigs.
Found the you know what
boner alert
(via the-absolute-best-gifs)
The best of Ralph Wiggum
This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.
(Source: seanmorrisons)
(Source: lespez, via thepowerofnerd)
