Moos in Headlights |
The eye of man hath not heard, the ear of man hath not seen, man's hand is not able to taste, his tongue to conceive, nor his heart to report what my dream was! |
The End of the Road / Nico Delort
The wolves and the sick ass.
Ernest Griset, from Æsop’s fables, with text based chiefly upon Croxall, La Fontaine and L’Estrange, London, New York, 1869.
(Source: archive.org)
(Source: grim-realizations, via mitsukake)
Julie Heffernan
STEEN, Jan
Nocturnal Serenade
c. 1675
Oil on canvas
Národní Galerie, Prague
Death as friend (1851).
A. Rethel, from Alfred Rethel; des Meisters Werke (Alfred Rethel, the master works), by Josef Ponten, Stuttgard & Leipzig, 1911.
(Source: archive.org)
Songoku, the Monkey King and the Jeweled Hare by the Moon
One Hundred Aspects of the Moon was one of Yoshitoshi’s most successful series, printed over a period of seven years with new designs released every few months to an eager public. The subjects drew on Chinese and Japanese folklore, history, and literature and often included elements of the supernatural, an obsession of Yoshitoshi’s later in life. This print refers to a Chinese story of an immortal monkey king, shown dancing with a jeweled hare that, according to legend, lives on the moon.
- Artist: Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 1839-1892
- Medium: Woodblock color print
- Dates: October 10, 1891
- Period: Meiji Period
- Brooklyn Museum
details from Ghent Altarpiece, Jan van Eyck, c. 1432
(via
This isn’t a fucking competition Legolas
Provensens - Iliad and the Odyssey 5 by Glen Mullaly on Flickr.
Kleine Flussaue, Jules-Louis Dupré. (1811 - 1889)
Auguste Rodin, The Burghers of Calais, 1884-86
Toilet Train Your Kids with our Terrifying Costumes
Before Halloween.