Artist Unknown, (A Question of Redness)
Author: ultrawolvesunderthefullmoon
Ravi Zupa
Ravi Zupa, “Sineater”, Illustration, Poster
Ravi Zupa is an eclectic and self-taught American artist from Denver, Colorado that creates interesting pastiche prints, manufactured sculptures, music videos and big installations using a variety of styles and techniques. He finds his biggest inspiration in books, the bulk of different cultures, mythologies, and imagery from around the world and many different epochs.
His art is colored with contemporaneity and political awareness and treats issues like violence, struggle, anarchism, dystopia, pop culture, power, ideology, and political figures. His studio practice combines several art techniques: lithography, painting, assemblage sculpture, collage,, drawing, and ceramic.
Alone in the Snow
Photographer Unknown, (Alone in the Snow)
The Skull of Saint Lucius
Relic at Saint Ansgar’s Cathedral in Copenhagen, Denmark: The Skull of Saint Lucius, Pope and Martyr
This relic was brought to Roskilde around the year 1100, after St. Lucius had been declared Patron of the Danish region of Zealand.
Cliff Nielsen
Illustrations by Cliff Nielsen
Cliff Nielsen is best known for his work on projects such as Star Wars, The X-Files, Chronicles of Narnia among many projects including advertising campaigns, designs, and magazines. He studied in both traditional and digital illustration and graduated as valedictorian from Art Center College of Design in CA. His illustrations have been recognized for their excellence by the Society of Illustrators, Print, and Spectrum among others.
Wings for Flight
Photographer Unknown, (Wings for Flight)
The Game Watcher
Photographer Unknown, The Game Watcher, Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts
Calendar: January 15
Year: Day to Day Men: January 15
Southern Edge of the Lake
On the fifteenth of January in 1962, the Derveni papyrus was found at a site in Derveni, Macedonia, northern Greece. Discovered among the remnants of a funeral pyre in the necropolis that belonged to the ancient city of Lete, it is the oldest surviving manuscript in the Western tradition and possibly the oldest surviving papyrus written in Greek regardless of provenance.
The papyrus dates to approximately 340 BC, making it Europe’s oldest surviving manuscript. Composed near the end of the fifth-century BC, its text is a mix of dialects, mainly Attic and Ionic Greek with a few Doric forms. Occasionally the same word appears written in different dialectic forms.
The content of the Derveni papyrus is divided between religious instructions on sacrifices to gods and souls, and an allegorical commentary of a genealogical poem of the gods, ascribed to Orpheus. The identification of the papyrus’s author is a matter of dispute among scholars. Names like Euthyphron of Prospalta, Diagoras of Melos, and Stesimbrotus of Thasos have been proposed with varying degrees of likelihood.
The reconstruction of the papyrus involved the exacting job of unrolling and separating the layers of the charred papyrus roll. The surviving two hundred and sixty-six fragments of the papyrus were conserved under glass in descending order of size; however, due to the existence of unplaced smaller fragments, reconstruction is exceptionally challenging. Modern multispectral imaging techniques were used to take digital microphotographs of the papyrus fragments. From this work, twenty-six columns of text were recovered, all with their bottom parts missing, as they had perished on the pyre.
The Derveni papyrus is now included in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register, a compendium of the world’s documentary heritage, such as manuscripts, oral traditions, audio-visual materials and library and archive holdings. The papyrus is noted in this register as being the oldest known European book.
Note: The Center for Hellenic Studies in Washington DC is the location of the Interdisciplinary Research Project for the Derveni Papyrus. Over the last forty-five years, the text of the papyrus has undergone extensive reconstruction and study. Among the leaders of the Imouseion Project have been Theokritos Kouremenos, George M. Parássoglou, and Kyriakos Tsantsanoglou. A user-friendly copy of the latest reconstruction of the papyrus is now available online at: https://chs.harvard.edu/derveni-papyrus-introduction/
An extensive and informative review written by Patricia Curd of Purdue University on the 2004 publication “The Derveni Papyrus: Cosmology, Theology and Interpretation” written by Hungarian academic Gábor Betegh, the eighth Laurence Professor of Ancient Philosophy at Cambridge University, can be found in the University of Notre Dame’s “Philosophical Reviews” located at: https://ndpr.nd.edu/reviews/the-derveni-papyrus-cosmology-theology-and-interpretation/
The Art of Realism
Photographer Unknown, (The Art of Realism)
Phobs
Phobs from DeviantArt, “Thor and Loki”
Phobs is an artist in the fields of film and animation. He currently lives and works in Russia.
Shelter of the Pines
Photographer Unknown, (Shelter of the Pines)
“All really inhabited space bears the essence of the notion of home.”. -Gaston Bachelard
Scream!
Artist Unknown, Title Unknown, (Scream!)
Reblogged with many thanks to https://melimelo85.tumblr.com
Sun Pendants
Sun Pendants, Dogon People of Mali, Bronze Alloy and Leather, Lost Wax Casting Method
Afghan Whigs, “I Am Fire”
Afghan Whigs, “I Am Fire” from the Album “Do the Beast”, 2014
Afghan Whigs: consistently a great band through all their albums.
The Homecoming
Photographer Unknown, (The Homecoming), Computer Graphics, Gay Film Gifs























