oh ok
Holy crap, it’s the Cheshire Alice!
A recent cartoon for New Scientist.
My next book ‘Baking with Kafka’ is available to preorder.She’s not wrong
The like they are part of the Empire. Specifically TIE fighters pilots. I love it
Wakandan Air Force fighter pilots
Chris Burkard is an accomplished explorer, photographer, creative director, speaker, and author. Traveling throughout the year to pursue the farthest expanses of Earth, Burkard works to capture stories that inspire humans to consider their relationship with nature, while promoting the preservation of wild places everywhere.
Layered by outdoor, travel, adventure, surf, and lifestyle subjects, Burkard is known for images that are punctuated by untamed, powerful landscapes. Through social media Chris strives to share his vision of wild places with millions of people, and to inspire them to explore for themselves.
Maxwell Tilse is an Australian illustrator now living in London currently backpacking and keeping a comic diary of my travels.
On his current trip he has mostly done quick pencil sketches outside. After, he finds a warm cozy place to finish the drawing with a hot meal and a cold beer. Here are a few of the finished postcard sketches of the cities he has visited.
Images identified from the top:
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Noel Kerns is a Dallas-based photographer specializing in capturing Texas’ ghost towns, decommissioned military bases, and industrial abandonments at night. Growing up in the central Texas hill country, Kerns developed his photographic skills shooting large format black & white landscapes. The slow and deliberate nature of the large format photographic process was a perfect launching pad into the art of digitally photographing the nocturnal world.
One of the things Kerns enjoy most about photographing under a full moon are all the latent details, those things which reveal themselves only when you take the time to let the moonlight tell the story. He loves the calm and tranquility of a peaceful night scene, as well as the eerie feeling one can get when shooting an old desert ghost town under a full moon.
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Smiljan Radic - Naive art space, Santiago 2004. Plagued by both a fire and years later an earthquake, the original structure was left in complete disrepair. The facade of the building was historically protected by the municipality, leaving a relatively empty lot behind the colonial skin.
“Everything seems to have been measured from above. The circus is the first, the most primitive and the most austere place imaginable for shows. A strange objet trouvé, far from its home, will appear above the theatre, a source of delight for the neighborhood. The rehearsal rooms, offices and services occupy other houses in the complex, transforming the entire building as it stands into a new internally interrelated organism.“
Via, photos © Nico Saieh, Cristobal Palma.
SOM has reimagined the Christmas tree for the courtyard of the Utzon Center in Aalborg, Denmark, where a tree-shaped social space is housed inside a three-dimensional grid of a thousand wireframe boxes. The traditional experience of assembling around the Christmas tree is inverted, allowing visitors to step inside the form of the tree. The project demonstrates the ways in which architecture can facilitate social experience, using a pure structural grid to create an intimate and festive space. The sculpture accompanies “Sky’s the Limit,” an exhibition on SOM’s integrated architecture and structural engineering practice. The tree will be on view at the Utzon Center through the end of January, and the exhibition until January 15th. Learn more