Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Christer Strömholm, who died in 2002, is known as the father of Swedish photography both for his abiding influence and for his role as a teacher. In the late 1950s and early 60s, he lived in Paris intermittently and it was there that he created his most famous book, Les amies de Place Blanche – portraits of the often glamorous transsexuals who... See more
Les amies de Place Blanche by Christer Strömholm – review

This is what I’ve been up to the last year! Building the largest remote observatory in the world
(By quantity of scopes) https://t.co/M1Gu3kyiMG
The Venetian Atlas is a recently rediscovered work of the 14th-century Genoese cartographer Petrus Vesconte, thought to have been completed towards the end of his Venetian period (c. 1330). Though the geographer has long been renowned for the accuracy of his nautical maps of the Mediterranean and Black seas, this long-lost portolan chart is... See more
M. E. Rothwell on Substack
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Noah Dillon
New Works
“These images are part of a series derived from 4 years of capturing the streets of Los Angeles via a passive non-autonomous motion sensor device. (trail camera.) Approximately 1 million images were captured, 38 were selected and shown.” ND
Untitled.... See more
instagram.comErased de Kooning is back! Warhol/Meisel, available now.
This book pays homage to Warhol, through the lens of Steven Meisel, who directed a brilliant, almost forgotten fashion story for Vogue Italia inside the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. In portraying the museum’s collection, Meisel appropriates the formal language of the... See more
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A study of tulips made by British photographer Edward Charles Le Grice, circa 1910. Le Grice took a series of shell and flower images using radiation technology and experimented with photomicrography.
📷️: Edward Charles Le Grice/Hulton Archive | #GettyImages #PreservingThePast... See more
instagram.comEmma G. Moller
@elmgm

An excellent piece about George Church's work on genetically de-extincting Woolly Mammoths AND curing lethal herpes virus in Asian Elephants. (In the back of the photo is me and Russian scientist Sergey Zimov.) https://t.co/DZZ0jg23cO

Launching itself six feet above the ocean’s surface, a fish called a mobula ray does a flip before plunging back into the water with a splash. The fish is traveling with about a hundred other rays that also jump, twirl, and belly flop as they move through the sea. These marine animals are expert acrobats. But their moves remain a mystery to... See more
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