absiesfeed - art and cred

absiesfeed

art and cred

97 posts

Latest Posts by absiesfeed

absiesfeed
8 months ago
Komorebi, Duri Baek
Komorebi, Duri Baek
Komorebi, Duri Baek

Komorebi, Duri Baek

absiesfeed
8 months ago

Guys our community for Hinduism just got approved!!!

Guys Our Community For Hinduism Just Got Approved!!!

Reblog or slide into the replies for an invite!!

So excited for this!!!

Let’s reach all Hindus on tumblr!

absiesfeed
10 months ago
Azerbaijani Artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran In Gold On 164 Feet Of Black Silk
Azerbaijani Artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran In Gold On 164 Feet Of Black Silk
Azerbaijani Artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran In Gold On 164 Feet Of Black Silk
Azerbaijani Artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran In Gold On 164 Feet Of Black Silk
Azerbaijani Artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran In Gold On 164 Feet Of Black Silk

Azerbaijani artist Tunzala Mamedzadeh's Hand-Painted Quran in Gold on 164 Feet of Black Silk

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Caroline Tompkins

Caroline Tompkins

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Soulmate Psychic, Kayla Witt
Soulmate Psychic, Kayla Witt
Soulmate Psychic, Kayla Witt

Soulmate Psychic, Kayla Witt

absiesfeed
1 year ago
🛝 Inner Room 🛝

🛝 Inner Room 🛝

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Flamingos An Aerial Series

Flamingos an aerial series

Lake Pulicat in India

BY RAJ MOHAN

Flamingos An Aerial Series
Flamingos An Aerial Series
Flamingos An Aerial Series
Flamingos An Aerial Series
absiesfeed
1 year ago
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed
1 year ago

Color has been disappearing from the world.

A new research group used machine learning to track color changes in common materials and items, below is their findings for all color changes over time, they used 7000+ items from the 1800s to now to determine color changes in the most common items.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Below are the colors of cars by year, notice how the majority of cars are grey, white, or black compared to twenty years ago.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

These aren't data points, but they are comparisons between the 'modern' homes of the 70s and 80s compared to the modern homes of today.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Carpets have equally had the same treatment of grey added to them! The most common color of carpet is now grey or beige.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Even locations that used to scream with color for decades have now modernized to becoming boring minimalist (and I love minimalism) personality-less locations.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

The world is becoming colorless, why?

source paper

absiesfeed
1 year ago

Color has been disappearing from the world.

A new research group used machine learning to track color changes in common materials and items, below is their findings for all color changes over time, they used 7000+ items from the 1800s to now to determine color changes in the most common items.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Below are the colors of cars by year, notice how the majority of cars are grey, white, or black compared to twenty years ago.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

These aren't data points, but they are comparisons between the 'modern' homes of the 70s and 80s compared to the modern homes of today.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Carpets have equally had the same treatment of grey added to them! The most common color of carpet is now grey or beige.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

Even locations that used to scream with color for decades have now modernized to becoming boring minimalist (and I love minimalism) personality-less locations.

Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.
Color Has Been Disappearing From The World.

The world is becoming colorless, why?

source paper

absiesfeed
1 year ago

Medieval scribes writing things like “fuck the abbot” (their boss) and “I am so hung over I feel dead” and “that goddamn cat got in here and pissed on the manuscript” and drawing penis monsters and purposefully unflattering portraits of public figures and animals in the marginalia is funny, yes. But more than that it is so deeply quintessentially human. It reminds you that they were largely just frustrated young adults who did an extremely repetitive and tedious job 6 days a week during daylight hours in poor conditions and felt the same malaise young adults feel now.

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Lengths Of The Principal Rivers In The World. Heights Of The Principal Mountains In The World. 1850.

Lengths of the Principal Rivers in the World. Heights of the Principal Mountains in the World. 1850.

Rumsey via Internet Archive

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).
Life Of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).

Life of Pi (Ang Lee, 2012).

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Physical Aspects Of Memories
Physical Aspects Of Memories
Physical Aspects Of Memories
Physical Aspects Of Memories
Physical Aspects Of Memories
Physical Aspects Of Memories

Physical aspects of memories


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absiesfeed
1 year ago
Art From Kumari Loves A Monster By Rashmi Devadasan. Illustrated By Shyam. 
Art From Kumari Loves A Monster By Rashmi Devadasan. Illustrated By Shyam. 
Art From Kumari Loves A Monster By Rashmi Devadasan. Illustrated By Shyam. 

Art from Kumari Loves a Monster by Rashmi Devadasan. Illustrated by Shyam. 

“The young maidens in these pages all have beauty, brains and talent / They while away the night and day / With monsters fierce and gallant.

 A romantic picture book of young girls who have fallen in love with monsters.”

absiesfeed
1 year ago
"The Feeling That She Was Not Alone Took Possession Of Her." The Whisper On The Stair. 1924. Frontispiece.

"The feeling that she was not alone took possession of her." The whisper on the stair. 1924. Frontispiece.

Internet Archive

absiesfeed
1 year ago
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed
1 year ago

My favorite part about modern world-class scientists and mathematicians is how none of them sound real

We've got this guy

won the Fields Medal for his work in plasma physics

reports to the French government about advancements in science and technology

doesn't look out of place as a Hogwarts professor

and this guy

uncovered a KGB hacker conspiracy ring

sells personalized glassblown Klein bottles

from a miniature robotic forklift warehouse under his house

used a slide rule in 2006

thought the internet was a fad

and especially this guy (RIP)

cracked the mystery of the NASA Challenger space shuttle explosion

cracked open safes in the Manhattan Project for funsies

won the Nobel Prize for his work in quantum electrodynamics

played the bongos on the side

couldn't tell left from right

absiesfeed
1 year ago

“The problem is not people being uneducated. The problem is that people are educated just enough to believe what they have been taught, and not educated enough to question anything from what they have been taught.”

Richard Feynman

“The Problem Is Not People Being Uneducated. The Problem Is That People Are Educated Just Enough To
absiesfeed
1 year ago
absiesfeed - art and cred
absiesfeed
1 year ago
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)
Agnès Varda - Jane B. Par Agnès V. (1987)

Agnès Varda - Jane B. par Agnès V. (1987)

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Meera Bai;

Meera Bai;

“One night as I walked in the desert the mountains rode on my shoulders

and the sky became my heart,

and the earth - my own body, I explored.

Every object began to wink at me, and Mira wisely calculated thinking,

My charms must be at their height

now would be a good time to rush into his arms,

maybe He won't drop me so quick.”

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Meera Bai By Kshitindrnanath Majumdar, Bengal

Meera Bai by Kshitindrnanath Majumdar, Bengal

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Meera Bai Hindu Print Kalyan. “Kalyan” Is A Hindi Monthly Magazine Published By Gita Press, Gorakhpur.

Meera bai Hindu print Kalyan. “Kalyan” is a Hindi monthly magazine published by Gita Press, Gorakhpur. (via CollectorBazar: Jaycollections)

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Meera Bai - Mystic Poet And Devotee Of Krishna Vintage Litho Tin Print (via EBay: Ishr2013)

Meera Bai - Mystic Poet and Devotee Of Krishna Vintage Litho Tin Print (via eBay: Ishr2013)

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Desi LGBT Fest 2023 (hosted By @desi-lgbt-fest)
Desi LGBT Fest 2023 (hosted By @desi-lgbt-fest)
Desi LGBT Fest 2023 (hosted By @desi-lgbt-fest)
Desi LGBT Fest 2023 (hosted By @desi-lgbt-fest)

Desi LGBT Fest 2023 (hosted by @desi-lgbt-fest)

Day 7 : Faith/Rituals of Love

Definitely geared heavily towards the 'Faith' part of this prompt as soon as I read it!

If being Queer is defying conventions and if being a part of the Queer community means going against heteronormativity and gender conformity, is it not Queer to forego materialistic ties and the love of a human partner and embrace the love of a greater being you have only heard about in stories?

All four individuals featured here were integral part of the Bhakti Movement and/or Sufism in South Asia. None were married other than Meerabai.

(Panel order from top to bottom)

Chaitanya Mahaprabhu (1486-1534) : A key name of the Bhakti Movement and the Gauriya Vaishnav tradition in 15th Century Bengal, Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was believed to have been a vessel for both Radha and Krishna. Bengali doesn't use pronouns or gendered language and we may never know what they would have preferred to be identified as in a language they didn't know (English), I will simply resort to using They/Them for them. Their written teachings are few and far between but the verse mentioned here is the seventh verse of the only written record of their teachings, the Shikshastakam - a collection of 8 total verses. The translation here is my own and quite literal so that the interpretation is left to the reader.

Meerabai (1498-1597) : [CW : IMPLIED QUEERPHOBIA/APHOBIA] Meerabai was born into Rajput royalty and was married off, also to Rajput royalty, in likely an arranged marriage. While most of the stories surrounding her are folklore whose historicity is yet to be confirmed, her marital status can be confirmed, and so can her devotion and affection for Krishna and the divine, which she has herself penned in numerous poems and songs. Folklore does strongly imply that she was non-committal to her marriage and that her in-laws tried to poison her to death multiple times for it.

Kabir (1398–1448 or 1440–1518) : Found as an orphan by a Muslim weaver couple, Kabir's religion grew to become somewhat of an enigma for future generations. His stance, however, on the topic romance and marital relationships is quite clear - he looked down upon them and a huge chunk of his couplets strongly imply that romantic and sexual relations simply obstruct spiritual enlightenment.

Bulleh Shah (1680-1757) : Bulleh Shah, though an ardent proponent of loving the divine, was declared a Kafir, a non-believer/non-Muslim by a quite a few Muslim clerics of the time. He was known for speaking up against existing power hierarchies of the time and used vernacular speech for his writings (Punjabi, Sindhi) which not only served to popularize his works, but also let people connect to his words.

A personal note on my motivations under the cut.

A while back when I was actively going through the anxiety of finding out that I am ace and that I will never fit into the current South Asian society that the wedding industry has a chokehold on, I desperately wanted to see people from my own culture living happily without a partner. During one of my history rabbit hole escapedes, I restumbled upon the story of Meerabai, how she always insisted on loving and devoting herself towards Krishna, despite being married into a normative and wealthy household and despite her in-laws repeatedly attempting to poison her for not committing to her husband. Most of us from India grow up hearing about Meerabai, her spiritual connections to Krishna, and her struggles. The moral of those stories is always framed as 'believe in god, he will help you through tough times'. But this was the first time I was making a different connection, I was drawing different morals. And when I took Meerabai's non-conformity to her married life and started looking for more examples like hers, I was overwhelmed by how many more individuals existed without a partner, condemned being in a normative, married relationship, admitted to having lost human connections and faced resistance even, and yet stayed true to their orientation and sounded HAPPY! It was extremely hard to narrow it down to these four, but these do make my point! Labels are hard to transpose across cultures and history. But if being queer means being nonconforming of marital structures and being aspec/arospec implies neutrality, indifference, or aversion to romance and intercourse, then no one fits the label if they don't.

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Stories Of Your Life And Others - Ted Chiang

Stories of Your Life and Others - Ted Chiang

A book review by Danny Yee

© 2011 https://dannyreviews.com/

The stories in Stories of Your Life and Others tackle big ideas intelligently, in the grand tradition of science fiction. They postulate some fundamental change in how the world works and explore its implications through the experiences or challenges faced by their protagonists.

"Tower of Babylon" is set in a Mesopotamia where there really is a vault of heaven for a tower to reach. In "Understand" an experimental drug makes the protagonist really, really intelligent, capable of understanding not only the world but his own mind. And "Division by Zero" is about a mathematician who discovers that arithmetic is inconsistent.

In "Story of Your Life" a linguist is drafted to help decipher the language of heptapod aliens. Interspersed with the narrative of her linguistic discoveries are vignettes of her lifetime relationship with her daughter. At first these two strands appear to have no connection at all — and their link turns out to be indirect, involving variational approaches to physics and a different kind of consciousness, challenging our notions of memory and free will.

"Seventy-Two Letters" is set in a 19th century England where industrialisation is kabbalah-inspired, with automata (golems) manufactured by applying names to sculptures. And reproduction works in accordance with preformationist theory, with tiny homunculi recursively nested inside sperm. This is mixed up with some politics, involving eugenics and class tensions, and some action. "The Evolution of Human Science", originally published in Nature, is less a story than an abstract speculation about how human science might react to a "metahuman" population with a superior but incommunicable knowledge system.

In "Hell is the Absence of God" angels regularly visit the earth, dealing out miracles (and incidental damage); statistics are kept on the results, and on the fraction of people who are taken to Heaven or condemned to life in Hell, without God. The lead character is desperate to learn how to love God so he can rejoin his dead wife in Heaven; two other characters face rather different challenges.

Presented in a documentary format, with short perspectives from different people, "Liking What You See" is set in a near future where it's possible to reversibly modify people's brains so that they don't perceive beauty or ugliness in faces. A progressive university is debating whether this, known as calliagnosia, should be a requirement for students.The significant novelties involved in Chiang's stories require some serious suspension of disbelief, but he manages this well. He doesn't dwell on the presuppositions or back-story, attempting to justify the impossible, but rapidly introduces the setting and elaborates on it only as much as is necessary for the plot and the exploration of ideas. (The occasional exceptions are jarring, for example in "Story of Your Life" when some nonsensical argument is presented to explain why the aliens haven't learned anything from human television broadcasts.)

None of the characters have much depth. They are driven by intellect rather than emotion and their personalities presented from the outside, fairly clinically. A focus on their understanding of the world is arguably necessary for the elaboration of the story ideas, however, and there's only so much that can be fitted into a short story. (I am not convinced that Chiang could produce a decent novel using the same approach.)The plots work effectively, both in unfolding the implications of the central ideas and in holding the reader's attention. This is true both in the stories with straightforward chronological narratives and in the more unusually structured ones, with resolutions provided by a mix of goal seeking, problem solution, and structural cadence.Stories of Your Life and Others is the most entertaining and thought-provoking collection of science fiction stories I've read for a long time.

absiesfeed
1 year ago
Under The Volcano, Julian Charrière
Under The Volcano, Julian Charrière
Under The Volcano, Julian Charrière

Under the volcano, Julian Charrière

absiesfeed
2 years ago
Álvaro Siza
Álvaro Siza
Álvaro Siza

Álvaro Siza

Boa Nova Tea House Leça da Palmeira, Portugal 1956


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absiesfeed
2 years ago
Repair Cafés

Repair Cafés

Repair Cafés are free meeting places and they’re all about repairing things (together). In the place where a Repair Café is located, you’ll find tools and materials to help you make any repairs you need. On clothes, furniture, electrical appliances, bicycles, crockery, appliances, toys, et cetera. You’ll also find expert volunteers, with repair skills in all kinds of fields.

Visitors bring their broken items from home. Together with the specialists they start making their repairs in the Repair Café. It’s an ongoing learning process. If you have nothing to repair, you can enjoy a cup of tea or coffee. Or you can lend a hand with someone else’s repair job. You can also get inspired at the reading table – by leafing through books on repairs and DIY.

There are over 1.500 Repair Cafés worldwide. Visit one in your area or start one yourself!

Read more…

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