/tagged/art/page/2

millsantiques:

These vases are considered to be one of the most famous models introduced by the Manufacture nationale de Sèvres; such discerning patrons as Madame de Pompadour and her brother the Marquis de Marigny collected the form. Among the largest vessels produced by the factory, these vases were extremely difficult to fire; the multiple piercings in the body weakened the overall structure, and they tended to collapse in the kiln. Consequently, only about twelve were ever produced, ten of which survive today.

The shape derives from the nef, a table decoration in the form of a ship, usually of precious metals, used since medieval times. This vase would have held potpourri used to perfume a room. Eighteenth-century ladies made their own, experimenting with various ingredients and sometimes blending essences for as long as nine years. Vases known as vaisseau à mat (masted ships) were made to be sold with other vases of different shapes to form a garniture.

(Source: eleganceantiques, via cavetocanvas)

drawpaintprint:

Picasso. Owl. 1952

drawpaintprint:

Picasso. Owl. 1952

(via cavetocanvas)

cavetocanvas:

Damien Hirst, Legend and Myth, 2011

ianbrooks:

Bubbles by Atelier Olschinsky

Bubbles are a blast, though usually accompanied by a rubber duckie. The Austrian duo of Peter Olschinsky and Verena Weiss created these mind-bending glass bubbles that seem to be the lowest microscopic magnitude we can perceive reality in… screw strings, I was never able to tie them properly anyway!

Artist: Behance / Website / CargoCollective

atavus:

Mia Liu - Can’t Stop Rolling It Up

(Source: atavus)

millsantiques:

These vases are considered to be one of the most famous models introduced by the Manufacture nationale de Sèvres; such discerning patrons as Madame de Pompadour and her brother the Marquis de Marigny collected the form. Among the largest vessels produced by the factory, these vases were extremely difficult to fire; the multiple piercings in the body weakened the overall structure, and they tended to collapse in the kiln. Consequently, only about twelve were ever produced, ten of which survive today.

The shape derives from the nef, a table decoration in the form of a ship, usually of precious metals, used since medieval times. This vase would have held potpourri used to perfume a room. Eighteenth-century ladies made their own, experimenting with various ingredients and sometimes blending essences for as long as nine years. Vases known as vaisseau à mat (masted ships) were made to be sold with other vases of different shapes to form a garniture.

(Source: eleganceantiques, via cavetocanvas)

drawpaintprint:

Picasso. Owl. 1952

drawpaintprint:

Picasso. Owl. 1952

(via cavetocanvas)

cavetocanvas:

Damien Hirst, Legend and Myth, 2011

ianbrooks:

Bubbles by Atelier Olschinsky

Bubbles are a blast, though usually accompanied by a rubber duckie. The Austrian duo of Peter Olschinsky and Verena Weiss created these mind-bending glass bubbles that seem to be the lowest microscopic magnitude we can perceive reality in… screw strings, I was never able to tie them properly anyway!

Artist: Behance / Website / CargoCollective

chaambler:

mondrian

chaambler:

mondrian

(via wowgreat)

atavus:

Mia Liu - Can’t Stop Rolling It Up

(Source: atavus)

wblut:

   By 
HLPFJ on Flickr.

wblut:

  By

HLPFJ on Flickr.

(via wowgreat)

About:

Watch tv, veg out, and tumblring my life away—that is all.