(Source: psychea)
"You're only as young as the last time you changed your mind" -Timothy Leary
(Source: psychea)
Video X, Final, made in final cut pro
This is where I want to live.
(via hippieswilltakeover)
(Source: sereudipity, via psychea)
Figure in Drapery
Photo X. Chemical burns and scratches look so lovely, but Professors don’t like them too much.
Sacred Geomancy
…is a visual reconstruction of the Tree Of Life. The Tree of life is a geometrical shape that can be extracted out of The Flower of Life (yet another geometrical shape). Sacred Geomancy is consistent of these geometrical visuals, they are the shapes cut from the pages of a geometry book. All of these shapes are from Sacred Geometry, which is a mathematical approach at accepting the Unity of Being. The Unity of being is an idea, or a possibility that we are all interconnected, with all life. Sacred geometry is an attempt to show the logical part of us that this possibility of Unity is well within our Reality.
The shapes in my project are shapes that can be found within all life everywhere, you just need to know where to look, and what to look for. It is for to you choose to see the interconnectivity within these shapes, and yourself, and everything around you, or take that idea in complete opposite. Life is about your experiences, what you want to perceive, and life is very much a reflection of your own consciousness. That is the idea that I want to present to the audience, the unity of life around us. I want to audience to experience at the very least a visual perception of this idea, to take it in and dwell on it and ask themselves what it means to them. To come at the work, completely unaware and vulnerable to this idea, and fill in their own blanks, good, bad, or indifferent, as long as they can come away from it with the experience.
Artist Léopold Rabus ”Arc-en-foin / hay rainbow” 2008
Mixed media Installation. dimensions variable. When fears become form, Installation view CAN - Centre d’art Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Oh my goodness. This gets a big ol fat YES and two thumbs up from Kaylee. :D
Is a GREAT piece of indie film. Probably one of my new favorites. It’s trippy, intense and a real mind fucker, that will make you sit and dwell on it for a few hours trying to scramble up what really happened. Definitely worth watching. And the best part? It’s on Netflix. Fuck yes. 
Cinematic space, installed at Lenora&Terry in front on Cornish.
(via psychea)
The 2nd Thursday art walk in Capitol Hill was rather depressing. There was basically nothing that really caught my interest. I trekked up to the hill over on Pine, starting at the Bauhaus Cafe, the coffee was good but the artwork didn’t so much catch my eye. The theme being comic books and featured one artists work, the giant comic strips weren’t too thrilling but I loved the color palates in his paintings. There was one artist who I found very intriguing at the Vermillion Gallery, Luke Haynes work is made out of well orchestrated quilts, it seemed to me like he was painting with fabric. Aside from Luke Haynes, out of the several galleries I stopped at there was nothing of real interest. I am not sure if this is the Hill’s first art walk, but I hope it will progressively pick up, and become something more worth participating in. 
Addition to inspirations list! Weekend Wolves. A German one man electronic band. He’s got some pretty groovy funky beats, and all of his videos in themselves are works of art as well, he splices old videos from public domain footage. Out of the videos my particular favorite is “Karma”, mostly because I dig the ridiculous monkey masks, but what of his music? I have a fondness for all of it really. The beats are just so damn good.