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Edward Kwong x INPRNT.
Absolutely exceptional illustrative works by artist Edward Kwong that are all available as fine art prints in his INPRNT Store.
(This is a sponsored post by INPRNT. Be sure to follow them on Tumblr)
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I’ve had dreams like that, Piotr Jabłoński
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Harrow County | Tyler Crook | Cullen Bunn
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fallen angels
Vincent of Beauvais, Le Mirouer historial (French translation of Speculum historiale), Paris 1463
BnF, Français 50, fol. 14r
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Request 05 Jackalope, requested by multiple people.
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My cover for a Meho Plaza 7 inch (out of print)
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For 30 Years, This Photographer Has Documented Disguises Around The World
And the results are nothing less than magic
Wearing a mask doesn’t just conceal the face of the wearers. It transforms their entire beings, ushers them into a liminal realm between the natural and spiritual worlds, where fixed identity is at the mercy of creativity and mythology.
Artists have long been transfixed by the divine powers of disguise, their ability to metamorphose a mood as well as a person, revealing how flimsy both have been all along. In the 1970s, photographer Ralph Eugene Meatyard placed grotesque masks on his children’s faces, arranging them to pose for monstrous family portraits. In the late 1990s, Forcefield, a noise rock band and art collective, crafted head-to-toe knit ensembles that turned the musicians into human stuffed animals.
(Continue Reading)
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