(Source: clownboss, via gajimara)

hi-mi-zu:

Hanashippanashi, Igarashi Daisuke

hi-mi-zu:

Hanashippanashi, Igarashi Daisuke

Aisu kriemu

Aisu kriemu

(Source: oxane, via rapemeagain)

archiemcphee:

Proving once again that the Japanese are masters of combining weirdness and cuteness: These awesome little kids are wearing protective welding masks in order to view the recent solar eclipse, but they look like they could just as easily be watching Ultraman battling the Alien Mummy.

Visit Kotaku to view more photos.

Cho kawaii

lauriejuspeczyk:

Ivan the Terrible and his Son Ivan, 1885

Ugh, I love this painting so much.

Just some background stuff, Ivan the Terrible was the Tsar of Russia for most of the 16th Century. In I think 1581, he caught his daughter-in-law wearing ‘immodest clothing in front of everyone’ and struck her. She was apparently pregnant and she may or may not have had a miscarriage because of it.

Ivan’s son and the girl’s husband, also named Ivan after his father, hears about it and gets into a really heated argument with his father that ends with Ivan the Terrible taking a swing at his son with his pointed staff. It’s said that he immediately fell down and kissed his son’s face, pressing his hands against his left temple to try to stop the bleeding. He famously screamed “May I be damned! I’ve killed my son! I’ve killed my son!” His son briefly regained consciousness and his last words were “I die as a devoted son and most humble servant.”

I love all the details. I love the pointed staff lying on the ground and the signs of a fight with the tossed over chair, disturbed carpet, and the door wide open. I love the single tear on Ivan’s face and their position on the floor. This is a really gorgeous but raw depiction of one of the darkest moments in an incredible man’s life. I wish there were more historical paintings like this.

(via rapemeagain)

mnky:

ほぼ日刊イトイ新聞 - 天久聖一の味写道