Most animals with a well-known white morph (lions, tigers, domestic cats, peacocks) are leucistic, not albinistic. True albinos are much rarer and are usually only bred-for in indoor pets (mice, rats,...
Wigan is a Tech Fonts design published by Fontfabric.
A new photo series, titled Table For One, takes the proverbial saying that “you are what you eat” literally as it transforms model Tin Gao by sandwiching her between layers of cheese, lunchmeat, shredded lettuce, and sliced tomato in a bulging hoagie. Shot by photographer Annie Collinge, the bizarre series sees Gao morph from one food group to the next, whether as a stout tomato fashioned from a red jacket that covers the model from chin to ankle or stuffed into a peeled banana that mimics a sleeping bag. More
The Thrill of Finding Money in Your Pocket: A Symphony of Serendipity in Five Notes There's an undeniable magic in finding forgotten mo...
In Colombian artist Doris Salcedo’s monumental installation titled "Uprooted" at the Sharjah Biennial 15, home is rooted in the mind.
Michael Northrup’s “Dream Away” is an elliptical chronicle of a romance as it morphs into family.
The New Adventures of Morph will be broadcast on the children's channel next month. Originally created in 1977 by Aardman, Morph first appeared on BBC's Take Hart'.
So there‘s this thing called grief. You’ve probably heard of it. You probably wish you hadn’t heard of it. There is also ambiguous grief, and cumulative grief, and secondary grief, and anticipatory grief, and traumatic grief and lots of other kinds of grief. You’ve probably heard of most of […]
Enjoy a fresh set of funny memes that will put a wide grin on your face
Monsters with no heads, grey aliens, and morphing babies can tell us a lot about medieval racism. Dr. Dark Age explains, in part XII of our ongoing series on Race, Racism and the Middle Ages.
My husband, Devan, wants to know when he can stop lying to everyone he cares about. He’s talking about the baby, the fact that we’re having one (if all goes well) in early October.
Artist Emil Alzamora explores the human body through his figurative sculptures that distort, inflate, elongate, and deconstruct physical forms in order to reveal emotional situations and narratives. Alzamora works with a variety of materials including bronze, gypsum, concrete, and other ceramic materials to create pieces with smooth, almost nondescript surfaces to instead draw attention to shape and scale. Born in Peru, he began sculpting in the fall of 1998 in New York at the Polich Tallix fine art foundry, and has since exhibited in galleries and museums around the world, most recently at Expo Chicago and the International Sculpture Symposium In Icheon in South Korea. More