dK
dK
mpdrolet:

Beverly Hilton, Los Angeles, CA, 1964
Garry Winogrand
rogerwilkerson:

Inflight - Air France - 1958
eugenialoli:

“I hate you, too” by Eugenia Loli
Follow the artist: Tumblr | Flickr | Facebook | Cargo | Society6
typetoy:

www.typetoy.tumblr.com
rogerwilkerson:

Commuters on a Train
ZoomInfo
allaboutjazz:

via theviolentquiet
The Jazz Loft Project
In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”
More…
allaboutjazz:

via theviolentquiet
The Jazz Loft Project
In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”
More…
allaboutjazz:

via theviolentquiet
The Jazz Loft Project
In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”
More…
allaboutjazz:

via theviolentquiet
The Jazz Loft Project
In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”
More…
allaboutjazz:

via theviolentquiet
The Jazz Loft Project
In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”
More…
Celestial Eyes
rogerwilkerson:

Manhattan
rogerwilkerson:

Sharing A Raincoat - 1963
rogerwilkerson:

Moonlight Future, art by Constantin Alajalov.  Saturday Evening Post cover August 15, 1959.
eugenialoli:

“Social Layers” by Eugenia Loli
Follow the artist: Tumblr | Flickr | Facebook | Cargo | Society6