My drawing professor suggested I take a look at Inka Essenhigh.  Her work blows my mind.

Joe Sorren’s soft, kind of fairy-tale paintings.

Inka Essenhigh yet again.

Wayne Horse, oh.

D.O. Jones: painting, drawing, contact.

via finnclark.

Cendrine Rovini fertilizes worlds that swell with life.

Mathieu Bernard-Reymond’s Sweden Demographic Development, 1970-2050.

via snowce.

via bitchville:

Take a look at this large and beautiful piece currently on display at the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA)! The suspended ocean goddess, entitled Thalassa, is the newest installation from street artist Swoon.

Thalassa by http://www.swimmingcities.org/

Marci McDonald just really, really, really likes to work.

via weandthecolor, ego-alterego.

Alice Duke. *

via the art of animation, snowce.

via chromatichouse, architizer:

“Cities” is a series of drawings by Atelier Olschinsky, depicting fantastical, fictional urbanisms that have more in common with sci-fi than with existing cities.

via snowce:

Cy Twombly, The Fire that Consumes All before It (1978), oil, oil crayon, graphite on canvas, 118 1/8 x 75 5/8 inches.

Yayoi Kusama’s installation Fireflies on the Water (2002) consists of a small room lined with mirrors, with a pool in the center of the space, and 150 small lights hanging from the ceiling, creating an effect of direct and reflected light emanating from the mirrors and the water’s surface. To see it in video, watch this.

via Terry, via gaksdesigns.

Julienne Hsu has taken an interest in dog aggression.

Alison Blickle lives and works in Brooklyn and LA.