I'm Drue.
Hi.

You'll find badass science, cranky politics, occasional amazing photography, mildly pretentious quotes, clever design, opinionated opinions(or Drueisms), and the occasional dumb thing that doesn't get a fancy adjective.

Feel free to ask or tell me anything, I am always open to suggestions for discussion topics. Questions and submissions are always welcome.

Most reblogs are on my separate blog linked below, except from a few important ones, responses/rants, and reblogs of my girlfriend's tumblr.

Days of the Week
Music Monday
Tattoo Tuesday
Wow Wednesday
Cute Thing Thursday
Food Friday


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May 13th
10:25 PM EST
May 4th
6:31 PM EST
I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.
-Albert Einstein

I am enough of an artist to draw freely upon my imagination. Imagination is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world.

-Albert Einstein

April 29th
7:21 PM EST
April 7th
7:19 PM EST
"People always make the mistake of thinking art is created for them. But really, art is a private language for sophisticates to congratulate themselves on their superiority to the rest of the world. As my artist’s statement explains, my work is utterly incomprehensible and is therefore full of deep significance."
—  Calvin
April 4th
5:29 PM EST
Wow Wednesday - The Dragon Blood Tree
A tree that’s shaped like an umbrella, bleeds a blood red sap, and is only found on one island off the coast of the Arabian Peninsula.
The varnish for the Red Violin was likely made with Dragon’s Blood. It is still used to varnish violins to this day.

Wow Wednesday - The Dragon Blood Tree

A tree that’s shaped like an umbrella, bleeds a blood red sap, and is only found on one island off the coast of the Arabian Peninsula.

The varnish for the Red Violin was likely made with Dragon’s Blood. It is still used to varnish violins to this day.

March 28th
4:51 PM EST
Via
Play with your food

Play with your food

March 19th
6:00 PM EST
made from shattered CDs

made from shattered CDs

February 15th
5:31 PM EST
Wow Wednesday
Andrea Pozzo was an Italian Jesuit Brother, Baroque painter and architect, decorator, stage designer, and art theoretician. He was best known for his grandiose frescoes using illusionistic technique called quadratura, in which architecture and fancy are intermixed. His masterpiece is the nave ceiling of the Church of Sant’Ignazio in Rome. Through his techniques, he has become one of the most remarkable figures of the Baroque period.
His masterpiece, the illusory perspectives in frescoes of the dome, the apse and the ceiling of Rome’s Jesuit church of Sant’Ignazio were painted between 1685–1694 and are a remarkable and emblematic creation of High Roman Baroque. For several generations, they set the standard for the decoration of Late Baroque ceiling frescos throughhout Catholic Europe.
On the flat ceiling he painted an allegory of the Apotheosis of S. Ignatius, in breathtaking perspective. The painting, 17 m (55.7 ft) in diameter, is devised to make an observer, looking from a spot marked by a brass disc set into the floor of the nave, seem to see a lofty vaulted roof decorated by statues, while in fact the ceiling is flat. The painting celebrates the missionary spirit of two centuries of adventurous apostolic spirit of Jesuit explorers and missionaries 

Wow Wednesday

Andrea Pozzo was an Italian Jesuit Brother, Baroque painter and architect, decorator, stage designer, and art theoretician. He was best known for his grandiose frescoes using illusionistic technique called quadratura, in which architecture and fancy are intermixed. His masterpiece is the nave ceiling of the Church of Sant’Ignazio in Rome. Through his techniques, he has become one of the most remarkable figures of the Baroque period.

His masterpiece, the illusory perspectives in frescoes of the dome, the apse and the ceiling of Rome’s Jesuit church of Sant’Ignazio were painted between 1685–1694 and are a remarkable and emblematic creation of High Roman Baroque. For several generations, they set the standard for the decoration of Late Baroque ceiling frescos throughhout Catholic Europe.

On the flat ceiling he painted an allegory of the Apotheosis of S. Ignatius, in breathtaking perspective. The painting, 17 m (55.7 ft) in diameter, is devised to make an observer, looking from a spot marked by a brass disc set into the floor of the nave, seem to see a lofty vaulted roof decorated by statues, while in fact the ceiling is flat. The painting celebrates the missionary spirit of two centuries of adventurous apostolic spirit of Jesuit explorers and missionaries 

February 13th
6:36 PM EST
Via

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“Goth Girl” by Kevin Francis Gray