Escopea
"Escopea" is an amalgamation of the words escape and microscopic. More so it is a fusion of the idea of attempting to run off into a fantasy world. However because this is a blog, these photos are only snapshots of my imagined universe. Be my guest and peer through the lens.

A bit about me: Half Danish & half Singaporean but currently in Malaysia. 17

Your welcome to ask me anything, comment on anything and suggest anything.
Escopea
adult-tree:

crying
wipaca:

5-ghosts:

untitled by Öykü Öge on Flickr.


P
ZoomInfo

Elizabeth Bishop with her cat, Minnow, 1938
photos by Louise Crane

Elizabeth Bishop with her cat, Minnow, 1938
photos by Louise Crane

Alex Kanevsky
ZoomInfo

By Renée Louise Anderson (tumblr)

By Renée Louise Anderson (tumblr)
ZoomInfo
artchipel:

Yang Yongliang (b.1980, China) - On the quiet water - Heavenly city
Yang Yongliang’s digital manipulations are clever in their inversion of the imagery of Song dynasty painters and he has created works that are themselves visually attractive. His cold, hard urban images possess a layer of romantic beauty with their mists and towering forms. By making his works “beautiful” he has managed to make them much more than a mockery of modern life. Instead they subtly pose the difficult question of whether urban life can be simultaneously loathsome and possess an intrinsic beauty. Yang carefully made these riffs on Southern Song landscapes because the earlier works have long been regarded in China as a sublime expression of nature’s beauty and mystery. Are Yang’s images meant to be taken as expressions of a city’s beauty or of the terror of urban encroachment. Fantastic rediscovery thanks to OFOTO Gallery. 
Inkjet print on Fine Art Paper© OFOTO Gallery collection
[more Yang Yongliang]
artchipel:

Yang Yongliang (b.1980, China) - On the quiet water - Heavenly city
Yang Yongliang’s digital manipulations are clever in their inversion of the imagery of Song dynasty painters and he has created works that are themselves visually attractive. His cold, hard urban images possess a layer of romantic beauty with their mists and towering forms. By making his works “beautiful” he has managed to make them much more than a mockery of modern life. Instead they subtly pose the difficult question of whether urban life can be simultaneously loathsome and possess an intrinsic beauty. Yang carefully made these riffs on Southern Song landscapes because the earlier works have long been regarded in China as a sublime expression of nature’s beauty and mystery. Are Yang’s images meant to be taken as expressions of a city’s beauty or of the terror of urban encroachment. Fantastic rediscovery thanks to OFOTO Gallery. 
Inkjet print on Fine Art Paper© OFOTO Gallery collection
[more Yang Yongliang]
artchipel:

Yang Yongliang (b.1980, China) - On the quiet water - Heavenly city
Yang Yongliang’s digital manipulations are clever in their inversion of the imagery of Song dynasty painters and he has created works that are themselves visually attractive. His cold, hard urban images possess a layer of romantic beauty with their mists and towering forms. By making his works “beautiful” he has managed to make them much more than a mockery of modern life. Instead they subtly pose the difficult question of whether urban life can be simultaneously loathsome and possess an intrinsic beauty. Yang carefully made these riffs on Southern Song landscapes because the earlier works have long been regarded in China as a sublime expression of nature’s beauty and mystery. Are Yang’s images meant to be taken as expressions of a city’s beauty or of the terror of urban encroachment. Fantastic rediscovery thanks to OFOTO Gallery. 
Inkjet print on Fine Art Paper© OFOTO Gallery collection
[more Yang Yongliang]
axalotls:

l’agonia degli angeli by Atychifobia on Flickr.