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Linus Ogalsbee Linus Ogalsbee Plus Member
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Scifi Spectre

Sketchbook drawing

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Dean C. Graf Dean C. Graf Plus Member
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Mud Prints & Sacred Transitions
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Sometimes, a good goodbye is also a fresh hello. As we wrapped up our "Sacred Spaces" paintings, I asked our student teacher to design a one-day project—something playful, earthy, and engaging to ease the class into her care. She brought mud. Literally. Using mud and simple stencils, students pressed images—flowers, insects, wings—onto the sidewalk behind our school. There's something timeless about making marks with the ground itself. It felt ancient and immediate at the same time. These prints won’t last long, but maybe that’s the point. A fleeting image, a shared laugh, a new hand guiding the next phase of learning. Art is about making marks. Not all of them need to be permanent.

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Annie Tate Annie Tate Plus Member
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Fuschia

Fuschia flowers from the garden which are a favourite with the New Holland Honeyeaters.

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Annie Tate Annie Tate Plus Member
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Pine Needles

There are only a few lovely large pine trees near my home in the Southwest of Western Australia. This little sprig was found on a walk where there was only the one pine tree in amongst the other trees.

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Annie Tate Annie Tate Plus Member
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Stones of the Earth

Abstract line drawing while thinking about the different rock formations found in caves, cliffs, hills and those in my rock collection.

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Ying Z Ying Z Plus Member
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My babies when they were little

Pen and watercolor

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Lana Lana Plus Member
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rainbow uni

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Lana Lana Plus Member
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ADORABLE RAINBOW GIRL (this is not the cotton candy girl)

EEEEEEK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Lana Lana Plus Member
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Fruits! And veggies?

WHO LIVES IN A PINEAPPLE UNDER THE SEA! SPONGEBOB SQUARE PANTS!

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DeeDee  Joseph DeeDee Joseph
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2/13 of my sketchbook

Random doodles of my sketchbook

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Sophie Di Ciommo Sophie Di Ciommo
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sketch

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Darién diaz Darién diaz
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Fruitecember Day 11: tree

para el día 11 de Fruitecember hoy le toca a árbol para este día decidí dibujar a Applejack enfrente de un árbol lleno de manzanas para cosechar

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Noodledoodle Noodledoodle
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1103

Ghost?

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Rose Castellani Rose Castellani
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Cowboy the fish

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Diana Radulescu Diana Radulescu
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Corporate Social Responsibility Initiatives at Telf AG

Discover Telf AG’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives and their impact on the community and environment. Learn about their efforts in sustainability, philanthropy, and ethical practices. Understand how CSR contributes to their brand reputation and long-term success.

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Darién diaz Darién diaz
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Week of pets Day 6: pinky

For this Sixth day of this week about pets today it's the turn of the Chihuahua dog owned by Isabella who, like Perry the platypus, although he seems like a normal pet, is actually a secret agent, that is, Pinky the Chihuahua

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DeeDee  Joseph DeeDee Joseph
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My proudest work

Jules_sp Ocs, learning different body types is hard but better than changing their overall shape to be "easy"

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Darién diaz Darién diaz
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Juneforest Day 14: water

for the 14th of Juneforest today it's time for water For this day I decided to draw the otter-like marapets named Quell swimming at the bottom of a river while finding a shell

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Gabriel  Relich Gabriel Relich
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Aliens Respond to the Arecibo Message

It may be a surprise, but I am only now reading 1st book on UFOs ( I have been mostly interested in aliens as fiction or in ttRPGs). I just learned about the Arecibo Message. Frank Drake sent a message of 1679 bits to his fellow UFO friends and said that this was a mathematical message he wanted to send to the aliens. While not all cultures share language, we all share math. To test if it was decode-able, he asked them to figure out what it meant with no other context. They failed. So he sent it to more UFO friends. They failed, too. So he put it in a decoder magazine and got exactly one correct answer from an electrician. 1679 is the product of two semi-prime numbers, which should get you to realize it’s a 23 *73 picture. Bu needless to say if the interpretation rate was that low amongst earthlings, the hopes for alien communication seemed dim. Especially since the message will take 25K years to arrive. But we do have C’therax and Friends’ take above – admittedly the DNA double helix (blue) does look like a butterflyish thing.

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Chiara Orlandini Chiara Orlandini
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Self-portrait  -  Olfaction

Se riesco ad accettare che il mio mondo interiore può essere estremamente vulnerabile e che forse posso cadere mille volte, in cui mi sembra di essermi dimenticata tutto quello che ho imparato, ma altrettante sono le volte in cui ci provo, allora del fallimento poco importa. È solo una salita, e abbassando le aspettative verso la presunta performance che dovrei avere, posso perdonarmi anche quando proprio non vorrei, anche quando tutto quello che detesto di me viene a galla, anche quando cado troppe volte nelle stesse buche, quando penso troppo e la mente diventa un groviglio confuso dal quale vorrei scappare, quando mi deprimo troppo e respirare sembra insostenibile, quando perdo ogni speranza nella mia capacità di vincere le crisi, quando vorrei piangere, ma mi dimentico come si fa.

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N/A N/A
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Golden Butterfly

This is my first time using highlights on art so it looks really weird with the placement :p I used the symmetry tool on sketchbook

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Himanshu Goyal Himanshu Goyal
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BOSS

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Spearmint Chalk Spearmint Chalk
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Gender Conceptualization

I highly recommend the book, Gender and Competition: How Men and Women Approach Work and Play Differently, by Kathleen J. DeBoer. In it, among other things, she elucidates that those with a conceptually masculine perspective (regardless of sex) are drawn to thinking of the world in hierarchies, which I have represented here with a triangle in the mind of the spotter on the left. She elaborates that those with a conceptually feminine perspective (again, regardless of sex) are draw to thinking of the world in webs, which I have represented here with a circle. Those that think more masculine-ly are more likely to expect beginners in a sport or field to prove themselves in the group. They will often not "hold their punches" (i.e. curb their ability) to make newcomers comfortable. All members of the group are expected to "earn their keep," in a sense. When a member of the group exceeds expectations, they move up in the hierarchy. Contrary to that, those that think more feminine-ly likely show acceptance and approval to beginners in order to foster an environment in which they will perform. They will often adjust their skills so that newcomers can more readily "keep up." When a member of the group exceeds expectations, they are expected to raise the status of the group as a whole. The playing field is "flattened" in that sense. I am not advocating for either perspective, but I will share that I have a more conceptually feminine perspective, and that I have previously left groups whose members have a more masculine perspective. Kathleen's book really helped me personally to understand the motivations of people that I genuinely did not understand prior to reading the book. It put a lot into perspective for me, and I hold fewer grudges these days. Cheers, fam~

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Spearmint Chalk Spearmint Chalk
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The Fall of the Tower of Babble

I take a lot of Genesis as an allegory for birth and maturation, both individually and collectively. The Garden of Eden could easily be interpreted as the womb, and we are all cast out of it at some point. Genesis 2:24 says "This is why a man leaves his father and mother and bonds with his wife, and they become one flesh." Though people use this passage to refer to the tradition of marriage, I think that it speaks to something much, much deeper than that. Literally, when two people copulate, they create a child that is of one flesh. They do not "become one flesh" because they engage in a ritual institution and are now "to be viewed as comprising a single identity," but they literally become one flesh because their genetic compositions are joined into a new being (Mark 10:8 and the two shall become one flesh.’ So they are no longer two but one flesh. 9 What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.”). That being said, I read somewhere once that babies born in every part of the world make phonetic sounds from pretty much every language in the world. It is only after a period of time that they start to key in on certain sounds that the people around them are making, and it is only after that that children key in enough to start developing more advanced language skills (typically). However, in this original state, there is a freedom. There are no assumptions. There is an innocence in that state. There is a lack of judgement. There comes a point at which babies/young children begin to mimic and to incorporate what they are experiencing from the creatures around them into themselves. To small creatures with an undeveloped sense of self or reality, the caregivers around them may as well be gods, at least from their perspective. They will learn from these gods around them and will begin to embody their cultural beliefs, their language, their idiosyncrasies, and their perceptions, often on a deeply unconscious level. Adults contribute to that quite thoroughly and somewhat consciously. (Genesis 1:26 Then God said, “Let Us make mankind in Our image, according to Our likeness..") (Genesis 11:7 7 Go to, let us go down, and there confound their language, that they may not understand one another's speech.) In our own way as individuals, we are each a Tower of Babel, and at some point, for each of us, that Tower fell. Barriers to communication of so many kinds were created for and/or by us. Perhaps we still spend time constructing new barriers and thinking up new ways to distance ourselves from the rest of our kind. I chose to use the phrase "materialism" to express how children engender these attributes of caregivers and others alike. However, this can easily be exchanged for a phrase like "socialism," or "corporate capitalism," or nearly any other thing that you can probably think of. Children are like sponges. They soak up even more than we realize. Most widespread religions in the world have some form of renunciation belief or ritual wherein an individual must 'cast off' the old self and put on the new. This is because, regardless of where or when a child is born in the world, the perspectives of the people around them raising them will likely leave much to be desired. It is necessary for beings to continue to learn, and this often entails a serious consideration of what was instilled into them at an earlier time. It is quintessential that we question and evaluate these things since the state of the world will have changed by the time that we reach maturation. The ideas that people gave us may apply to a world that is already different. The story of the Tower of Babel may refer to a state that earlier humans lived in, perhaps on a shared continent, in which the manners in which they communicated were similar. Then, at some point, perhaps these same peoples went off on their travels and developed new languages. In a funny way, we seem to do that as individuals. At some point, we strike out on our own, even if only a little. Though we may differ on surface level behaviors and in the symbols that we use to describe the human experience, human beings are more or less fundamentally the same. We let our differences create so, so, so many barriers between ourselves and other beings. Just think of all of the harm that things like xenophobia, racism, intolerance, and a lack of an ability to communicate verbally with one another have done to our species. Even beyond that, just think of how easily we dismiss the inner lives and inner experiences of creatures different than ourselves simply because they do not communicate verbally with us in our preferred tongue. Research is overwhelmingly in support of other beings communicating with others of their kind, whether we as individuals acknowledge it or not.. Some of us are just really into denial about it. We could achieve remarkably wonderful things, if only we would learn to recognize the similarities of our experiences. (Matthew 19:6 So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.”)

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Birladeanu Andrei Birladeanu Andrei
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Power of the seal

Drawing done on A6 sketch paper 90 g/m2 using Uni pin fineliners, pen ink and green crayon. Started drawing pointy corners and areas to fill later and along the way I got inspired to do something similar to the ring of Green Lantern from DC. A friend of mine said the drawing makes her think of energy and fury.

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Rafael Mir Rafael Mir
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Tall astronaut

Image inspired in a song about an strange and introvert astronaut who lives in his little island.

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BiancaChiorescuArt BiancaChiorescuArt
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Sketchbook page

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Preeta Preeta
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Bouquet of Peonies

Loose watercolor Floral

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Rupali Roy Choudhury Rupali Roy Choudhury
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Children Books Illustration

A child enjoying the night sky with her flower buddy

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Veridiflore Veridiflore
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Vanitas is a HOOMAN???

Hi! Here's a watercolor pencil, pastel, & colored pencil drawing of our fave boys Vanitas and Noe!!

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