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Baltimore Artist Hangs Dolls From Tree To Represent Black Men Who Are Being 'Lynched, Killed And Murdered Legally'

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When Walter Scott was shot and killed by a police officer in South Carolina earlier this month, artist Loring Cornish closed his gallery and began working on a new exhibition outside of his work studio in Baltimore, Maryland.

“I am in mourning for all of the black men that are dying needlessly, and the United States of America is doing nothing about it. And it seems like we can do nothing about police brutality,” he told Baltimore NBC affiliate WBAL.

The deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Akai Gurley, Tamir Rice and, sadly, many others have spurred nationwide protests and brought the issue of police brutality to the forefront of America’s consciousness in the past year.

But Cornish is protesting in his own way -- he grabbed some baby dolls, painted them black and hanged them from a tree in front of his studio.

“I wanted to make a statement. I wanted to show people exactly what's going on with a figure of something that I've been feeling. It’s pretty much death. We're being killed like innocent babies,” he said. “Who should get shot eight times?”

The bold exhibit has gotten mixed reviews from the community.

Warning: Some readers may find the following images disturbing.









Baltimore resident Michael Scott told WBAL he believed the exhibit was successful in getting the message across but criticized that it was “a bit loud.” Others found it enlightening.

"I think everybody should wake up to it, because that's what's happening. It's happening everywhere, but the thing about it is that it’s been going on. It's just now coming to TV," Jonathan Esters, another resident, said.

The chance of the public never knowing the truth about Scott's shooting without video is a point many Americans are making after the footage was released.

Cornish said he hanged the dolls as a visual representation of what some black Americans are currently feeling given the number of black men who have died because of alleged police violence.

“We’re feeling this. This is not something we should just gloss over. We’re actually feeling death in our community,” he said. “We are being lynched, killed and murdered legally in the United States.”

H/T WBAL

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Artists Behind Edward Snowden Bust Ask NYPD To Give Them Back Their Art

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NEW YORK (AP) — The mysterious artists who planted a bust of Edward Snowden on a Revolutionary War monument now want to free their sculpture from police custody and display it again, saying it was intended as a thought-provoking "gift to the city."

The artists are applying for permission to show parkgoers their likeness of the former National Security Agency secret-leaker, their lawyer, Ronald Kuby, told police in a letter Tuesday. In the meantime, a Manhattan gallery wants to show the sculpture next month. "We feel the piece would offer a great deal of good" and reflect the city's history as a home for free thinkers if exhibited through a temporary art-in-parks program, the artists — who have kept their identity secret — said in a statement Tuesday.

Police said they're holding the sculpture while investigating its unauthorized, dark-of-night appearance April 6 in Fort Greene Park; it was removed within hours. Deputy Chief Kim Royster wouldn't comment on the status of the probe but noted that police may return confiscated property after investigations conclude.

The 4-foot-high, 100-pound, fiberglass-reinforced cement bust of Snowden, who is living in exile in Russia after divulging secret U.S. government collection of phone records, turned up on a monument that honors American captives who died on British prison ships during the Revolutionary War. The three artists say they considered the bust "a gift to the city" that could spur discussion about American ideals, values and heroes.

Parks officials and police didn't see it that way.

"The object was erected in the park without permission or authority," Royster said in an email.

The city Parks Department didn't respond to a request for comment on the artists' bid for permission to display the sculpture in future.

Parks activist Geoffrey Croft feels the bust deserves a place in the city's public space, regardless how viewers may feel about Snowden.

"New York City has a long, storied history of art and dissention," said Croft, who heads NYC Parks Advocates, a nonprofit group.

After all, the "Charging Bull" statue that has now become a symbol of Wall Street was an artist's surprise, deposited overnight outside the New York Stock Exchange in 1989. City officials ultimately accepted it and installed it nearby.

For now, downtown Manhattan gallery Postmasters hopes to show the Snowden bust next month.

"It's a very interesting effort and gesture," both in its subject and its unauthorized unveiling, said co-founder Magdalena Sawon.

She doesn't know who the artists are, she said.

___

Reach Jennifer Peltz on Twitter @ jennpeltz.

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This Proposal Photo Was Shot Outside In The Middle Of Winter

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Earlier this year, New York City photographer Justin Bettman received a romantic email from a stranger named Jose, asking him to help plan and execute a surprise marriage proposal for his girlfriend on Valentine's Day.

Bettman is the man behind the #SetintheStreet photo project, in which he builds sets on city sidewalks with unwanted or thrown away materials and furniture. Afterwards, he leaves the sets up so pedestrians can take pictures with them and share them on social media.

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Credit: Justin Bettman

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Credit: Justin Bettman

For the proposal location, he and Jose decided on the edge of the water in Williamsburg, Brooklyn because that's where the couple had their first date. But how did they get Jose's unsuspecting girlfriend to play along?

"The story we came up with was that Jose submitted himself for a photo shoot casting and out of hundreds of people, he was picked," Bettman explained to The Huffington Post. "He told his girlfriend that we needed another model, so she was asked to fill in. I did a normal photo shoot of dining room scenes and then asked him if he had any poses he wanted to try. At that point, he got down on one knee, pulled out the ring, and popped the question."

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Credit: Justin Bettman

"I had never witnessed a proposal before and seeing it happen in front of me was pretty surreal," Bettman said. "Shooting the proposal was interesting because I was pretty far from him but still felt all the emotions in the air on that cold winter morning."

It took the artist about six weeks to find all the furniture for the shoot and about two and a half hours to build the set that February morning. Bettman used materials found on Craigslist and the sidewalk, in addition to items from his friends' apartments.

Watch the sweet proposal video above. You can check out more of the artist's work here.

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Buddhist, Hindu Deities Come Alive In Brilliant, Mythological Artwork

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Mandala Publishing, a branch of multimedia publishing company Insight Editions LP, released two new poster collections on April 14 that illuminate some of the sacred and elaborate stories of Buddhism and Hinduism.

Celestial Gallery: The Poster Collection, Volume I contains 40 posters painted by artist Romio Shrestha, who specializes in the sacred artwork of Tibetan Buddhist. His paintings, according to Mandala Publishing, are intended to invite viewers into meditation and reflection.

The other poster collection, Gods in Print: The Krishna Poster Collection, draws from another Mandala Publishing book on Indian mythological art and also features 40 removable posters painted by various artists.

These paintings are a feast for the eyes, bringing to life the stories of Vishnu, Rama, the Buddha and more. See a sampling of the posters below, with captions from Mandala Publishing's original hardcover books.

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10 Of New York's Sexiest Male Dancers Will Drop Trou For Broadway Bares Solo Strips 2015

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Ten of Broadway's sexiest male dancers are set to drop trou for a sizzling benefit this May.

Smash shows like "The Lion King," "Wicked" and "Jersey Boys" are among those that will represented by performers in Broadway Bares Solo Strips, which hits New York's 42West on May 10.

Hosted by "Matilda" star Lesli Margherita and helmed by Tony Spinosa, the evening will comprise "10 solo, choreographed stripteases," with proceeds benefiting Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS (BC/EFA).

The show is essentially a teaser for Broadway Bares: Top Bottoms of Burlesque, which hits New York's Hammerstein Ballroom June 21. Prior to that, the Bares crew will head to the beach for Broadway Bares Fire Island.

Head here for more information on this year's Broadway Bares Solo Strips, and be sure to take a look at the teaser video above and photos below.


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'Orange Is The New Black' Releases Season 3 Clip As Show Gets Renewed For Fourth Season

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Wednesday brings "Orange Is the New Black" fans some good news, and some much-debated news. Netflix renewed the comedy-drama for a fourth season, but also released a new clip from the upcoming third season about a character's fate.

The Season 2 finale of the show left fans with a major cliffhanger: is Vee alive or dead? The conniving inmate was hit by a speeding van in the final moments of the episode, leaving many to think she's gone for good. (But then again, Netflix's "House of Cards" teased a character's fate as well, so maybe she will return?) Some fans are also convinced they saw Vee in the background of the Season 3 trailer.

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Image via Tumblr

To make matters more uncertain, a new clip from Season 3 shows Poussey and Crazy Eyes getting into a cafeteria argument when Poussey claims Vee was "smooshed like a bug on a windshield." Crazy Eyes is super adamant that Vee is coming back for her, though. Sadly there's no pie throwing, but at least we have a fourth season to look forward to for that.




"Orange Is the New Black" Season 3 hits Netflix on June 12.

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David Chase Analyzes 'The Sopranos' Ending, Had No Idea It Would Be So Debated

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The ending of "The Sopranos" is pretty much the "Inception" of the small screen, leaving TV fans forever perplexed over those ambiguous final moments. Creator of the HBO hit, David Chase, has talked about the finale a lot since it aired in 2007, but has always been careful to never fully explain Tony's fate.

In a recent interview with the Director's Guild of America, Chase returned to the famous final scene to analyze it shot-by-shot. No, he still didn't explain whether or not Tony is dead, but it's an interesting read for any "Sopranos" fan. Chase, who directed the final episode, talked about his use of Tony's P.O.V. shots, the selection of music (Journey's "Don't Stop Believin'," of course), how he used editing to build tension and that he had no idea the ending would cause such debate.

Last year, Chase's interview with Vox stirred some controversy when it appeared that the creator had finally revealed Tony's fate. The author claimed Chase had told her that Tony was in fact still alive after the famous cut-to-black ending, but a rep for Chase later clarified that Vox had "misconstrued" his words.

While we may never know the real answer, that doesn't matter for Chase. At the end of his DGA interview, he left us just where he did eight years ago: with the words of Steve Perry. "Life is short," Chase said of the episode's final shot of James Gandolfini. "Either it ends here for Tony or some other time. But in spite of that, it's really worth it. So don't stop believing."

For the full interview, head to DGA.

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'Take Back Postpartum' Instagram Encourages Parents To Redefine Life After Birth

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Shortly before mom blogger and public speaker January Harshe gave birth to her sixth child in February, she discovered that some of the content under the Instagram hashtag #postpartum was unfriendly towards new moms. There she found "spam posts and gimmicks" and other decidedly not body positive images, she told The Huffington Post.

Harshe chronicled the phenomenon on her personal blog, and asked her fellow parents to "take back" the word postpartum and redefine what it represents in the social media sphere. She encouraged parents to share their honest and inclusive #postpartum images on her personal accounts -- as well as the Instagram account for her website Birth Without Fear. She even created the Instragram account "Take Back Postpartum" and a new callout with the hashtag #takebackpostpartum.

"Postpartum is full of hormones, little sleep, survival mode, and figuring out a million different things with our new babies (and possibly toddlers and teenagers on top of it)," she wrote, adding, "It’s trying to breastfeed, getting a groove back in your marriage or relationship, and our bodies taking time to heal. It’s a roller coaster ride that is personal and different to each person and family going through it, but is also similar enough that most of us can relate on some level."







"By showing variations of 'normal' in not only pregnancy and birth, but postpartum and motherhood, we can be more accepting of ourselves and each other," the mom told The Huffington Post. "Life and motherhood are hard even when blessed. We need support not shaming."






The project is very personal for Harshe. "I used to see the world through the mind of a 'fat' woman. I realized as I shared my journey of self acceptance, that all women struggle," she said. "'Fat' is no longer a shameful word to me. I am simply me. A woman, a mother, beautiful. My hope is that by women changing how they feel about themselves they will be more loving not just to themselves, but to other women as well. We are more powerful and amazing than we realize."

Scroll down and visit the Take Back Postpartum Instagram to see real moms' empowering photos of life after birth.






















H/T Today



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'Suffragette' Teaser Previews The Great Feminist Movie Of The Year

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"Suffragette" sounds like our favorite feminist movie of 2015: Carey Mulligan, Meryl Streep and Helena Bonham Carter star in a film about the fight for women's voting rights and the untold story of the "real foot soldiers" of the Suffragette movement. The first 30-second spot shows a radical women's movement and one brilliant line from Streep: "Never surrender. Never give up the fight." Yes please. The official synopsis states:

These women were not primarily from the genteel educated classes, they were working women who had seen peaceful protest achieve nothing. Radicalised and turning to violence as the only route to change, they were willing to lose everything in their fight for equality – their jobs, their homes, their children and their lives.


Brendan Gleeson, Anne-Marie Duff and Ben Whishsaw also star. "Suffragette" is due to hit theaters on Oct. 23, just in time to make it a likely Oscar contender.

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Watch A Few Furry Friends Scamper About For Snacks In This Exclusive 'Monkey Kingdom' Clip

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Ever since James Earl Jones taught us all about the planet's wildlife in 2008's "Earth," Disneynature has cranked out one glossy nature documentary after the next. Its eighth outing, "Monkey Kingdom," hits theaters on Friday. Chronicling a mama primate (technically a toque macaque) rebuilding her family's home after a neighboring tribe takes over, the film is narrated by Tina Fey and has earned Jane Goodall's coveted stamp of approval. The Huffington Post has an exclusive clip in which a bushel of furry friends enter the "urban jungle" to scout out a few snacks:




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Making Art From Trash In The High Desert

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The Noah Purifoy Outdoor Desert Art Museum is a case study in resilience. Situated 10 miles north of Joshua Tree National Park, 10 miles south of the ominously fenced Marine Air Ground Task Force Training Command (your guess is as good as mine), this is real-deal desert country. The Mojave, as is the case with virtually all deserts, relentlessly brutalizes everything it touches, living and otherwise. Summer days routinely hover above 100 degrees, and winter nights plummet to below freezing temperatures. At around 3,000 feet above sea level, this is the high desert. And high desert means wind. Bone-rattling, eye-drying, tuck-your-chin-into-your-clavicle-and-pray-it-will-stop kind of wind. The predominant environmental features are enormous mounds of bare rock and innumerable clusters of Yucca brevifolia, the eponymous Joshua Trees, plopped like wooly mammoths amidst the sand.

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Natalie Westling Presents Every Tomboy's Guide To Being A Modern Lady

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One badass chick has resurfaced The Ladies' Book Of Etiquette And Manual Of Politeness to show women how to nail the whole ladylike thing.

In a new video for i-D Magazine, 17-year-old model Natalie Westling reads from a 1950s etiquette book that describes itself as a "complete handbook for the use of a lady in polite society." Westling, however, puts her own spin on how to be a modern lady with style, grace and, of course, badassery.

Westling reads chapters from the book of etiquette aloud, which contain "full directions for manners, dress, conversation" as well as "rules for courtship and kitchen" for the true renaissance woman. Demonstrating each old school tip with a modern spin and a heavy dose of cool, Westling gives these outdated tropes a much-needed upgrade.

Here are a few of our favorite suggestions (ladies, take note):

Chapter One: “Dress”

Polish your silver and gold.


You must know how to sew.


Chapter Two: “The Regal Arena Of The Kitchen”

Make sure your man is well-fed.


Chapter 3: “Courtship And Manners”

Be a good listener.


Remember, always cross your legs in public.



Voilà! You're a lady.

Westling wraps up the video reminding every woman that a true lady "always knows her place."




Who run the world? Ladies.

H/T The Cut

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Incredible Poet Proves Just How Influential Teen Girls Can Be

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“You are the first drop of rain in a hurricane.”

That’s what being a teenage girl means to Clementine von Radics.

The 23-year-old traveling poet performed her spoken word poem, “Advice for Teenage Girls with Wild Ambitions and Trembling Hearts," at the February 2015 Soap Boxing Poetry Slam (watch above). In it, she reflects on the amazing things young girls have accomplished in the past and what they can achieve in the future.

From Anne Frank’s kind words that collided with the cruelty around her to Malala Yousafzai’s brave mission to provide girls with an education, von Radics employed several examples to remind young girls to never underestimate themselves -- even if everyone else does.

“You don’t need to grow up to find greatness,” she said in her poem. “You are so much stronger than the world has ever even told you you could be.”

von Radics, who just released a book, also mentioned writer Mary Shelley. The mind behind “Frankenstein” shook up the literature world years ago, but von Radic's present-day description of her shows just how powerful teenage girls can truly be: “She soon learned little girls with big ideas are much scarier than monsters.”

von Radics also performed the poem at a 2015 Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration. You can watch it here.

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This Couple's Wes Anderson-Inspired Save-The-Date Video Is Wonderful, Whimsical Perfection

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Friends of Jon Sukarangsan and Jess Lau are always calling them the "creative couple." So when it came time to send out save-the-dates for their September 2015 wedding, they knew a run-of-the-mill paper card just wasn't going to cut it.

Instead, the Manhattan couple decided to do something more original. They shot, starred in, directed and edited their own save-the-date video in the style of director Wes Anderson, who is best known for films like "Rushmore," "The Royal Tenenbaums," "Moonrise Kingdom" and "The Grand Budapest Hotel."

"We don't always have the same taste in everything, but one thing we always agree on is that Wes Anderson's aesthetic is brilliant," the bride-to-be told The Huffington Post. "It's his mix of style, music and vintage design. And that amazing color palette! We hope we did it some justice, and definitely took cues from his films, while trying to put our own spin on it."

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Courtesy of the couple

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Courtesy of the couple

The rest of the video is an homage to the couple's interests -- old Hollywood movies, cocktails, traveling and, of course, food. They interspersed those shots with home video footage from vacations they've taken together to places like Newport, Rhode Island, Hudson Valley, New York, The Grenadines and the Virgin Islands.

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Courtesy of the couple

Both the bride- and groom-to-be work in marketing for creative fields and have experience with art directing and styling shoots; Lau is a brand manager at Skinnygirl and Sukarangsan does marketing at Edelman Digital. In her downtime, Lau works as an interior designer and Sukarangsan launched a men's accessories brand on the side.

Now the couple, who got engaged in August 2014, lives together in Battery Park City where much of the video was shot.

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The couple at their engagement shoot | Credit: Audrey Rogers

They first met in 2008 when Lau was the president of a nonprofit that threw social fundraising events for New York City charities. Jon came to one of the events and then decided he wanted to get more involved in the planning side of things. After one such fundraiser, the pair, who was "just friends" at the time, grabbed pizza together. The owner of the restaurant asked Sukarangsan, "Who's that, your wife?" His reply? "Not yet." (For more on their love story, check out this awesome comic that the groom-to-be created for their wedding website.)

"That was pretty much the beginning [of our relationship] and that was five years ago," Lau told HuffPost. "It took about six months of spending time together before we started actually dating. After a while, I grew impatient and just asked Jon if there was something going on here."

The couple plans to tie the knot this fall on September 19, 2015 at Ashokan Dreams Bed & Breakfast in the Catskill Mountains in New York State. If their save-the-date and wedding website are any indication, this is going to be one hell of a wedding.

H/T BuzzFeed

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Photographer Seeks To Normalize Breastfeeding With Striking Outdoor Nursing Photos

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For photographer and mother of two Ivette Ivens, taking pictures of breastfeeding moms has personal meaning. "Every time I nurse my baby with my burp-spotted shirt on and messy hair, I still feel like some kind of superhero, and nursing is my super power," she told The Huffington Post.

Ivens takes her subjects outside to capture them breastfeeding in nature as a reminder that nursing is "a totally normal thing." "I want people to look at it as if it was a cat nursing her baby kittens. Or any other mammal, if you're not a cat person," she said, adding, "Forget the covering up, nursing in a public bathroom, age restrictions. It's between a mother and her child."

The photographer breastfed her older son until he was a little over 3-years-old and still breastfeeds her 10-month-old baby today. "I nursed them both anywhere I wanted. From church to parties, from farmers market to high-end designer stores. I believe that mothers should nurse their little ones whenever they want to," Ivens said. She also believes moms should breastfeed as long as they see fit for their own families. "Children know when it's time to wean off. Mothers do too. Strangers don't know, so they shouldn't care."

Later this year, Ivens will release a photo book titled Breastfeeding Goddesses. It will be available for pre-order on May 3 -- the day of the photographer's "I breastfeed my toddler" art show in Chicago.





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Cody Simpson Breaks Out His Guitar For 'FourFiveSeconds' Acoustic Cover

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Three of music’s biggest artists helped turn “FourFiveSeconds” into a hit. Cody Simpson decided to tackle it using just his voice and a guitar.

During a stop at the SiriusXM studios, the singer performed a cover of the collaboration between Rihanna, Kanye West and Paul McCartney. With his black hat matching his acoustic guitar, Cody kept it simple while adding his signature island vibes to the song.

We’re about four five seconds from having this on repeat.

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Leonardo Da Vinci, The Original Renaissance Man, Would Have Turned 563 Years Old Today

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While to the non-art lovers of the world, April 15 is known primarily as tax day, the culture fiends among us recognize this most holy of holidays as the day a brilliant mind named Leonardo first entered the world -- 563 years ago to be exact.

Today we're celebrating Leonardo da Vinci, artist, scientist, inventor, philosopher and musician extraordinaire. Coinciding with his day of birth, an exhibition entitled "Leonardo da Vinci and the Idea of Beauty" goes on view today at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, featuring a rare variety of drawings from Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, ranging from angelic portraits to scientific renderings.

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Head of a Young Woman (Study for the Angel in the "Virgin of the Rocks"), about 1483-85, Leonardo da Vinci.


Born in 1452 to unmarried parents in Vinci, an area within the territory of Florence, Italy, Leonardo became an apprentice to the sculptor, goldsmith and painter Andrea del Verrocchio at the age of 14. Under Verrochio's tutelage, he discovered an immense talent and insatiable curiosity for the wonders of the world, leading him on a lifelong path filled with art, science and exploration.

From the smallest muscles in the human body to the grandest notions of the universe, Leonardo saw every detail as existing in relationship to the whole. His works maintained the perfect harmony he saw in the cosmos, where the eye could further both art and science through careful observation and eternal inquisitiveness. On this matter, most will agree: Leonardo da Vinci stands out among the most intriguing figures in history.

"Leonardo da Vinci and the Idea of Beauty" runs from April 15 until June 14, 2015, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

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Photographer Gets A Little Too Close To Lion, Escapes With This Stunning Picture

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This is what it looks like to stare danger in the face.

Pakistani photographer Atif Saeed captured this incredible image of a lion at a wildlife park outside of Lahore by slowly creeping out of his car's open door. The 38-year-old told NDTV he sat on the ground, "a stone's throw" from the animal, and snapped a couple of photos, but was forced to retreat "within seconds" when the lion noticed him and leapt in his direction.

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"The Ghost and the Darkness."

"It was a pretty close encounter," Saeed conceded to ABC News. "I was laughing afterwards at the time, but I don't think I'd ever be able to do something like that again."

Saeed retreated to his car, where we hope he locked the doors.

Saeed took the photo in 2012, though it went viral earlier this month. Saeed shared the photo on Facebook in 2013, titling it "Angry king;" In January of this year, he shared it on 500px, calling it "The Ghost and the Darkness."

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Moving Photos Show Native American Children Defending The Earth

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Photographer Tailinh Agoyo believes that even though adults are destroying the earth, children will be the ones to fix the mess they’ve inherited.

“Children are so knowledgeable [about environmental issues],” Agoyo, who is also an actress, told The Huffington Post. “They know what’s going on and they’re more aware and more affected than adults are.”

For the past few months, Agoyo has been documenting this idea through her photo series The Warrior Project, which captures images of Native American children defending the planet. Agoyo, with the help of her creative partner Ryan Begay, has photographed Native children around New Mexico, and in the coming months they plan to photograph more children in states like New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Utah.

Scroll down to see The Warrior Project's photos of Native American children.

The idea for the project came to Agoyo -– who has roots with the Blackfeet and Narragansett tribes -- while discussing environmental issues with her 11-year-old son. She said the pair decided it would be compelling to visually document “the effects of what we’re doing on the environment and what [the world] could look like when they get older and have children.”

Agoyo and her son headed out to a barren location with lots of “dirt and hills and broken down trees," and decided to shoot.

“We were shooting and talking about it, and this look came over his face. And as I was shooting I was like ‘oh my goodness.' He really absorbed all of the information and it’s reflecting on his face so strongly,” said Agoyo.

It wasn’t before long that Agoyo decided she wanted to build on this idea and "travel to different native territories, people affected by the pollution or mining or corporations … and talk to the children.”

While Agoyo says that environmental issues impact all the world’s people, in Native American communities, she argues, “there’s just this tie to the earth … We’re just raised being very in touch with the earth and its rhythms.”

"The children we photograph are nurtured in a culture where the importance of honoring the earth is part of their DNA," Agoyo says on the project's website. "They are not passive victims. They are budding change makers, activists, and empowered leaders. They are warriors of strength, knowledge and ancestral power."

In the future, Agoyo says she wants the project to go global and document children around the world.

Below are some of her photos and the captions she provided.

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14 Stunning Designs That Perfectly Illustrate America's Decades-Long Fascination With Posters

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Uniquely situated at the point where art and consumerism intersect, posters serve a purpose slightly different than other design objects.

In addition to being aesthetically pleasing and eye-catching, they must convey information, be it the title of a summer blockbuster, the location of an upcoming concert, or the reasons why you should buy pricier shampoo. When tasked with this range of roles, poster designers often follow certain rules to effectively captivate passersby. In an upcoming exhibit at New York City's Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, "How Posters Work," curator Ellen Lupton hoped to explain these practices to visitors who admire or covet posters, but don’t necessarily grasp why they’re such intriguing phenomena.

cooper hewitt

“There have been many exhibitions about the history of posters or about different subjects – posters for trains, wars, or movies,” Lupton told The Huffington Post. Instead, she aims to help the public understand visual concepts designers rely on. Perhaps the most important rule of poster-design, according to Lupton: “Simplify.” She cites Lucian Bernhard –- whose iconic images featured a single product atop a pithy slogan –- as the purveyor of this method. A similar approach was taken during the 1968 Paris uprisings -– a single-color image trumpeting a bold message.

As always, there are exceptions; the psychedelic poster art of the '60s is designed to overwhelm the eye. “Designers today continue to experiment with the edges of perception," Lupton said, "using software and visual overload to create restless compositions where the eye has no place to rest.”

Posters have evolved in other ways to adapt to the over-stimulating nature of the age of information –- no longer just static images, they’ve moved off the page, and now take the form of animations and even three-dimensional spaces that viewers can immerse themselves in. Even without trying to stay relevant during a time on online consumerism, the art form persists. This may be because, as Lupton put it, “anyone can make a poster!”

Take a look at a few iconic posters from the last several decades, on view May 9 at Cooper Hewitt:

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