Casting quarters into wells that hold our dreams

My name is Zachary Joseph Prevost. I no longer possess the proper words to describe myself, so you may garner whatever personal knowledge you can manage from this random conglomeration of photos, music, and personal poetry and writings. Try to enjoy yourself. But if you don't, I don't give a damn. Ta-ta.


just-art:

The Projectionist by Eric Fan

Filed in: Eric Fan art Illustration

467 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

The Projectionist by Eric Fan

Filed in: Art Maja Wrońska Illustration painting

2,429 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

Watercolors by Maja Wrońska


Filed in: Illustration Claire Roe Art

123 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

Illustrations : by Claire Roe 


Filed in: Jennifer Kraska art illustration watercolor animals

652 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

Watercolor by Jennifer Kraska


Filed in: tim mcdonagh art Illustration

182 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

New released artworks by Tim McDonagh

Artist’s: Blog / Website / Behance


just-art:

keep the flames

by Alex Ferreiro an illustrator living and working in Barcelona, Spain.

artist’s: Blog / Site / Flickr / Facebook

Filed in: alex ferreiro art Illustration keep the flames

163 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

keep the flames
by Alex Ferreiro an illustrator living and working in Barcelona, Spain.
artist’s: Blog / Site / Flickr / Facebook

(via luckyeahshelsilverstein)

Filed in: reblog art

388 notes

source: thenewinquiry


just-art:

Sauvage by Gaetan Henrioux

I love lions

Filed in: Gaetan Henrioux art painting

207 notes

source: just-art

just-art:

Sauvage by Gaetan Henrioux

I love lions

Filed in: illustration art digital

6,792 notes

source: adamtanart


Filed in: van gogh quote art lady peasant theo vincent van gogh

5 notes

source: awkward-coffee

Vincent Van Gogh, excerpt from a letter to his brother Theo, 30 April 1885:

anastasia-e:

I think a peasant girl is more beautiful than a lady, in her dusty, patched blue skirt and bodice, which get the most delicate hues from weather, wind, and sun. But if she puts on a lady’s dress, she loses her peculiar charm. A peasant is more real in his fustian clothes in the fields than when he goes out to church on Sunday in a kind of dress coat.