monsoon_sadness: Visit to The gates of hell, Auguste Rodin #RodinSculptureGarden
monsoon_sadness: Native American art, Cantor Arts
monsoon_sadness: Giuseppe Arcimboldo - Summer1572 at Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, California
monsoon_sadness: Giuseppe Arcimboldo - Spring, 1572 at Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University, California
monsoon_sadness: Excuse Me I Didn't Mean to Interrupt, 1975 (Ed Ruscha)
monsoon_sadness: ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG Cardbird II
monsoon_sadness: Catch my reflection
monsoon_sadness: Room with a view @CantorArts
monsoon_sadness: Early Picasso painting "Courtesan With a Hat" (1901)
monsoon_sadness: Nice surprise spotting Alexander Calder - Chariot (16 Black Leaves), 1957 @CantorArts after the amazing #Calder exhibit @Tate Modern
monsoon_sadness: Nage people, Flores, Indonesia, 20th C. Equestrian Figure Representing a Male Ancestor, detail (Javd Keda Riding the Male Horse Keda) Wood.
monsoon_sadness: Cantor Arts, Asia
monsoon_sadness: Bronze Buddha (close-up), Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University, California
monsoon_sadness: Bronze Buddha, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University, California
monsoon_sadness: Horse, Bronze, Deborah Butterfield, Cantor Art Museum, Stanford #Amazing
monsoon_sadness: Horse, Bronze, Deborah Butterfield, Cantor Art Museum, Stanford #Amazing
monsoon_sadness: Manuel Neri’s 1981 “Carriona Figure No. 1”, painted marble
monsoon_sadness: Manuel Neri’s 1981 “Carriona Figure No. 1”, painted marble
monsoon_sadness: Joseph Kosuth: Nothing, 1968
monsoon_sadness: Claes Oldenburg’s sculpture “Soft Inverted Q” at the Cantor Arts Center, #Stanford @CantorArts
monsoon_sadness: The story of The Kiss - Did you know #Rodin’s paramours represent a pair of doomed adulterers from Dante’s Infern o? @CantorArts #Stanford
monsoon_sadness: Rodin @CantorArts
monsoon_sadness: Blue Skies, Palm Trees & @CantorArts #WelcomeToSanFran 🌴☀️🎨
monsoon_sadness: Blue Skies, Palm Trees #WelcomeToSanFran 🌴☀️
monsoon_sadness: Talk nerdy to me #Always
monsoon_sadness: Hoover Tower is a 285 feet (87m) tall structure on the Stanford campus
monsoon_sadness: Nuu-chah-nulth style pole, Boo-Qwilla by Art Thompson
monsoon_sadness: Boo-Qwilla by Art Thompson #TotemPole
monsoon_sadness: Art Thompson finished the Nuu-chah-nulth style pole, titled Boo-Qwilla, in 1995