(Source: instagram.com)
“Encounter,” by Frank Frazetta
Big Hawk (James Gurney)
In the 1960s, NASA had a bunch of dummies working to bring humans to space. Well, it was just two dummies, really. Each ‘Power Driven Articulated Dummy’ was a 230-pound robot that NASA engineers designed to test space suits. One of the dummies now resides at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, and the other was auctioned off.
Popular Science wrote about the dummies back in 1967. Controlled by an operator and driven by a circulatory system of oil inside tubes, each android could mimic 35 human movements, from arm and hand flexing to twisting at the waist. [x]
(via jmdj)
Martin Wiegand
St. George in front of the slain dragonOil on canvas on board, 112 x 84 cm, 1915
Uncredited 1988 cover art to the Polish translation of ‘Men Like Gods,’ by H. G. Wells
(via gammaknights)
Marc Ericksen
Scops Owl in Moonlight, by Ohara Koson, early 1920s
(Source: twitter.com, via japaneseaesthetics)
(via dreamsrecurring)
by Japanese artist Kiyokata Kaburagi, 1920s or 1930s
(Source: twitter.com, via holespoles)