![]() The pair have seemingly gotten closer in recent weeks after the “Good American” founder rushed to Thompson’s side following the death of his mother, Andrea Thompson, in January. One thing Kardashian took to the birthday bash that she didn’t show online was her apparent plus one: ex-boyfriend Tristan Thompson.Īlthough the former couple arrived separately at the Nice Guy in West Hollywood, fans are convinced the pair are back together given their tumultuous on-again, off-again relationship. ![]() khloekardashian/Instagram Kardashian was spotted with ex Tristan Thompson over the weekend. 3 pix □♀️,” a fan requested once again, as another asked, “Are y’all seeing what I’m seeing □.” This isn’t the first time Kardashian has been caught editing her photos. However, the snaps still appeared to be heavily retouched, especially the third photo in the carousel in which the foil in the background was noticeably warped to whittle down her waist. “Shimmer and Shine Baby! It’s a must for the twins 40th birthday □✨,” she captioned the flicks. Ricardo Horatio Nelson Fans also noticed the reality TV star’s glutes and legs didn’t match up in one of the snaps. Khloé Kardashian re-uploaded a set of photos to Instagram Sunday after fans noticed some of the photos were allegedly warped. “The aluminium foil in the background to cover the photoshop □□,” another joked about the metallic background, while a third added, “honey wake up new khloe kardashian face just dropped.”Īfter fixing some of the obvious errors, Kardashian - who is no stranger when it comes to Photoshop fails - shared news photos from BFFs Malika Haqq and Khadijah Shaye Haqq’s birthday party to her feed. We recently caught up with the two recent grads as they were dipping a toe into the contemporary art world and looking for new studio space.A post shared by Khloé Kardashian who tf photoshops their pics so badly,” one user tweeted alongside a close-up of Kardashian’s warped leg. The two work at an increasingly trafficked intersection where photography, styling, art and design meet, which allows creators to control both the product and the way it's presented - both the input and the output, as it were, which is where their clever studio name comes from. In some ways, the work of the Danish-Swiss duo Putput could be considered a response to sites like this one: If we're constantly bombarded by scrolls of images, the two designers seem to ask, how can we be convinced to reconsider objects that at first glance seem so quaintly familiar? Projects like their Popsicle series (above), which found the icy treats replaced by scrubbing sponges, or Inflorescence - for which the two employed the visual language of still life to depict cleaning implements as potted plants - play with subverting our expectations in a way that could seem cliché if the resulting images weren't so exceedingly lovely. Background and white highlights are fresh, top and bottom are. Which is exactly the kind of self-referential bizarreness I really need right now. See Instagram photos and videos from Warped Reality Tattoo (warpedrealitytattoo). There’s even an image below that creates an entirely new “sculpture” out of a photo of an artist sculpting clay. ![]() Yet there’s actually more going on in Hauser’s images than just a poetic manipulation of classical sculptures in a confusing digital age. He’s making artifacts look like contemporary art, but he’s also making contemporary art look like artifacts - one piece, for example, being a Viktor and Rolf runway dress rendered as crumbling stone - as well as photographing clay sculptures he himself has made that are based on those artifacts and non-artifacts. And I liked it not only because it was weird and disorienting, but because I had rarely seen that kind of digital technique deployed to such beautiful results. ![]() When I first discovered the Dutch artist Koen Hauser, and his Skulptura series in particular, that’s how I viewed the work - as moments of disrupted reality, primarily in the form of warps and swirls edited into photos of artworks and artifacts taken from old books and museum archives. Some do that through self-care, others through TV binges for me, it’s been a gravitation towards the strange and surreal, and finding funny little moments of disrupted reality to distract me from actual reality. With the state of the world the way it is right now, being present and aware is especially important, but so is finding moments of escape. ![]()
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