First released in 1899, “France in the Year 2000” was a series of postcards that envisioned a future one hundred years ahead.
The country of Iceland wants to help you navigate this crazy stressful time we’re living in with some good old fashioned scream therapy.
And with the twist of a cap, food may never be the same again. IBM’s supercomputer, Watson, can cook.
Puzzle pieces arranged in strangely confusing ways, these ads showcase the painful confusion and fading memory that accompanies Alzheimer’s disease.
Canadian photographer David Johnson has a new take on firework photography, using long exposure to showcase the beauty of the explosions. It has produced some beautiful results.
Classic, memorable paintings from the Prado, Spain’s most famous art museum, have been redone to encapsulate the terror and chaos that climate change is and will bring.
This collection of portraits shows us striking models, giving us a look at African albinism from a unique angle.
Fractals exist everywhere in nature, creating infinite, mind-bending patterns that are even stranger than a casual glance may show.
The very talented Eiko Ojala has a new series that speaks to climate change, and the feelings and perceptions around it.
It’s very easy to get wrapped up in small problems and forget to keep a global perspective, to realize how fortunate most of us truly are. These very sobering and insightful juxtapositions by Uğur Gallenkuş give us a taste of that. Using matched objects and perspective, we see wealth, stability, and even opulence paired with the war-torn equivalent, all in one image.
This tragic case of humans vs. the natural world involves the critically endangered Northern White Rhino, of which two remain, in the entire world. You read that right. One, two. And since they are both females, the species is set to go extinct in the next few years
In a poetic, half-a-lifetime effort, Polish conceptual artist Roman Opalka tried to count to infinity, using his paintbrush. From 1965 until his death in 2011, he patiently and diligently painted consecutive numbers.
You’d most certainly not want to be on the receiving end of this Simbakubwa kutokaafrika, an ancient giant carnivore that lived in Africa, 22 million years ago.
The Weather Channel has begun using immersive mixed reality to showcase some of the weather scenarios we may see in the future, and they’re quite scary, to be honest.
An exceptionally sleek and modern home in Spain makes us wonder, what is too minimal? We explore the Hofmann House.
In a strange and high-tech answer to animal reintroduction to the wild, a reserve in the UK is using ultra-high-definition TVs to show footage of their protected habitat to the animals they’re releasing.
We have no backup planets, no spares. This is the only one. The only one we can call home. This is earth. Please protect it. Original.
In this era of digital-everything, it’s usually the case that many of us are behind on our book reading. No, not the Kindle kind, but the actual, bound paper books of yore.