Home Actress Debbie Millman HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers January 2024 Debbie Millman Instagram - I am so thrilled and honored to be joining my dear friend @mariapopova for the 2024 Universe In Verse with my wife @roxanegay74 and my ridiculously talented pal @joanaspolicewoman AND so many artistic and scientific superstars, including @jadabumrad @davidbyrneofficial @poetellenbass @rebeccasolnit and so many more! Come join us in Austin, and while you are there you can see the TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN! Roxane and I missed it when we went eclipse chasing in 2021 so hopefully we’ll see it this time! Repost from @mariapopova • Consider the dazzling odds: Out of the billions upon billions of possible combinations, a planet whose sole satellite is exactly 400 times smaller than its star and exactly 400 times closer, so that each time it passes between the two, it covers the face of the star perfectly, thrusting the planet into midday night, into something surreal and sublime. Randomness seems too small a word for the staggering improbability that is a total solar eclipse. We may call it wonder. We may call it mystery. We may just fall silent before its brutal beauty, the way it presses consciousness against the gun barrel of time. Totality transported Virginia Woolf to “the birth of the world.” Annie Dillard saw in its almost unbearable strangeness a lens on “our complex and inexplicable caring for each other, and for our life together here.” Maria Mitchell, traveling fifteen hundred miles in her Quaker gown to lead an eclipse expedition of the world’s first women astronomers, was stunned by the “inky blackness” and the flowerlike prominences around the Sun’s disc and the silver streamers its corona sent “millions of miles into space” — tendrils of the majesty and mystery of nature, touching for a blink of time the depths of human nature with raw transcendence. On the eve of the 2024 total solar eclipse — the last in North America for twenty years, and the first to sweep so vast a portion of the continent since Maria Mitchell’s day — The Universe in Verse returns to celebrate the majesty and mystery of the cosmos with science and poetry. All details and tickets at themarginalian.org/the-universe-in-verse

Debbie Millman Instagram – I am so thrilled and honored to be joining my dear friend @mariapopova for the 2024 Universe In Verse with my wife @roxanegay74 and my ridiculously talented pal @joanaspolicewoman AND so many artistic and scientific superstars, including @jadabumrad @davidbyrneofficial @poetellenbass @rebeccasolnit and so many more! Come join us in Austin, and while you are there you can see the TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN! Roxane and I missed it when we went eclipse chasing in 2021 so hopefully we’ll see it this time! Repost from @mariapopova • Consider the dazzling odds: Out of the billions upon billions of possible combinations, a planet whose sole satellite is exactly 400 times smaller than its star and exactly 400 times closer, so that each time it passes between the two, it covers the face of the star perfectly, thrusting the planet into midday night, into something surreal and sublime. Randomness seems too small a word for the staggering improbability that is a total solar eclipse. We may call it wonder. We may call it mystery. We may just fall silent before its brutal beauty, the way it presses consciousness against the gun barrel of time. Totality transported Virginia Woolf to “the birth of the world.” Annie Dillard saw in its almost unbearable strangeness a lens on “our complex and inexplicable caring for each other, and for our life together here.” Maria Mitchell, traveling fifteen hundred miles in her Quaker gown to lead an eclipse expedition of the world’s first women astronomers, was stunned by the “inky blackness” and the flowerlike prominences around the Sun’s disc and the silver streamers its corona sent “millions of miles into space” — tendrils of the majesty and mystery of nature, touching for a blink of time the depths of human nature with raw transcendence. On the eve of the 2024 total solar eclipse — the last in North America for twenty years, and the first to sweep so vast a portion of the continent since Maria Mitchell’s day — The Universe in Verse returns to celebrate the majesty and mystery of the cosmos with science and poetry. All details and tickets at themarginalian.org/the-universe-in-verse

Debbie Millman Instagram - I am so thrilled and honored to be joining my dear friend @mariapopova for the 2024 Universe In Verse with my wife @roxanegay74 and my ridiculously talented pal @joanaspolicewoman AND so many artistic and scientific superstars, including @jadabumrad @davidbyrneofficial @poetellenbass @rebeccasolnit and so many more! Come join us in Austin, and while you are there you can see the TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN! Roxane and I missed it when we went eclipse chasing in 2021 so hopefully we’ll see it this time! Repost from @mariapopova • Consider the dazzling odds: Out of the billions upon billions of possible combinations, a planet whose sole satellite is exactly 400 times smaller than its star and exactly 400 times closer, so that each time it passes between the two, it covers the face of the star perfectly, thrusting the planet into midday night, into something surreal and sublime. Randomness seems too small a word for the staggering improbability that is a total solar eclipse. We may call it wonder. We may call it mystery. We may just fall silent before its brutal beauty, the way it presses consciousness against the gun barrel of time. Totality transported Virginia Woolf to “the birth of the world.” Annie Dillard saw in its almost unbearable strangeness a lens on “our complex and inexplicable caring for each other, and for our life together here.” Maria Mitchell, traveling fifteen hundred miles in her Quaker gown to lead an eclipse expedition of the world’s first women astronomers, was stunned by the “inky blackness” and the flowerlike prominences around the Sun’s disc and the silver streamers its corona sent “millions of miles into space” — tendrils of the majesty and mystery of nature, touching for a blink of time the depths of human nature with raw transcendence. On the eve of the 2024 total solar eclipse — the last in North America for twenty years, and the first to sweep so vast a portion of the continent since Maria Mitchell’s day — The Universe in Verse returns to celebrate the majesty and mystery of the cosmos with science and poetry. All details and tickets at themarginalian.org/the-universe-in-verse

Debbie Millman Instagram – I am so thrilled and honored to be joining my dear friend @mariapopova for the 2024 Universe In Verse with my wife @roxanegay74 and my ridiculously talented pal @joanaspolicewoman AND so many artistic and scientific superstars, including @jadabumrad @davidbyrneofficial @poetellenbass @rebeccasolnit and so many more! Come join us in Austin, and while you are there you can see the TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN! Roxane and I missed it when we went eclipse chasing in 2021 so hopefully we’ll see it this time!

Repost from @mariapopova

Consider the dazzling odds: Out of the billions upon billions of possible combinations, a planet whose sole satellite is exactly 400 times smaller than its star and exactly 400 times closer, so that each time it passes between the two, it covers the face of the star perfectly, thrusting the planet into midday night, into something surreal and sublime.

Randomness seems too small a word for the staggering improbability that is a total solar eclipse. We may call it wonder. We may call it mystery. We may just fall silent before its brutal beauty, the way it presses consciousness against the gun barrel of time. Totality transported Virginia Woolf to “the birth of the world.” Annie Dillard saw in its almost unbearable strangeness a lens on “our complex and inexplicable caring for each other, and for our life together here.” Maria Mitchell, traveling fifteen hundred miles in her Quaker gown to lead an eclipse expedition of the world’s first women astronomers, was stunned by the “inky blackness” and the flowerlike prominences around the Sun’s disc and the silver streamers its corona sent “millions of miles into space” — tendrils of the majesty and mystery of nature, touching for a blink of time the depths of human nature with raw transcendence.

On the eve of the 2024 total solar eclipse — the last in North America for twenty years, and the first to sweep so vast a portion of the continent since Maria Mitchell’s day — The Universe in Verse returns to celebrate the majesty and mystery of the cosmos with science and poetry.

All details and tickets at themarginalian.org/the-universe-in-verse | Posted on 17/Jan/2024 00:17:19

Debbie Millman Instagram – Want to learn more about branding? 
Applications are due January 15, 2024 to join the @svabranding program this fall either onsite from our campus or online from your home! For any questions about the program, hybrid technology or application process, you can reach out to our department at branding@sva.edu or DM me here. For more information, please go to the link in my bio or visit our site at branding.sva.edu
Debbie Millman Instagram – This live episode of Design Matters with @thedailyheller and @newyorknico was recorded at the @aigadesign conference in NYC in October, and it is one of my all time favorites. A native New Yorker, my dear friend and mentor Steven Heller is also one of the most influential art directors, design thinkers, and cultural critics in the entire world. He started his illustrious career working for many sixties era counterculture periodicals before joining the New York Times as an Art Director of the Op-Ed page and the book review where he worked for over three decades. In 1997, he became Co-Founder and Co-Chair of the MFA design program at the School of Visual Arts, and also co-founded five other grad programs, including the @svabranding program I run at @svanyc (which was his idea). In addition to writing over 200 books, including his recent splendid memoir, Growing Up Underground, he’s contributed to and edited numerous design publications and is currently the Co-Owner and Editor at Large at PRINT Magazine.

It’s very possible that his love of New York may have washed off on his son Nicolas Heller. Nick is an acclaimed commercial director and documentarian, better known to his two and a half million social media followers as New York Nico, and Nick Heller loves New York City. As the New York Times‘ unofficial talent scout of New York, Nick is known for creating stories that document the real one of a kind people and places in our city, and New York loves Nick Heller right back. In 2023, he was featured on the Why We Love New York Issue of New York Magazine, the Christmas issue of Timeout New York. His commercial clients include Shake Shack, Nike, the New York Knicks, Major League Baseball, Calvin Klein, and Timberland. Nicolas’s love affair with stories has extended into narrative filmmaking seen in his latest short order film Out of Order, which premiered at the 2022 Tribeca Festival. And like father, like Son, his first book, New York Nico and Friends Guide to New York City will be released in 2024. 

I hope you enjoy this episode with two of my favorite people; link to listen is in my bio.

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