?>

This chicken has mistaken these rottweiler puppies for her own, and started sitting on them when winter came to keep them warm. (via dorkvader)

Share the Snuzz with your pawple. Post it to your favorite service:

See related Snuzzy entries:
What's Pawpular on Digg

This guy looks like an awesome pet. (via ironicstatement)

Share the Snuzz with your pawple. Post it to your favorite service:

See related Snuzzy entries:

AAAAHHHH (via Blair)

Share the Snuzz with your pawple. Post it to your favorite service:

See related Snuzzy entries:

:O? (via Jim Force)

Share the Snuzz with your pawple. Post it to your favorite service:

See related Snuzzy entries:

Even if you don’t know Salvador Dali by name you’re probably familiar with his work. You likely have a vague melty recollection of his most famous painting, The Persistence of Memory. Dali is notable here at Snuzzy because, like us, he was inspired by animals; his paintings often contained weird abstracted mammalian forms, soaring birds and hatching eggs. He was also photographed doing normal things with weird animals and doing weird things with normal animals.

dali_cat

This relatively famous photograph of Dali was a collaboration between himself and artist Philippe Halsman. It’s part of a series of photographs called “DalĂ­ Atomica” inspired by Dali’s own painting Leda Atomic. The photograph of Dali with the flying cats and water attempts to capture the dynamic weightlessness of Leda Atomica’s image of a floating woman entangled with a swan:

dali_cat

For a period he was obsessed with the form of anteaters. Many of his paintings feature long slender figures with strange proportions that seem both alien and organic. To achieve this he studied live anteaters and was even seen walking around New York City in the ’60s with an anteater on a leash.

dali_cat

Dali even observed how the forms of animals match the work of others. In this movie, he notes how the shape of the woman in Vermeer’s The Lacemaker mimics a rhinoceros’s horn:


Can’t see the video in your reader? Watch it here.

It’s a real shame he died in the ’80s, before the Internet’s obsession with animals came to fruition. Who knows how high he could have soared with Keyboard Cat on his side. As fellow animal lovers, Snuzzy salutes him!

Share the Snuzz with your pawple. Post it to your favorite service:

See related Snuzzy entries: