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Thistle win 2-0 at home against Perth Saints.

© Phil McCloy 2016

Fotografije studenata NOVE akademije umetnosti:

Dušan Popovic, Violeta Tešic, Vesna Jovanovic, Mina Stefanovic, Ljiljanja Božovic,

Ana Ðuric,Milica Gvozdenovic, Denis Jeremic, Andela Jovetic, Milana Pavkovic,

Stefan Petrovic, Jelena Randjelovic , Dušan Šljivic, Vida Brdanin i Marko Spasojevic

Mentor: Branka Nedimovic

 

The plants of the Taft 2.0 Terrace.

Processed with VSCOcam with p5 preset

Guisborough Town Ladies 2-0 Poppleton Ladies | North Riding Football League Womens Premier Division | 17/3/2024

 

Venue: King George V Ground, Guisborough.

 

Guisborough Town scorers: Paige Davis (26), Mary Barnard (32)

Nature 2.0

Nicolas Touron and Amy Lemaire

 

Gallery 224 at the Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard

 

September 18 – November 21, 2023

 

Reception: Friday, September 22, 5-7pm

 

2022-23 Ceramics Program Artist In Residence Nicolas Touron and glass artist Amy Lemaire's ongoing collaboration explores the shapes of the natural world using 3d ceramic printing and glass. The works in Nature 2.0 were produced and developed in the new 3D clay printing area of the Ceramics Program, Office for the Arts at Harvard.

 

Their work exists in the past and future at the same time, and is concurrently of flora, fauna, and technology. Lemaire, a glassblower, utilizes a craft invented over two thousand years ago, while Touron uses the contemporary technology of 3D-modeled and printed ceramic. As a result, their works include thousands of years of human innovation as they regard the effects of these achievements and technology on nature. In this sense, their technique and subject matter parallel one another: Lemaire and Touron reveal, in the physical sense and the philosophical, what nature can look like in sync with humans and their technology.

 

The works combine two materials produced by each one of the duo. The ceramics created by Touron function as the base of the sculptures. Often resembling medieval fortresses or futuristic temple, they function as a stage for the story to be told. Lemaire’s glass work, colorful and even more organic in form, is whimsical and delicate much like nature itself; sometimes they look like otherworldly plants or fungi, sometimes perplexing figures or animals. They represent the actors in this theater.

 

As an artist, Lemaire considers the role of technology as an accelerant in a multiplicity of narratives that weave together virtual and physical worlds. Touron, who also uses storytelling as a crucial part of his art, constructs narratives without specific beginnings or ending, and in this way become visual embodiments of the living process of storytelling. Together, their work tells a tale of our time: an ongoing story of growth, coexistence, and time.

Old Cranleighan HC Ladies 1st XI 2-0 PHC Chiswick, January 27th 2024

Materials used to beef up the dogcam: drybag, foam from fabric store, scissors, glue and velcro.

haha, same picture 3 years later

Enterprice 2.0 Conference | Nov 2-5, 2009 | San Francisco,CA

Camera: PENTAX: K-x

ISO: 200

Exposure: 1/2 sec.

Focal Length: 18mm

Shutter Speed: f/22

 

Panning/ Blur Motion attempt #2

(extreme over-exposure)

Kodak Duaflex Lomography Earl Grey 620

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Paris 2.0

lundi 8 mars 2010

photo © Francois lafite

network of people, and their awareness of the various elements in the deadletter network. Central means multiple people were aware of them.

 

red circles - bars

blue squares - bike clubs

orange triangles - burner tribes

blue crosshatched squares - cafes

pink triangles - collectives/borganisms

green circles - colleges

green diamonds - entertainent groups

blue crosses - NGOs

yellow double stars - participants

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