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30,7 megapixel, sweetfx, .xml-tweaks,

DET cheat table (freecam | timestop | dof)

Alien cupcakes:

 

Cupcakes baked in aluminum foil cups

White Icing (for cakes)

Food coloring

Junior Mints

White Cupcake Decorating Icing (Dispenser w/ attachments)

Toothpicks

Aluminum Foil

  

the alien hasn't always been on the best of terms with us...

 

>=)

Just testing out my new flash.

The aliens are coming ya hear?

"Aliens" cheesecake 7inches marble cheesecake 3D cartoon figure: Chopper

www.facebook.com/SweetieNeko

found these pods in a tide pool in palos verdes. does anyone know what kind of aliens hatch out of pods like this?

An alien mini figure photographed in front of a computer screen with one of my images of sparkles at full screen.

From the Alien movies.I made this in 8th grade.

The NECA figures of Hicks, Hudson & Ripley, with the NECA Queen & the backdrop is from the box of the latter.

Alien vines and melons on a strange planet surface. Original acrylic painting, with inks.

don't know...don't want to know...

Virginia

 

Random people. Taken a while ago in a pub. I think the guy's hair makes him look like Predator from the movie, and the lass's smile isn't entirely human - the Alien!

Alien She

 

Photos and Video by Mario Gallucci

 

Alien She

Sep 3, 2015 â Jan 9, 2016

 

Alien She, curated by Astria Suparak + Ceci Moss, is the first exhibition to examine the lasting impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers working today. A pioneering punk feminist movement that emerged in the early 1990s, Riot Grrrl has had a pivotal influence, inspiring many around the world to pursue socially and politically progressive careers as artists, activists, authors and educators. Emphasizing female and youth empowerment, collaborative organization, creative resistance and DIY ethics, Riot Grrrl helped a new generation to become active feminists and create their own culture and communities that reflect their values and experiences, in contrast to mainstream conventions and expectations.

 

Riot Grrrl formed in reaction to pervasive and violent sexism, racism and homophobia in the punk music scene and in the culture at large. Its participants adapted strategies from earlier queer and punk feminisms and â70s radical politics, while also popularizing discussions of identity politics occurring within academia, but in a language that spoke to a younger generation. This self-organized network made up of teenagers and twenty-somethings reached one another through various platforms, such as letters, zines, local meetings, regional conferences, homemade videos, and later, chat rooms, listservs and message boards. The movement eventually spread worldwide, with chapters opening in at least thirty-two states and twenty-six countries.* Its ethos and aesthetics have survived well past its initial period in the â90s, with many new chapters forming in recent years. Riot Grrrlâs influence on contemporary global culture is increasingly evident â from the Russian collective Pussy Riotâs protest against corrupt government-church relations to the popular teen website Rookie and the launch of Girls Rock Camps and Ladyfest music and art festivals around the world.

 

Alien

Alien She

 

Photos and Video by Mario Gallucci

 

Alien She

Sep 3, 2015 â Jan 9, 2016

 

Alien She, curated by Astria Suparak + Ceci Moss, is the first exhibition to examine the lasting impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers working today. A pioneering punk feminist movement that emerged in the early 1990s, Riot Grrrl has had a pivotal influence, inspiring many around the world to pursue socially and politically progressive careers as artists, activists, authors and educators. Emphasizing female and youth empowerment, collaborative organization, creative resistance and DIY ethics, Riot Grrrl helped a new generation to become active feminists and create their own culture and communities that reflect their values and experiences, in contrast to mainstream conventions and expectations.

 

Riot Grrrl formed in reaction to pervasive and violent sexism, racism and homophobia in the punk music scene and in the culture at large. Its participants adapted strategies from earlier queer and punk feminisms and â70s radical politics, while also popularizing discussions of identity politics occurring within academia, but in a language that spoke to a younger generation. This self-organized network made up of teenagers and twenty-somethings reached one another through various platforms, such as letters, zines, local meetings, regional conferences, homemade videos, and later, chat rooms, listservs and message boards. The movement eventually spread worldwide, with chapters opening in at least thirty-two states and twenty-six countries.* Its ethos and aesthetics have survived well past its initial period in the â90s, with many new chapters forming in recent years. Riot Grrrlâs influence on contemporary global culture is increasingly evident â from the Russian collective Pussy Riotâs protest against corrupt government-church relations to the popular teen website Rookie and the launch of Girls Rock Camps and Ladyfest music and art festivals around the world.

 

Alien

Kenner 1993 Catalog Page 28 Aliens

Love this, the alien structure is very awesome to me! got this figure at a comic-con one year :D

Olympus E-520 + Zuiko Digital 14-42mm

Location: Empangan Batu (Batu Dam), Selayang Selangor

 

View in large : farm3.static.flickr.com/2478/3920305211_2bfde984dc_b.jpg

Alien invadiendo las aguas terrestres....

random doodle instead of working

Une mosaïque de l'Alien de Flo, une de ces dernières créations.

  

Matériels utilisés :

 

. Canon EOS 7D

. EF 50 1: 1,8

  

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Autres Pages:

500px | Behance | Facebook | Fluidr | Myfav

 

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© Marceau Rouvre - Photographie & Graphisme

Merci de me contacter pour toute utilisation de la photographie. Un auteur vit de ses droits d'auteur. En respectant le Code de la Propriété Intellectuelle et en vous refusant systématiquement à utiliser une image ou un texte sans l'accord de celui qui l'a créé, vous respectez son travail.

 

-- - All rights reserved / Tous droits réservés - --

 

While shooting some paint update photos, thought I'd take some shots of past versions of the ALIEN 79 beast I have completed, including the Alien: Isolation beastie. Updates coming soon Hope you enjoy! #alien #isolation #alienisolation #nostromo #alien79 #xenomorph #miniature #customactionfigure #sculpt #paint

While we were hearing about the missile site, a menacing flying saucer suddenly blocked out the sun over the Bay Area. Supt. Dave Matthews, always at the ready, mobilized the Nike Missiles and dispatched a message to the aliens that humankind would not be assimilated this day. Our world, saved once again. For now.

 

Had a work retreat to Angel Island in the Bay. Got amazing views while biking the perimeter of the island. There are beautiful and creepy abandoned military buildings in clusters all over the island. Angel Island was military for 200 years, serving as a fort, a gun battery, an immigration station and quarantine, and a Nike Missile site - plenty of good history there.

An out take from the 52 week project for which this weeks theme was Up close / Macro..

 

I really like how alien this looks.

 

Reckless Times Redbubble

© Angela M. Lobefaro

All Rights Reserved

  

taken where I live, outside in the courtyard.

It was abt 5/6 cm. long

     

Interestingness shots

50 Most interesting slide show

 

btw : link to my PUBLISHED shots

 

Subscribe to my stream

   

Check out my last fun project (interviews with my fellows Flickr friends )

Today is hb19 turn @ angiereal.blogspot.com

Alien She

 

Photos and Video by Mario Gallucci

 

Alien She

Sep 3, 2015 â Jan 9, 2016

 

Alien She, curated by Astria Suparak + Ceci Moss, is the first exhibition to examine the lasting impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers working today. A pioneering punk feminist movement that emerged in the early 1990s, Riot Grrrl has had a pivotal influence, inspiring many around the world to pursue socially and politically progressive careers as artists, activists, authors and educators. Emphasizing female and youth empowerment, collaborative organization, creative resistance and DIY ethics, Riot Grrrl helped a new generation to become active feminists and create their own culture and communities that reflect their values and experiences, in contrast to mainstream conventions and expectations.

 

Riot Grrrl formed in reaction to pervasive and violent sexism, racism and homophobia in the punk music scene and in the culture at large. Its participants adapted strategies from earlier queer and punk feminisms and â70s radical politics, while also popularizing discussions of identity politics occurring within academia, but in a language that spoke to a younger generation. This self-organized network made up of teenagers and twenty-somethings reached one another through various platforms, such as letters, zines, local meetings, regional conferences, homemade videos, and later, chat rooms, listservs and message boards. The movement eventually spread worldwide, with chapters opening in at least thirty-two states and twenty-six countries.* Its ethos and aesthetics have survived well past its initial period in the â90s, with many new chapters forming in recent years. Riot Grrrlâs influence on contemporary global culture is increasingly evident â from the Russian collective Pussy Riotâs protest against corrupt government-church relations to the popular teen website Rookie and the launch of Girls Rock Camps and Ladyfest music and art festivals around the world.

 

Alien

Alien She

 

Photos and Video by Mario Gallucci

 

Alien She

Sep 3, 2015 – Jan 9, 2016

 

Alien She, curated by Astria Suparak + Ceci Moss, is the first exhibition to examine the lasting impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers working today. A pioneering punk feminist movement that emerged in the early 1990s, Riot Grrrl has had a pivotal influence, inspiring many around the world to pursue socially and politically progressive careers as artists, activists, authors and educators. Emphasizing female and youth empowerment, collaborative organization, creative resistance and DIY ethics, Riot Grrrl helped a new generation to become active feminists and create their own culture and communities that reflect their values and experiences, in contrast to mainstream conventions and expectations.

 

Riot Grrrl formed in reaction to pervasive and violent sexism, racism and homophobia in the punk music scene and in the culture at large. Its participants adapted strategies from earlier queer and punk feminisms and ‘70s radical politics, while also popularizing discussions of identity politics occurring within academia, but in a language that spoke to a younger generation. This self-organized network made up of teenagers and twenty-somethings reached one another through various platforms, such as letters, zines, local meetings, regional conferences, homemade videos, and later, chat rooms, listservs and message boards. The movement eventually spread worldwide, with chapters opening in at least thirty-two states and twenty-six countries.* Its ethos and aesthetics have survived well past its initial period in the ‘90s, with many new chapters forming in recent years. Riot Grrrl’s influence on contemporary global culture is increasingly evident – from the Russian collective Pussy Riot’s protest against corrupt government-church relations to the popular teen website Rookie and the launch of Girls Rock Camps and Ladyfest music and art festivals around the world.

 

Alien She focuses on seven people whose visual art practices were informed by their contact with Riot Grrrl. Many of them work in multiple disciplines, such as sculpture, installation, video, documentary film, photography, drawing, printmaking, new media, social practice, curation, music, writing and performance – a reflection of the movement’s artistic diversity and mutability. Each artist is represented by several projects from the last 20 years, including new and rarely seen works, providing an insight into the development of their creative practices and individual trajectories.

 

Artists: Ginger Brooks Takahashi (Pittsburgh), Tammy Rae Carland (Oakland), Miranda July (Los Angeles), Faythe Levine (Milwaukee), Allyson Mitchell (Toronto), L.J. Roberts (Brooklyn), Stephanie Syjuco (San Francisco) and more.

 

Archival Materials from: dumba collective; EMP Museum, Seattle; Interference Archive; Jabberjaw; the Riot Grrrl Collection at the Fales Library & Special Collections, NYU; and many personal collections.

 

Collaborative Projects and Platforms include: Counterfeit Crochet Project, Feminist Art Gallery (FAG), General Sisters, Handmade Nation, Joanie 4 Jackie, Learning to Love You More, LTTR, projet MOBILIVRE-BOOKMOBILE project, Sign Painters and more

Women’s Studies Professors Have Class Privilege / I’m With Problematic, from the series Creep Lez, Allyson Mitchell, 2012.

 

Altered t-shirts with iron-on transfer and vinyl letters. Courtesy of the artist and Katharine Mulherin Gallery, Toronto.

 

Alien She is curated by Astria Suparak and Ceci Moss, and organized by the Miller Gallery at Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh

  

Alien She is presented in two parts:

 

Museum of Contemporary Craft

724 NW Davis

Portland, OR 97209

 

511 Gallery @ PNCA

511 NW Broadway

Portland, OR 97209

 

Both venues are open Tuesday through Saturday from 11am to 6pm.

A smal "alien" in a cone of light.

The light source is my darkroom enlarger, a device to expose analog photographic paper :-)

The aliens descended upon Great Malvern the other night, and Dave thought he had drunk too much because seven dwarfs appeared in the bar.

 

Holga CFN, Fuji Provia 400F, pushed to 800, cross processed.

 

the twilight zone

He's just the right height!

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