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This is a follow up to a shoot I did at The Chameleon in Birmingham in 2011. They asked me to come back and do some more images and panoramas after having a bit of a refurb and I was more than delighted to accept.
PHOTO CREDIT: JOEL C FILDES
Sat 5 February 2011, 8pm.
Internationally acclaimed Company Chameleon present 7 new Dance-Theatre works at Contact.
'Second Grace' choreographed by Anthony Missen, is communicated as a narrative, taking the experience of a soldier at war to reveal a universal struggle. A study on the search for ones own truth, to not behave blindly and act in ways that are put upon us by a 'higher authority'. It is about finding the courage and strength to go against the grain, to live by ones own belief system, even if no one else around does.
'Shattered' choreographed by Kevin Edward Turner. A tattooed character, both the actor and the narrator of his experience, unpicks the strands of memory and circumstance that delivered him to the place he now resides. A discourse on the conception of 'Shattered' in all its permutations.
Supported by Arts Council England, Dance Base, Zion Arts Centre and The Brindley.
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Auditions
Company Chameleon Artistic Directors Anthony Missen and Kevin Edward Turner will select five local emerging artists to work with over a two week choreographic residency, creating original solos which will then be performed alongside the world premiere of 'Second Grace' and 'Shattered' on Sat 5 February 2011.
This chameleon appears to be in a state of suspended animation, and has been sleeping on a creeper trellis in our garden which catches the sun for most of the day. I believe it to be a form of hibernation, as he has been there for about two months now!
Veiled Chameleon Greenly, hatched 11/06. Photo taken 1/11/08. Nikon D-80 Lens 18-135mm 1:3.5:5.6G, SB-800 Flash.
The Chameleon. Always en garde, determined not to be on another critter's lunch menu! (And I LOVE the "I Spy" book series! The books are GREAT!)
Chameleons or chamaeleons are a distinctive and highly specialized clade of Old World lizards with 202 species. These species come in a range of colors, and many species have the ability to change color.
On holiday in Portugal Kai found this brilliant chameleon by the pool. I love how he is holding his tail.
A small slow-moving lizard with a long extensible tongue and tail.It has protruding eyes that rotate independently, and has the ability to change body colour hence the name 'Chameleon' I always thought a chameleon changed colour to hide but have just recently found out it's in fact the way that they communicate with each other.
This Veiled Chameleon is the newest resident for one of the people we pet sit for off and on. He/She was too adorable for words, so I had to video him/her.
This photo was shot through a fine mesh at night lit by only two heat lamps at the top of his cage, handheld with an unimpressive lens. That said, I'm ridiculously happy with how this came out despite lackluster circumstances.
The veiled chameleon, Chamaeleo calyptratus, is a large species of chameleon found in the mountain regions of Yemen, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia. It is also sometimes referred to as the Yemen chameleon
'Chameleon Guitar' es un Proyecto del MIT Media Lab, que combina los 'valores' del sonido de una guitarra acustica con una multidi de posibilidades digitales. Es una creación del estudiante del MIT Media Lab, Amit Zoran para su trabajo de tesis de Master 2008-2009 en el Fluid Interfaces Group, del MIT Media Lab, in collaboration with Marco Coppiardi, un violinista de Boston y bajo la dirección de la Profesora Pattie Maes, directora del Fluid Interfaces Group (en donde también están investigando el catalán Pol Pla i Conesa y el indú Pravav Mistry creador de la interfaz "SixthSense". Mas información de Chameleon guitar en: www.thechameleonguitar.com/Chameleon_Guitar/Home.html
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These photos were taken last week of a friends collection of reptiles.
Chameleons mostly, but each creature standing out in its own right from the others, amazing.
This picture, and the others from this set were taken with the help of the Canon 60mm 2.8 Macro lens, a couple were shot using a tripod & natural light, but most were shot hand held with the aid of a 580ex2 strobe.