View allAll Photos Tagged COMPLEXITY

Dedicated to Catness Grace and Paul Ewing for sparking the idea.

 

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© 2020, Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ). All rights reserved. This image may not be used in any form here or elsewhere without express, written permission.

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I have made my first step into the Macro World and I have to say, I find it fascinating. I know that Dandelions are very popular subjects but I am not sure you have seen this interpretation before.

 

At the first look of this closeup, I have directly seen the allegory with the human brain. Even with less complexity and features, I believe Nature is much nicer graphically.

Ornate, dusty, old, repurposed, dominated by a tree, ironically beautiful. Basically these apartments are a metaphor for society in general.

© All Rights Reserved Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. best on black. click image to view on flickr black or see it somewhere on my stream in flickriver: www.flickriver.com/photos/msdonnalee/

  

Adored this tree trunk as it wove its way in a very serpentine fashion through the dense (and still very green) complexity of foliage. Taken in the woods at Whiteleaf Cross, Princes Risborough.

First of a series of 8 in a set that takes exclusively Pano-Sabotage imagery into extreme mirroring.

 

The visual complexity of the foliage and branches of the mostly natural elements, along with the complex mirror shapes makes for a very ornate statements in this series. At this time of year I seem to often end up doing things that are purely or largely abstract. I also wanted to take, what I call, "X-Stream Mirroring" as far as I could go ( for now ). The results made my think of the complex brocades that frame Tibetan Buddhist Thangka paintings. Hence the "Brocade" name.

 

It's always been my goal to take Pano-Sabotage as far into art making as I can. I love visually complex work and thought I'd "pull out the stops" for this series. Following these 8 it's likely that I'll go in completely the opposite direction, exploring Pano-Sabotage in extremely simple forms.

 

Image created Feb 13, 2018.

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© Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ) - 2018. All Rights Reserved. This image is not for use in any form without explicit, express, written permission.

 

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A jumble of woodland complexity taken on a dreary day but needed to get my tree fix for the day! needs to be seen big for all the details to get lost in :)

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Captured in Berkeley, California in 2015 with a Tamron 90mm/2.8 macro lens wide open. (BBB2194)

_DSC3710-ARW - This statue called Pine Sanctuary is located at the entrance to Riverwood in Mississauga (a small conservation area along the banks of the Credit River). It is certainly eye catching with bold light green and cyan colouring although I like the bw image better. I think the bold colours obscure the complexity of the structure to a certain degree.

Tight relationships

Subsystems turn

Coherent organization

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SAMYANG AF 135mm F1.8, stitched and edited in Affinity

Venezia è stata definita "la città delle maschere" per ovvie ragioni. Le elaborate maschere veneziane di Carnevale sono ampiamente riconosciute ed apprezzate per la loro bellezza e complessità,

 

Venice has been called "the city of masks" for obvious reasons. The elaborate Venetian carnival masks are widely recognized and appreciated for their beauty and complexity,

 

Venecia ha sido llamada "la ciudad de las máscaras" por razones obvias. Las elaboradas máscaras de carnaval venecianas son ampliamente reconocidas y apreciadas por su belleza y complejidad.

Explore Page.

 

This flower never ceases to astonish me.

 

Have a great day, friends. Guess what I'll be doing.

 

Here is Peggy's mosaic.

 

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Playing in arboretum Opeka (north Croatia)

This shot reminds me of the ornamental Japanese blossom displays, but set in South Oxfordshire! The second shot of blackthorn blossom painting a spectacular display amid the complexity of the branches. There may be more to come!!

 

As always please press 'L' to view full screen.

Amazing complexity of the lightning flash. View of Tucson to the south from the foothills above.

On a misty morning in Little Wittenham Wood, these complex forms in the mist provide ample eye candy with their engrossing shapes and earthy hues.

 

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Autumn is back in South Bohemia.

 

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© 2020, Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ). All rights reserved. This image may not be used in any form here or elsewhere without express, written permission.

 

Urban detail. Dettaglio urbano. Abstract reality. Realtà astratta. Complessità. Complexity. Cameraphone. Androidography. Bologna 2022

I have always loved dandelions! Not just the colour but the explosion if tiny petals that burst out when the sun appears. Took this shot in monochrome and in that medium, the complexity and structure of this common wild flower can be appreciated more.

of buildings of Richard Meier ...

 

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The commandments of justice and mercy, indeed of love or the golden rule, have after all inspired historic resistance to lawless aggressions and to oppressive law. The Torah, the Jewish law, is not reducible to legalism or exclusivism, but supports the “struggle for justice and mercy.” 26 Perhaps it is a matter of infusing the commandments within the atmosphere of the Eros: “Arise my love, and come away” is also an imperative—a proposition in the sense suggested in our earlier discussion of truth-claims! After all, the ethics of “should and should not” may also encode, should also encode the divine lure. For without strong supportive structures of community, society, liturgy, theology, the chances are minute that we can individually or collectively even discern the initial aim...

 

...How does this unforcing force work? By sparking your desire: desire ignites desire. This sparking process takes place largely beneath and before our consciousness. Sometimes glimpsed in a dream, in a stranger’s face, in a flow of grief, a comforting embrace, a surge of music, a private illumination, a public act of truth. In conscience, shame, guilt, awe at a random sunset. The spark is what we hope for in prayer, meditation, worship. We infer it—and cannot in truth make any certain claims about it, as in “God told me this or that; God wills this or that for me.” For it comes already coated in our experience, in our own subjectivity, in the aims of our own socialized desire.

--On the Mystery, DISCERNING DIVINITY IN PROCESS, Catherine Keller

youtu.be/bQWjlkl2klw "Out of complexity emerges greater complexity. We could almost say that the universe, nature, is a novelty-conserving or complexity-conserving engine. It makes complexity and it preserves it and it uses it as the basis for further complexity." -Terence McKenna

Here is my 2021 close-up of this remarkable flower.

See my previous post for this year's life-cycle mosaic of it.

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Image based on a flower in Biltmore House's gardens

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