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A number of people were participants from previous museum projects and it was great to work with them again. It was interesting to hear from people who were familiar with the Museum and its work, along with those who had never been to the museum before.

National Dance Day XPLOSION! held at Sports and Learning Complex on July 31, 2010

Revitalização da quadra no Ciep Elis Regina na Nova Holanda, Complexo da Maré com Rita Wainer e Pinky Wainer.

Foto: © Patrick Marinho

Hammond Stadium at CenturyLink Sports Complex

 

Ft. Myers, 03/20/15

Light over Sea and Land – The Önningeby Colony on Åland

 

waldemarsudde.se/en/exhibitions/light-over-sea-and-land-t...

 

Joining the year-long centenary celebration of the autonomy of the Åland Islands, Waldemarsudde will host the first ever Swedish exhibition featuring the nineteenth century artist’s colony at Önningeby on Åland, a highly interesting but often overlooked group. Active from 1886 until 1914, the colony was made up of mostly Swedish, Finnish and Estonian artists. This exhibition highlights many of the Swedish and Finlandic Önningeby painters’ most important works depicting the island’s rural landscape and the Åland archipelago, along with portraits of their artist friends and photographs from life in the community.

 

The artists represented here include J.A.G. Acke, Ida Gisiko-Spärck, Anna Wengberg and Edvard Westman from Sweden, and Victor Westerholm, Elin Danielson-Gambogi, Hanna Rönnberg, Ellen Favorin, Amélie Lundahl, Eva Acke, Elias Muukka and Helmi Sjöstrand from Finland.

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”Second to the arts, I think flowers are my greatest joy,” Prince Eugen wrote in a letter in 1901.

 

A visit to the beautiful park and garden at Waldemarsudde is a treat for many senses and offers more than a century old garden history. The design of the garden determined by Prince Eugen, is still managed according to the Prince’s instructions and directions. The park is also rich in sculptures, all of them bought by Prince Eugen, often with specific sites in mind.

 

Prince Eugen was an art collector of note, with special emphasis on Nordic and French art. The Collections number around 7,000 works and comprise painting, sculpture and crafts objects. The Painting Collection includes works by Ernst Josephson, Anders Zorn, Julia Beck, Isaac Grünewald, Sigrid Hjertén and Sven X:et Erixson. International artists such as Edvard Munch and Auguste Rodin are also represented. Throughout the year, a selection of Prince Eugen’s own art and works from the Collections, are on display.

 

waldemarsudde.se/en/

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Prince Eugen's Waldemarsudde (Swedish for Cape Waldemar), is a museum located on Djurgården in central Stockholm. The name is composed of Waldemar, an Old German noble male name, and udde, meaning cape. It is derived from a historical name of the island Djurgården, Valmundsö.

 

It was the former home of the Swedish Prince Eugen, who discovered the place in 1892, when he rented a house there for a few days. Seven years later he bought the premises and had a new house designed by the architect Ferdinand Boberg, who also designed Rosenbad (the Prime Minister's Office and the Government Chancellery), and erected 1903–1904.

 

Prince Eugen had been educated as a painter in Paris and after his death the house was converted to a museum of his own and others paintings. The prince died in 1947 and is buried by the beach close to the house.

 

The complex consists of a castle-like main building—the Mansion—completed in 1905, and the Gallery Building, added in 1913. The estate also includes the original manor-house building, known as the Old House and an old linseed mill, both dating back to the 1780s. The estate is set in parkland which features centuries-old oak trees and reflects the prince's interest for gardening and flower arrangement. The Art Nouveau interior, including the cocklestoves, by Boberg are designed in a Gustavian style and makes good use of both the panoramic view of the inlet to Stockholm and the light resulting from the elevated location of the building.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waldemarsudde

 

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Shojo Complex @ Jakarta Fair 2016

Shojo Complex @ Jakarta Fair 2016

Detail of tile work outside the Shams-Al Emarat.

Stairs cut in rock in Sigiriya ruin archaeological site

Desert Flower by Christopher Ries seen at an exhibit of his work at Misericordia University

For the film geeks out there.

Most of this was shot at the Concow area off Hwy 70.

Nite shots were on Jordan Road near Granite Ridge Road

This is the Philae Temple Complex, located on Agilkia Island, though it was originally located on Philae Island at Aswan in Upper Egypt. Constructed between 380 and 362 BC under Nectanebo I of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, the primary temple structure of the complex was built to honor Isis, the mother goddess and most important female deity in the Ancient Egyptian religion. The temple also gained quite a few smaller temples dedicated to various deities, including Hathor, and it is believed that the site was the last active Ancient Egyptian religious site after all pagan religious practices were banned by the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD, in favor of Christianity, with the last known Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic carving being found at the site, dating to the late 4th Century. In 537 AD, religious ceremonies were halted at the site by the local commander, and the structure then became the Church of St. Stephen, with many of the carved reliefs being vandalized and the stone columns and walls having carvings of crosses and other religious symbols being added, while the temple structure itself remained largely intact for over a millennia. The temple complex includes the Vestibule of Hadrian, a tall Roman-era structure, and several Ptolemaic-era column capitals that were never completed, and remain in an unfinished state. The temple attracted a lot of attention in the 19th Century due to its picturesque location, immaculate state of preservation, and lack of sediments or debris obscuring the structure. The darkest period in the structure’s history began in 1902, when the British government, which controlled Egypt at the time, constructed the Aswan Low Dam on the Nile River, with the water level behind the dam rising up over the base of the temple, damaging the structure. The dam was raised twice, further covering more of the structure and leading to yet more damage. When the Aswan High Dam was under construction in the 1960s, UNESCO stepped in and moved the temple to higher ground, rescuing it from its watery grave.

The University Sports Complex at Lisle in DuPage County, Illinois, is the football home of the Benedictine University Eagles. This snapshot was taken on Sunday morning, 02 September 2018.

This is the Philae Temple Complex, located on Agilkia Island, though it was originally located on Philae Island at Aswan in Upper Egypt. Constructed between 380 and 362 BC under Nectanebo I of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, the primary temple structure of the complex was built to honor Isis, the mother goddess and most important female deity in the Ancient Egyptian religion. The temple also gained quite a few smaller temples dedicated to various deities, including Hathor, and it is believed that the site was the last active Ancient Egyptian religious site after all pagan religious practices were banned by the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD, in favor of Christianity, with the last known Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic carving being found at the site, dating to the late 4th Century. In 537 AD, religious ceremonies were halted at the site by the local commander, and the structure then became the Church of St. Stephen, with many of the carved reliefs being vandalized and the stone columns and walls having carvings of crosses and other religious symbols being added, while the temple structure itself remained largely intact for over a millennia. The temple complex includes the Vestibule of Hadrian, a tall Roman-era structure, and several Ptolemaic-era column capitals that were never completed, and remain in an unfinished state. The temple attracted a lot of attention in the 19th Century due to its picturesque location, immaculate state of preservation, and lack of sediments or debris obscuring the structure. The darkest period in the structure’s history began in 1902, when the British government, which controlled Egypt at the time, constructed the Aswan Low Dam on the Nile River, with the water level behind the dam rising up over the base of the temple, damaging the structure. The dam was raised twice, further covering more of the structure and leading to yet more damage. When the Aswan High Dam was under construction in the 1960s, UNESCO stepped in and moved the temple to higher ground, rescuing it from its watery grave.

This is about as much time as she spent standing still all day.

It was a late night at the Waterfront last night (Heavyweight Beer d'Art on the hand pull, and Ridgeway Lump of Coal dark holiday stout to follow), and as I headed home there was snow on the ground, and chill in the air.

 

Tech specs: Canon Digital Rebel XT, 1 second, f/5.6, ISO 400, 50mm.

The Dayabumi Complex (Malay: Kompleks Dayabumi) is a major landmark in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It houses several commercial facilities and is one of the earliest skyscrapers in the city. It is located near the National Mosque, the Old Kuala Lumpur Railway Station and the Federal House at Jalan Sultan Hishamuddin. It was designed in a modern Islamic style.

New Delhi, Uttar Pradesh

Shojo Complex @ Jakarta Fair 2016

Shojo Complex @ Jakarta Fair 2016

Second half photos of Barton Community College men's soccer team versus Dodge City Community College.

Game played 9-14-19 at the Cougar Soccer Complex on the campus of Barton in Great Bend, KS.

Photos by Todd Moore, Sports Information Director.

Built in 1889-1890, this Richardsonian Romanesque Revival and Chicago School-style building was designed by Adler and Sullivan to serve as a multi-use complex with a 4,300-seat auditorium, 136 office suites, a 400-room hotel, and a dining hall. The building stands 17 stories and 236 feet (71 meters) tall and was the second-tallest in Chicago when it was built, only exceeded in height by the Masonic Building. The building’s exterior is based on the Romanesque Revival architecture of Henry Hobson Richardson, with the interior being a far more flamboyant and expressive design incorporating many of Louis Sullivan’s Art Nouveau-inspired Sullivanesque details and motifs, with the building being the first significant large-scale commission for the fledgling firm of Adler and Sullivan, with Frank Lloyd Wright having worked as a draftsman on this project. The building was completed prior to the 1893 Columbian Exposition World’s Fair, with the first major event to take place in the building being the 1888 Republican National Convention, which was held in the auditorium while the building was still incomplete and did not yet include the offices or hotel rooms. The building was the home of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra from its debut in 1891 until the Chicago Symphony Center was completed in 1904, and hosted the Chicago Civic Opera, which was founded in 1922, until the Civic Opera House was completed in 1929. The building was among the first air-conditioned public spaces in the United States, and was among the first theaters to be lit entirely by incandescent electric light bulbs. The top of the tower housed the offices of Adler and Sullivan in the 1890s, and was utilized as a servicemen's center by the City of Chicago between 1941 and 1947. The historic auditorium was largely disused between 1941 and 1967, when it became a rock concert venue.

 

The building sits on a unique stone raft foundation, which was designed by Dankmar Adler and engineer Paul Mueller. The exterior of the building features a rusticated granite base, rusticated limestone on the third floor, and smooth-faced limestone above. The gray granite base features thick corner piers, an arcade on the Ida B. Wells Drive side of the building, a result of the widening of the roadway in 1952, arched bays, rectilinear bays with engaged doric columns and smaller transoms above, smooth granite cladding around the doorways at the central bays along Michigan Avenue, which feature arched transoms, are separated by smooth-faced granite corbels, and sit below an enclosed sun porch with doric pilasters and chamfered engaged columns, and an iron railing on the roof. The second-story features window bays with arched transoms, with the third floor featuring rusticated limestone cladding, windows with transoms, with granite cladding at the base of the tower on the south side of the building extending up to the third floor. The facade features recessed bays between the fourth and seventh floors, with arched windows n the seventh floor, recessed spandrel panels, pilasters between windows, and one-over-one double-hung windows. The eighth and ninth floors feature narrower recessed bays with recessed spandrel panels, and arched transoms at the ninth floor, window bays on the tenth floor separated by engaged tapered doric columns, and a parapet with corbels around the perimeter of the building’s parapet that encloses the low-slope roof. The tower features a base with a large flared cornice, recessed arched bays above with small square window openings, rectilinear bays above with engaged tapered doric columns and a large cornice below, a flared top with small windows, and a low-slope roof enclosed by a parapet. The interior features an auditorium with a barrel vaulted ceiling, decorative Sullivanesque ornament, a paneled proscenium arch, decorative mural, decorative arched screens flanking the stage, multiple tiers of balconies, and a coffered ceiling above the upper balcony. Other intact historic areas of the building include the barrel vaulted ceiling of the old Dining Hall, stairways with coffered ceilings, marble treads and risers, red marble columns with gilded capitals, archways, metal railings, decorative Sullivanesque motifs on the walls, coffered ceilings, mosaic tile floors, stained glass arched transoms, decorative light fixtures, and marble wall cladding.

 

The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1975. It was designated a Chicago Landmark in 1976, and is a contributing structure in the Historic Michigan Boulevard District, listed as a Chicago Landmark in 2002. The building was restored in 2001 under the direction of Daniel P. Coffey and Associates and EverGreene Architectural Arts, restoring the exterior of the building, the lobbies, stairs, and the auditorium itself. The building’s auditorium has, in more recent decades, hosted multiple rock concerts by bands such as The Doors and the Grateful Dead. The former office and hotel sections of the building have housed part of Roosevelt University since 1947. It presently hosts performances by the Joffrey Ballet, and special events, such as the 2015 NFL Draft.

Most of this was shot at the Concow area off Hwy 70.

Nite shots were on Jordan Road near Granite Ridge Road

This is the Philae Temple Complex, located on Agilkia Island, though it was originally located on Philae Island at Aswan in Upper Egypt. Constructed between 380 and 362 BC under Nectanebo I of the Ptolemaic Dynasty, the primary temple structure of the complex was built to honor Isis, the mother goddess and most important female deity in the Ancient Egyptian religion. The temple also gained quite a few smaller temples dedicated to various deities, including Hathor, and it is believed that the site was the last active Ancient Egyptian religious site after all pagan religious practices were banned by the Roman Empire in the 4th Century AD, in favor of Christianity, with the last known Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic carving being found at the site, dating to the late 4th Century. In 537 AD, religious ceremonies were halted at the site by the local commander, and the structure then became the Church of St. Stephen, with many of the carved reliefs being vandalized and the stone columns and walls having carvings of crosses and other religious symbols being added, while the temple structure itself remained largely intact for over a millennia. The temple complex includes the Vestibule of Hadrian, a tall Roman-era structure, and several Ptolemaic-era column capitals that were never completed, and remain in an unfinished state. The temple attracted a lot of attention in the 19th Century due to its picturesque location, immaculate state of preservation, and lack of sediments or debris obscuring the structure. The darkest period in the structure’s history began in 1902, when the British government, which controlled Egypt at the time, constructed the Aswan Low Dam on the Nile River, with the water level behind the dam rising up over the base of the temple, damaging the structure. The dam was raised twice, further covering more of the structure and leading to yet more damage. When the Aswan High Dam was under construction in the 1960s, UNESCO stepped in and moved the temple to higher ground, rescuing it from its watery grave.

Indonesia 2015

 

Visiting Java and Bali

 

Destination Jakarta today, Non-stop Amsterdam-Jakarta.

We arrived in Jakarta in the late morning and headed straight away for the old Harbor and Dutch Cityhall.

That was enough for the day and our 14 hour flight.

 

Leaving Jakarta already next morning, after a quick stop at the Monas, for Bogor and the Puncak pass, but the pass was deleted from the tour as the roads were blocked during this eastern holiday weekend.

Visited only Bogor Botanic gardens and headed to Bandung via Jakarta.

 

Bandung is famous for its Art Deco city center.

We boarded the train for a 5 hour scenic drive to Kroya .

Night-stop at Wonosobo with the Dieng Vulcanic area and Java's oldest Hindi temples are nearby.

Fortunatly it didn't rain during our visit to the famous Borobudur temple complex .

 

We arrived in Yogjakarta for a full package - 2 day visit.

A becak tour in the early moring to the the Sultans Kraton Palace, Shopping, Batik, silver and dinner show to name a few.

On the second day a bicycle tour near Prambanan and more World Heritage at the Impressive Prambanan temple complex

 

Our second scenic trainride ends in Batu.

Time to relax here and prepare for our ultimate sunrise experience at the Bromo vulcano.

One more stopover in Kalibaru with a nice Botanic Garden before we took the ferry to Bali.

 

A few days at Bali Sanur Beach, relax and enjoying the sun.

Despite a few activities : Mountainbike at Bali's famous Ricefields, snorkling and visiting art village Ubud as we headed for our last

visit at the Tanah Lot temple for sunset.

   

Our Unesco World Heritage visits

  

Icarus Complex @ YAC, Byron Bay

21-06-13

Descripción:

B-complex 75, cápsulas de acción retardada en dos etapas. En la primera etapa una porción del producto es liberada de forma rápida, el resto del producto se libera gradualmente en un periodo de 6-8 horas.

 

Ingredientes por cápsula:

Solaray garantiza que en este producto sólo están presentes los siguientes ingredientes:

Vitamina B1(tiamina), 75 mg.

Vitamina B2 (riboflavina), 75 mg.

Niacina (niacinamida), 75 mg.

Vitamina B6 (piridoxina HCl), 75 mg.

Ácido pantoténico (pantotenato d-cálcico), 75 mg.

PABA (ácido para aminobenzoico), 75 mg.

Colina (colina bitartrato), 75 mg.

Inositol, 75 mg.

Ácido fólico, 400 mcg.

Vitamina B12, 75 mcg.

Biotina, 75 mcg.

 

Otros ingredientes:

Gelatina (cápsula), celulosa, sílice, base de alimentos enteros (gel de Aloe vera, concentrado de arroz integral), estearato de magnesio y óxido de magnesio. Por su contenido en PABA, no se recomienda tomar con sulfamidas.

 

Modo de empleo:

Como complemento alimenticio, tomar una cápsula en días alternos durante la comida.

 

Presentación:

Envase de 100 cápsulas.

 

Para más informacion: www.amatusalud.es/producto/b-complex-75

The main floor of the Science Complex building at the University of Guelph.

Photo By: Agri-Food and Rural Link

More than 100 exquisitely carved Hindu and Jain Temples make up this site, some dating back to 750 AD.

 

There are 161 steps to reach the main temples, and the last part is reached barefoot on white marble steps. The air temperature was 38°C, and i can only guess that the steps held a temperature of over 50°C. Talk about hot-footing it around these temples.

The Besakih temple sits on the slopes of Mount Agung, the holy mountain in Bali, and is regarded as the 'Mother temple' for the entire island.

Utrecht University Law Faculty Janskerkhof Utrecht The Netherlands - Marx & Steketee Architects - 2014-2016

 

From January 2016, the Law Faculty of Utrecht University, has a central downtown location. To this end, a monumental complex renovated at the Janskerkhof and internally transformed into teaching building. Marx & Steketee Architects combines the above objectives in a clear organized, readable building that can be used intensively. The oldest part was built in 1246 as a Franciscan monastery; which was extended with the current States Wing in the sixteenth century, from which government functions were exercised at the time of the Union of Utrecht. In 1643 the current ornamented entrance to the Janskerkhof was added to the building.

 

From the nineteenth century 'Janskerkhof 2-3' has been used as a teaching building. The law faculty settled there in the seventies of the last century. The new destination will facilitate students with study places, group rooms, classrooms and an information center; There are also flexible workplaces for employees. "This building is the heart of the law faculty," says architect Ady Steketee. "The building design has three principles: strengthening and legible making of the monumental value, providing a robust, clear and future-proof structure and develop an access that connects the ensemble well with the surroundings."

 

The biggest transformation took place inside. The rooms are rearranged, added later adjustments as suspended ceilings and dividings , were removed as much as possible. Steketee: "where possible, existing elements are spared, as the glass cabinets in which objects from the library were kept. And the cloister - with intact church wall along the Minderbroederstraat - was made legible. We have chosen a fairly unique implementation phase, which was carried out the necessary cleanup, and the contractor then cram a break. During this time we are going to analyze with the client what the demolition came forward so that the work could be better planned. "

A recognizable new element is the integration of a new building core in the States Wing, with a head kick lacquered larch. "This staircase and elevator shaft connects all parts of the building and is a crossroads in the coordinate system." Two courtyards have been restored and sealed with atrium roofs; a former canteen in the States Wing has been converted into lecture hall with 150 seats.

 

The components in the courtyard have been demolished, with the exception of the anatomy room, a separate educational building that is re-coated with a tile system of coated aluminum, which is attached by glass walls and serves as a cafeteria. The dormer windows on the side of the Telingstraat have been replaced by modern variants; The exterior has been left unmolested.

Because of the double layer is monumental door frames renovation glass used for the benefit of the insulation; the required installation space is mainly found in acoustic ceiling islands. The integration of modern systems is the great challenge of the project, said Steketee. "It is always exciting new elements based on contemporary needs and requirements to weave a monumental building. The sport is to seek out the architectural essence, and on this basis to create a clear, comprehensive structure. "

 

The I.DAY.16 event was organized by AMD-ABITARE Ann Maes & Marleen Bruurs

Yeboah's farm is on a rift at the edge of Tenebea. You can see two other villages we've visited to the north in the lowlands below.

 

When we toured his farm, he explained that the way he'd dug the complex furrows for his tomatoes limited the soil's erosion. The cashew tree he's holding is covered in tiny ants, which he tells us, distracts the birds and larger insects from eating its fruit.

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