View allAll Photos Tagged Compose
Silvia Cempini, cello and Letizia Maulà, clarinet;
KLASSIEK@WEST;
OBA De Hallen, Amsterdam,
July 26th, 2020;
© co broerse
Composer Duncan Chapman coaches a student in a Fanfare Competition workshop at the Royal Opera House.
Find out more about Royal Opera House Education
Photograph: Sim Canetty-Clarke
For the Daily Dog Challenge -- 7/25 "Nicely Composed"
For 365: The 2013 Edition -- 206/365
There's just something about the lines and curves of a Greyhound that really draws me. Bunny is always really good about indulging me, too!
You can read more about Bunny at TalesAndTails.com.
Written, composed, and recorded in 1493 AL when Zina was 17 years old. It is the only song she released with her original singing partner, Sarena Clare, before Sarena's tragic death. This song resonates with the simplicity and idealism of youth yet speaks true to the feelings that come alive the first time we have a crush on another. Zina wrote the words to describe how she felt when she met a young man in Melian the year before while down from Larissa to visit Sarena.
Later on, she found out the man was Sarena's lifelong friend and beloved; at this, Zina was quite embarrassed and kept the incident to herself. Later on, Sarena found the lyrics and liked them so much that she put the words to music and arranged a duet for the two of them to sing. How ironic that they would share in singing about falling in love with the man who had captured both their hearts.
If you're wondering why the song is directed at falling in love with a woman, it's because this was Zina's way of hiding the fact that a song was about herself when she wanted. She also wanted the meaning of this song to be two-fold; she wanted to express both her feelings when she saw this man but also how she hoped he had felt when first seeing her - thus, the use of the feminine.
Regular text is sung by Zina; italicized text is sung by Sarena; bold text is sung by both.
Composed for IP285 with the elements of:
1. something which is entirely a primary colour (Yellow)
2. something which is entirely a secondary colour (Purple)
3. Lens flare
Another approach, different lens.
"A Soldier's Tale"
Ballet Tech
choreography by Eliot Feld
composed by Igor Stravinsky
"Pimp" costume designed & painted by Frank Krenz
I composed my photo this way in order to act out a scene in the picture. My intent was to make it seem like a troop was surrendering to an enemy. What makes this photo interesting was the way the army men matched the mood of the background. The emotion that I was aiming for was the loss of hope. The bluish background kind of matched this mood. I had a white setting in order to make this photo simple and not too distracting. I had a high shutter speed of 320, because somebody was holding a piece of paper for my background and the paper kept moving. So, I had to capture the scene instead. I had to open my aperture all the way to get as much light as I could since I have a high shutter speed. I had an ISO of 800 so I wouldn't be having really dark photos to turn in.
Carefully composing the picture so that the overflow from Hollingworth lake filled half the frame, I was satisfied that I'd 'got it'!
Then I printed it, and found the angled surface of the lake with the reflections looked totally wrong. So I tilted it - this is the result. What do you think?
Cette cathédrale est de style gothique, mais au centre d'un quartier baroque. Son bourdon « Die Pummerin » pèse 20 tonnes. Sa toiture est composée de tuiles vernissées, disposées en motifs linéaires, en diagonale. Sur le toit de la partie Est se trouve l'emblème de l'Empire d'Autriche-Hongrie : l'aigle à deux têtes. La flèche la plus haute de la cathédrale culmine à 136 mètres de hauteur, faisant de la cathédrale Saint-Étienne le plus haut monument religieux de Vienne, devant l'église votive.
Sévèrement endommagée pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, la cathédrale a été restaurée en sept ans et a rouvert en 1952.
Débutée en 1137, elle est consacrée en 1147, pendant sa construction en présence de Conrad III d'Allemagne, Otton de Freising, ainsi que d'autres nobles allemands prêts à partir pour la deuxième croisade. La première partie fut achevée en 1160. Elle est ensuite agrandie de 1230 à 1245. C'est de cette époque que datent le mur Ouest et les premières tours romanes. En 1258, un grand incendie détruisit une grande partie du bâtiment. Une deuxième structure, plus large et elle aussi romane fut alors reconstruite sur les ruines de l'ancienne et consacrée le 23 avril 1263.
La cathédrale a été bombardée en 1575 par les Ottomans, puis par Napoléon, ainsi que lors des bombardements alliés à la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale qui l'endommagèrent sévèrement.
Elle contient les viscères des Habsbourg.
La structure mesure 107 mètres de long et 34 mètres de large. La cathédrale est l'un des édifices gothiques les plus importants d'Autriche. Des parties de l'édifice précédent, de style roman tardif, de 1230-40 à 1263, sont encore conservées et forment la façade ouest, flanquée de deux tours hautes d'environ 65 mètres. La cathédrale Saint-Étienne compte au total quatre tours : la plus haute à 136,4 mètres est la tour sud, la tour nord n'a pas été achevée et ne mesure que 68 mètres de haut. Dans l'ancienne Autriche-Hongrie, aucune église ne pouvait dépasser la tour sud de Saint-Étienne. Par exemple, la cathédrale de l'Immaculée-Conception de Linz a été construite avec deux mètres en moins.
La tour sud est un chef-d'œuvre architectural de l'époque ; malgré sa hauteur remarquable, les fondations ont moins de quatre mètres de profondeur. Dans la tour sud, il y a un total de 13 cloches, dont onze forment la cloche principale de la cathédrale Saint-Étienne.
Tour principale, la tour sud présente un plan d'étage carré, qui se transforme progressivement en octogone grâce à un arrangement sophistiqué de pignons. Douze pinacles se dressent au sommet.
La tour nord fut commencée en 1467 et les travaux durèrent jusqu'en 1511. Cependant, en raison de difficultés économiques, de troubles religieux — Vienne était devenue une ville protestante vers 1520 — et militaires (menace turque), elle resta inachevée. La Pummerin, la troisième plus grande cloche d'église à oscillation libre d'Europe, est située dans la tour nord sous une coupole de la Renaissance depuis 1957.
La cathédrale a trois nefs. La nef principale est alignée avec le maître-autel, la nef latérale gauche est dédiée à la Vierge, et celle de droite aux apôtres. Bien que l'intérieur de la nef ait été conçu au Moyen Âge, l'ensemble artistique et liturgique d'origine est incomplet, car le bâtiment a été considérablement modifié au cours de la période baroque.
La création du bâtiment Haas Haus (à gauche sur la photo), dans les années 1990, a provoqué un scandale, son style très moderne cassant la beauté de la cathédrale gothique dont la flèche se reflète dans les vitres du bâtiment.
FR Léontodon hispide - EN Rough hawkbit - ES Leóntodon de prado - DE Steifhaariger Löwenzahn
Leontodon hispidus L. (port)
Prairie humide (alt. 750 m)
Hausen (Rhön-Grabfeld, Bavière, Allemagne)
Indigène (Europe, Caucase, Anatolie, Irak)
Porcelle enracinée - Hairy catsear - Hierba del halcón
Hypochaeris radicata L. (rosette)
Falaise siliceuse (alt. 90 m)
Hermalle-sous-Huy (province de Liège, Wallonie, Belgique)
Indigène (Paléarctique occidental, Assam)
Et si on changeait un peu les règles ?
Si d'habitude notre LightPainting s'exprime par des mouvements de lumières, nous avons souhaité changer les règles. Face aux ambiances lumineuse des cités urbaines, nous avons appliqué le mouvement à l'appareil photo lui même.
Cette technique se base sur des rotations et des zoom de l'appareil.
Le décor devient la source lumineuse avec laquelle il faut composer.
Settings: iPhone 4S
Yesterday and today I've been shooting a film for the London 48hour Sci-Fi competition. The competition is huge and has launched some pretty awesome careers, like Gareth Edward's (Monsters)!
This photo isn't a great 'photo' but it sum up my day perfectly - being sat in front of this small setup composing the soundtrack.
I'm also uploading my Day 96 as soon as I'm home and at a PC!
Missoula,MT (Missoula County)
The Fort Missoula Historic District is composed of 32 contributing structures, a post cemetery, two historic parade grounds, and two groupings of foundations (those of the 19th Century Officers' Row and those of the World War II internment camp barracks) that date from the district's period of significance from 1877-1944 and are directly associated with the historical development of the Fort.
Fort Missoula, the only permanent military post in Montana west of the Continental Divide, was established in June, 1877. The strategic intent of the choice of the Fort location was for greater military control of the Indian tribes of western Montana and to assure the protection of white settlers from hostile Indian attack. By 1877, however, reservation lands had been established in western Montana and few major uprisings occurred which involved the soldiers.
Fort Missoula's significance rests less with its direct military role in quelling uprisings and more with the sequence of non-combative military uses of the property by the federal government and the consistent contribution Fort personnel have made to local economic development. Through the years, Fort Missoula has been used as the headquarters for the Black 25th Infantry Regiment, the place from where the potential military applications of the bicycle were explored, a government training school for skilled mechanics to aid in the World War I effort, the largest Civilian Conservation Corps Headquarters in the United States during the 1930's, a detention camp for Italian artists and seaman as well as Japanese-Americans during World War II, and, for a short time following World War II, Fort Missoula became a medium security prison camp for American soldiers. (1)
This rural one-room schoolhouse was built in 1907 by John Rankin, father of Jeanette Rankin. It was originally located north of Missoula in the lower Grant Creek drainage, a farming area that it served until 1937. It is used to interpret the history of the region’s one-room schoolhouses. (2)
References (1) NRHP Nomination Form npgallery.nps.gov/pdfhost/docs/NRHP/Text/87000865.pdf
(2) Fort Missoula Walking Tour buildings.fortmissoulamuseum.org/grant-creek-schoolhouse/