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FIDELIO
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
Original libretto by Joseph Sonnleithner & Georg Friedrich Sonnleithner
Adapted and Directed by Ethan Heard
Arranged and Music Directed by Daniel Schlosberg
New English Dialogue Co-Written by Marcus Scott & Ethan Heard
Scenic Design by Reid Thompson
Costume Design by Valérie Thérèse Bart
Hair/Makeup Design by Jon Carter
Lighting Design by Oliver Wason
Sound Design by Kate Marvin
Projections Design by Nicholas Hussong & Joey Moro
Baruch Performing Arts Center
All photos by Russ Rowland
This is a shot of the composing room where they paste up the paper. Hopefully this won't be for much longer and we get a pagination system! I felt it very fitting to use the B&W art filter :)
Vocal coach and composer;
26th Young Composers Meeting;
Podium Gigant, Apeldoorn,
February 25th, 2020;
© co broerse
I have had an idea in my head to use this location for a while. I drive past it almost everyday, and I finally made the decision to stop. I wanted to capture all the green, with a bright contrast color..so pink it was. I am so grateful for my little girl who has the patience to let me play.
I composed this shot with a white background so it wasn't distracting to the viewer. I made sure everything was plain colors so that it really put an emphasis on the persons face while also being focused on the front only to emphasize it even more. This is interesting because there is no true definition of happiness, and you may not know what this guy is happy about, but no matter who you are you could always be happy. This leads also into the idea of evoking happiness and joy while looking at this photo. I took this at a very high shutter speed and low iso to get the right amount of light on his face and keep it in focus.
This double-exposure photograph of the Monument Gardens was composed in-camera (that is, not combined later in post-processing) on the last day of the Bahá’í Fast. It captures two things that I really like about the Bahá’í gardens in Haifa and Akka—symmetry and vivid colour. Both of these, along with the exquisite attention to detail in the maintenance of the gardens, contribute to the glory and majesty of these sanctified precincts.
“Hear Me, ye mortal birds! In the Rose Garden of changeless splendour a Flower hath begun to bloom, compared to which every other flower is but a thorn, and before the brightness of Whose glory the very essence of beauty must pale and wither. Arise, therefore, and, with the whole enthusiasm of your hearts, with all the eagerness of your souls, the full fervor of your will, and the concentrated efforts of your entire being, strive to attain the paradise of His presence, and endeavour to inhale the fragrance of the incorruptible Flower, to breathe the sweet savors of holiness, and to obtain a portion of this perfume of celestial glory.”
—Bahá’u’lláh, Gleanings From the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, p. 320
Composed largely of rock formations and covering an estimated area of 0.12 km², these islands are an important sanctuary for marine fauna like the guanay guano bird, the blue-footed booby and the tendril. Other notable species include Humboldt penguins and two varieties of seals (fur seals and sea lions), amongst other mammals.
Drums, double bass, piano, serpent and vocals;
Nacht van de (Oude) Muziek/Nacht van de Oude Muziek;
Truth&Dare;
Who's Next - Classical Music for a New Generation;
Kunstlinie Almere Flevoland [Schouwburg], Almere,
November 24th, 2016;
© co broerse
This one actually looks better in B&W I think, but I want it to stay color so you can convert it to greyscale yourself if you're curious.
Speleothem (= "cave formations") refers to all secondary mineral deposits in caves. Most speleothem is composed of calcium carbonate (CaCO3 - usually in the form of calcite, but sometimes aragonite). Calcareous speleothem is referred to using the rock name "travertine", a crystalline-textured, chemical sedimentary rock formed by precipitation from water.
The most common type of travertine speleothem is dripstone - it forms from dripping water. Dripstone includes stalactites, stalagmites, columns, and draperies. The second-most common speleothem type is flowstone, which involves mineral precipitation from a thin film of flowing water. Flowstone typically has the appearance of frozen waterfalls. Both dripstone and flowstone form in the vadose zone (= above the water table).
Seen here is flowstone composed of travertine in western Kentucky's Mammoth Cave, the longest cave on Earth, with 426 mapped miles as of fall 2022. The gray rock surrounding the flowstone is limestone. This example is in Pinson's Pass, between lower Boone Avenue and Martel Avenue in Mammoth Cave Ridge. My understanding is that the limestone bedrock in the walls of Pinson's Pass is the Fredonia Member of the lower Ste. Genevieve Limestone (upper Middle Mississippian).
The flowstone mass is not in its original, pristine condition. It has been partially eroded by dissolution during past high flow events in Pinson's Pass, which is a canyon passage. Canyons are taller than they are wide and form in the vadose zone. When a subterranean river is present, it flows downstream toward the phreatic zone (= at & below the water table). This canyon passage formed during the Pleistocene when the water table was higher than now (local base level is the non-subterranean Green River). After the water table lowered, the passage was subaerial long enough to allow flowstone to form. Subsequent high flow events resulted in the passage having high-enough water levels to partly dissolve the flowstone.