View allAll Photos Tagged DailyCatch
North End. July 27, 2012. Chef Jimmy Huynh eats a delicious pan of pasta after a long shift at Daily Catch.
North End. July 27, 2012. Waitress and Girlfriend of the Owner's son, Erinilda Medeiros, serves some fresh calms at the Daily Catch.
Tiny joint, Hanover street. Smaller than my bedroom. These jokers here - raw clams - are an entirely different ballgame than oysters. I didn't have oysters because this was what the restaurant had.
Ashamedly I hid the last one underneath an empty and pretended I'd finished all six.
So delicious. From a restaurant on the Harborwalk called the Daily Catch, which I highly recommend. Tell Max and Maria that the crazy lady with the party in August sent you. Their scallops were absolutely to die for.
A vibrant look at the fresh sea fish arriving at Fishery Ghat in Cox’s Bazar. From colorful marine catches to the busy activity of fishermen and traders, this coastal market reflects the true spirit of Bangladesh’s largest fishing hub along the Bay of Bengal.
Some humor to brighten the day. Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina. February 2012. Nikon Coolpix AW 100.
A vibrant look at the fresh sea fish arriving at Fishery Ghat in Cox’s Bazar. From colorful marine catches to the busy activity of fishermen and traders, this coastal market reflects the true spirit of Bangladesh’s largest fishing hub along the Bay of Bengal.
A vibrant look at the fresh sea fish arriving at Fishery Ghat in Cox’s Bazar. From colorful marine catches to the busy activity of fishermen and traders, this coastal market reflects the true spirit of Bangladesh’s largest fishing hub along the Bay of Bengal.
Pan de Azucar national park in Chile. Fishermen bringing in their catch on the along the coast. Taken March 2012 with a Canonet 28 and lomographic film.
It's always perplexed me to see people getting their daily catch in the Hong Kong harbour. Hello third arm!
A fisherman at Pan de Azucar, Chile cleaning and fileting some fish while some hungry pelicans look on. March 2012. Canonet 28 and lomographic film.
A fisherman rowing in after a long days work. Taken in March 2012 in Pan de Azucar, Chile. Canonet 28 and lomographic film.
Fresh fish displayed at a market stall in Sanlucar de Barrameda, province of Cadiz, Andalusia, Spain. Two men working in the background.
Oil on Canvas
Hals depicted a smiling fisher boy against windy dunes, the sea visible behind him. He made several paintings of fisher children who brought the daily catch from the coastal town of Zandvoort to sell at the Haarlem fish market. Haarlem townsfolk imagined Zandvoort as a seaside idyll and its local villager as uncommonly virtuous souls. They would have understood this boy's gentle smile as a sign of his innocent goodness.*
From the exhibition
Frans Hals
(September 2023 – January 2024)
Four hundred years since they were painted, Frans Hals’s portraits still breathe with life. There’s the hint of a smile, a hand resting nonchalantly on a hip, and just occasionally, a burst of laughter.
Meet the striking characters Hals brought to life in this exhibition of some 50 of his best works. It’s the first major Hals retrospective in more than thirty years.
Hals enthralled 17th-century Dutch audiences. His style was pioneering for the time, showing relaxed, lively sitters, often smiling, and even laughing. This gifted artist’s deft brushwork was unparalleled. He changed the face of portraiture forever.
See these intimate portraits, lively groups scenes and marriage portraits reunited after centuries apart. Amongst them is the first-ever loan of his most famous picture, ‘The Laughing Cavalier’ (1624), from the Wallace Collection, and paintings that have never left the Netherlands.
[*National Gallery]
Taken in National Gallery
Oil on Canvas
Hals depicted a smiling fisher boy against windy dunes, the sea visible behind him. He made several paintings of fisher children who brought the daily catch from the coastal town of Zandvoort to sell at the Haarlem fish market. Haarlem townsfolk imagined Zandvoort as a seaside idyll and its local villager as uncommonly virtuous souls. They would have understood this boy's gentle smile as a sign of his innocent goodness.*
From the exhibition
Frans Hals
(September 2023 – January 2024)
Four hundred years since they were painted, Frans Hals’s portraits still breathe with life. There’s the hint of a smile, a hand resting nonchalantly on a hip, and just occasionally, a burst of laughter.
Meet the striking characters Hals brought to life in this exhibition of some 50 of his best works. It’s the first major Hals retrospective in more than thirty years.
Hals enthralled 17th-century Dutch audiences. His style was pioneering for the time, showing relaxed, lively sitters, often smiling, and even laughing. This gifted artist’s deft brushwork was unparalleled. He changed the face of portraiture forever.
See these intimate portraits, lively groups scenes and marriage portraits reunited after centuries apart. Amongst them is the first-ever loan of his most famous picture, ‘The Laughing Cavalier’ (1624), from the Wallace Collection, and paintings that have never left the Netherlands.
[*National Gallery]
Taken in National Gallery