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This part of our adventures on our Grand Tour of Europe is in episode one of the Take Flight with Scott video series on YouTube. Please join us there for even more content from this trip. Part one is our time in Athens, Greece with our teen nieces Madeline and Emily.
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Model - Emily Whitworth
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The Fine Art Society is pleased to announce two major exhibitions of new work by Emily Young (FRBS), widely acclaimed as Britain’s greatest living stone sculptor. The first exhibition will be staged in the cloisters of the Madonna dell’Orto church in Venice from 9 May - 22 November 2015, to coincide with the 56th Venice Biennale. Venice is a city of stone, and a city of stone carving; it is therefore a fitting location for this exhibition, which presents twenty monumental stone heads. Using rock from quarries near her studio in the Etruscan hills, Young’s work fuses the age-old principles of stone carving with a progressive, widely informed approach to form and composition. The contemporary and ancient are united in the sculptures, creating a rare and poetic presence that is amplified by the atmosphere of the tranquil Venetian cloister, which is part of the Madonna Dell’Orto church favoured by the Italian painter Tintoretto. Monumental yet strongly individualised, static yet expressive, these sculptures encourage the deep contemplation on mankind’s relationship with stone and its source of origin; the Earth. Young observes: “Every moment of every day and every night humankind is called to by the Earth, and we respond to her, our mother planet, our creator. She is our maker, and we her dependents... These are things I think about when carving these stones which the local volcano has thrown out in some eruption, or the wind and rain has exposed over thousands of years, or a river has rolled and smoothed around, for me to find and work into a semblance of me, a conscious human. Throughout our human history we’ve acknowledged nature’s great powers in this way. When I carve the stones I wait to see what the stone and I arrive at together. I think: these stones can easily carry my call back to the Earth, of sorrow and the knowledge of tragedies unfolding, along with gratitude and delight in the beauty of unpolluted night skies. I add my voice to the stone’s, one made in Earth’s history, in violence and stillness and endurance, born of their ascent out of and descent back to dusty origins. They can last at least as long again as they already have done, millions upon millions of years.”
another cross processed holga shot of emily taken on the vacant 5th floor of our cota street campus...
Model: Emily Rose
Strobist: Elinchrom Quadra firing a Freelite A head to camera right through a 70cm Phottix Luna folding beauty dish. Triggered with Elinchrom Skyports
Shot from Leeds Road showing the stone facade around two sides of the building, with the windows fitted in place.
This is the second building to be built on the National Health Inovation Campus.
More information here www.ahr.co.uk/projects/emily-siddon-building
Emily aged 30. In 1849 died of tuberculosis
Emily's only novel: Wuthering Heights, had been published just a year earlier.
ai/digitalpaint/gimp/pixlr
A close up shot from Leeds Road of the Emily Siddon Building, showing the pink insulation covered over with a black membrane. This is the second building to be built on the National Health Inovation Campus.
More information here www.ahr.co.uk/projects/emily-siddon-building
Emily has nice delicate soft features so working on her was a very easy task. We tried so many lovely looks, but these two were my favourites out of them all!
Boys Will Be Girls, London's Luxurious Dressing Service
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Thank you for the kind comments and enquiries on my last upload. Yes, I am still around; just not taking so many photographs these days. Hence the need to dip into the archives yet again.
And here's the story behind the image: The White Van
This part of our adventures on our Grand Tour of Europe is in episode two of the Take Flight with Scott video series on YouTube. Please join us there for even more content from this trip. Part one is our time on Santorini, Greece with our teen nieces Madeline and Emily.
Take Flight to Santorini, Greece Travel Vlog on YT
www.buymeacoffee.com/scottalanmiller
^^^^ You Can Support My Work ^^^^
media-sl.com/2019/10/10/collection-emily-new/
Slavia
Exclusive release for LOOK Event – Opens
WEBSITETELEPORT
Early morning in the East MacDonell Ranges.
It would appear that Emily and Fenn Gaps to the east and west of Heavitree Gap in the MacDonnell Ranges were named by WW Mills or members of the Overland Telegraph Line construction party in 1871.
Mills in his report to Todd (dated 12 December 1872 SA PRO 140/47) mentions
.... scratching in the bed of The Laura at Fenns Gap, also at Temple Bar. The Emily Springs 8 miles east of Heavitree Gap ... and later on ... The Burt is situated 4 miles north of the Harry. Red gum trees line its banks and water may be obtained by scratching for several months after rain. - when referring to availability of water in the vicinity of MacDonnell Ranges.
Info couresy of NT Place Names Register
This shot from Old Leeds Road of the Emily Siddon Building, with the pink insulation now covering the whole of the building, and the small annexe appears to be finished.
This is the second building to be built on the National Health Inovation Campus.
More information here www.ahr.co.uk/projects/emily-siddon-building
Nikon 18-70mm lens used at 18mm, no flash, ISO 250. This shot was handheld. I had to bump up the shot in Photoshop a bit because it was underexposed. I was testing this lower angle to see how good the positioning was. I liked this angle because of how the light casts off of Emily's face. The shadows here are not harsh.
Emily Gap is located in the East McDonnell Ranges in the Northern territory, Australia
Thanks for any comments, views or favorites for this or any of my other images!
Copyright © Paul Hollins. All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my explicit written permission.
The Fine Art Society is pleased to announce two major exhibitions of new work by Emily Young (FRBS), widely acclaimed as Britain’s greatest living stone sculptor. The first exhibition will be staged in the cloisters of the Madonna dell’Orto church in Venice from 9 May - 22 November 2015, to coincide with the 56th Venice Biennale. Venice is a city of stone, and a city of stone carving; it is therefore a fitting location for this exhibition, which presents twenty monumental stone heads. Using rock from quarries near her studio in the Etruscan hills, Young’s work fuses the age-old principles of stone carving with a progressive, widely informed approach to form and composition. The contemporary and ancient are united in the sculptures, creating a rare and poetic presence that is amplified by the atmosphere of the tranquil Venetian cloister, which is part of the Madonna Dell’Orto church favoured by the Italian painter Tintoretto. Monumental yet strongly individualised, static yet expressive, these sculptures encourage the deep contemplation on mankind’s relationship with stone and its source of origin; the Earth. Young observes: “Every moment of every day and every night humankind is called to by the Earth, and we respond to her, our mother planet, our creator. She is our maker, and we her dependents... These are things I think about when carving these stones which the local volcano has thrown out in some eruption, or the wind and rain has exposed over thousands of years, or a river has rolled and smoothed around, for me to find and work into a semblance of me, a conscious human. Throughout our human history we’ve acknowledged nature’s great powers in this way. When I carve the stones I wait to see what the stone and I arrive at together. I think: these stones can easily carry my call back to the Earth, of sorrow and the knowledge of tragedies unfolding, along with gratitude and delight in the beauty of unpolluted night skies. I add my voice to the stone’s, one made in Earth’s history, in violence and stillness and endurance, born of their ascent out of and descent back to dusty origins. They can last at least as long again as they already have done, millions upon millions of years.”
Comments always appreciated, as long as you keep it clean - I love to hear your feedback! xx
Apologies for the quality of the audio on this - I've had to bodge this together. I made a slideshow using online software but I couldn't save it in a usable format, so instead I had to play it on the PC screen while filming it on my iphone.
It is somewhat self-indulgent, so apologies for that also, lol.
A collection of pictures from my first emergence, right through up to the end of July this year. Loads of different looks, outfits, places and people. Personally, I can't watch this without being reduced to joyful tears!
The music, 'This Is Me', from The Greatest Showman, is the perfect track and is somewhat of a trans anthem. Rightly so. As the lyrics go:
Look out 'cause here I come
And I'm marching on to the beat I drum
I'm not scared to be seen
I make no apologies
This is me!