View allAll Photos Tagged Eric
Eric Reichwein ollieing a sketchy 11-flat (between parked cars). Now I know there are a few things with this photo, like I shot it too early, the one flash is too bright, and I didn't have time to set up a second flash, but I don't care cause it was a hard angle to shoot. And I'm too stoked on this lens. Plus, I'm stoked on skating with Eric; he's one of the rawest dudes I've ever skated with. Fun evening right before the rain hit.
Hasselblad 500 C/M with 30mm CF T* fisheye with Ektar 100, f/4 @ 1/500. Flash to the left at 1/2 power.
More photos you see in my blod fantasy-blog.ru/?p=261 My blog in Russian only. If you don't know Russian you may watch photos :)
DollChic Eric OOAK 2016
18" fashion doll by Petr Tishkov
Mold: Mr. Chic - David
Skin tone: Natural
wig by DollChic (dollchic.com)
102/365 | April 12, 2010
According to Wikipedia, there are a few known Eric Martin's. The two I am most familiar with is the former NFL player and the lead singer for Mr. Big.
Do you share your name with anyone famous?
Camera: Nikon D90 | Nikkor 35mm(ƒ/1.8G) | ƒ/8 | ISO 200 | 1/200s
Strobist: LumoPro LP120 @ 1/32 through 28" Westcott Apollo Softbox, camera right, approx. 2' from subject, triggered via Cactus v4's.
Twitter: @ericmmartin
Project 365: A daily collection of photos tagged "project365" on Flickr
Eric played with his friend's band again last night. It was a LOT of fun. He played guitar, I danced with old guys and took photos. Good times all around!
Eric Clapton performing on acoustic guitar at the Time Warner Cable Arena on April 2, 2013 in Charlotte, North Carolina - © 2013 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions Concert Photography Archives
I started quilting 7 years ago and Eric, my DH, has patiently waited and supported me all these years. Now he finally get his own quilt. I used fabric I bought this past May when we went to Hawaii. This is Eleanor Burns' Double Pinwheel pattern. Quilted by Marie Chestnut. I used Piping Hot Piping (in orange) in the binding. 63" by 81"
Eric Trump speaking at the 2018 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in National Harbor, Maryland.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
Eric Bompard 2012
Follow me at: twitter.com/toksuede
Please check out my site: Ryu Sha
If you want to learn more about how to shoot sports photography, please visit Big Lens Fast Shutter
Gérard Fromanger. Splendour / Splendeur
arquivos.rtp.pt/conteudos/atlas-do-corpo-e-da-imaginacao/
[ EN ] The Gérard Fromanger (1939–2021) exhibition at Lisbon's Museu Coleção Berardo, part of the France-Portugal Season 2022, features a number of series that characterise the artist's work: twenty-six in all, including more than sixty major paintings.
Each period, comprising reassessments, ruptures, recompositions, and different techniques, forms a highly coherent whole. The series have an internal logic within the artist’s work and mark the different eras within his personal biography, his encounters, and his relationship with current events and, more broadly, with history.
“Red” of all colours and shades permeates Gérard Fromanger’s painting to such an extent that Jacques Prévert imagined, like Klein blue, a Fromanger red.
Gérard Fromanger’s oeuvre is that of a great explorer of the world around him, in permanent sympathy with Walter Benjamin’s flâneur aesthetic, and even with Guy Debord’s dérives.
In historical terms, the artist’s work converges with Pop Art, displaying his preference for bold, non-modulated colours, but is also in constant revolt against any categorical form of artistic convention. His conversions to various practices led him to remain constantly open to new ideas. His exploration of all the traditional themes of painting—portraiture, nudes, landscape, mythology, history painting—places him within the continuum of art history, but his form, devoid of all symbolism, implies at the same time a rupture. Fromanger’s work is that of the tension between the figurable, the representable (bodies, landscapes, cities, etc.), and that which resists: the unrepresentable, the uncertain, with its stretches of abstract painting.
Curator: Éric Corne.
I asked Eric how long he had been growing the beard and his muttered response was a year. I quipped something in reply about his testosterone levels, we laughed and he walked on.
Thats a helluva beard for a years growth. Never had much patience for facial hair, it was always so bloody itchy!!!
#1287A from the Rotary Real Photograph series of postcards - featuring the baritone, comedian and actor Eric Thorne in the part of Baron Popoff in The Merry Widow ~ photo taken in 1907.
For the 1907 London 'première' numerous role names were changed [for various reasons] and 'Baron Popoff' was originally 'Baron Mirko Zeta'
Eric Thorne was born in 1862 and died in London on 26th Nov 1922.
He sang with the D'Oyly Carte Company from early 1884 to Dec 1885. During this time he progressed from the chorus to roles such as -
King Hildebrand in Princess Ida ~ Sir Marmaduke Poindexter in The Sorcerer ~ Florian in Princess Ida and Dick Deadeye in H.M.S. Pinafore.
After leaving D'Oyly Carte he went on to become considerably popular as a comedian in light opera and musical comedy. Not just in the UK but in Europe and the U.S.