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This is a quarter view of a 1955 Mercury D-528 concept car at The Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, California. The rounded fenders were actually functional -- a spare tire was beneath one and a gas tank beneath the other.
A combination of pieces from Hiroshi Sugimoto's photographic exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art Art Australia.
SMC PENTAX (K) 28mm f2 "Hollywood"
Yo, hold up, hold up, hold up, okay, hold up
You see a bad bitch coming through, yo, what's the hold up?
I'm in that new new, me and New New when I roll up
I tell the valet, "Park my Benz and bring the Rolls up"
Yo, hold up, hold up, hold up, okay, hold up
The Himalayas, or Himalaya, form a mountain range in Asia separating the plains of the Indian subcontinent from the Tibetan Plateau.
The Himalayan range has many of the Earth's highest peaks, including the highest, Mount Everest. The Himalayas include over fifty mountains exceeding 7,200 metres (23,600 ft) in elevation, including ten of the fourteen 8000m peaks. By contrast, the highest peak outside Asia – Aconcagua, in the Andes – is 6,961 metres (22,838 ft) tall.
The Himalayan range is bordered on the northwest by the Karakoram and Hindu Kush ranges, on the north by the Tibetan Plateau, and on the south by the Indo-Gangetic Plain. The Himalayas are distinct from the other great ranges of central Asia, although sometimes the term Himalaya is loosely used to include the Karakoram and some of the other ranges. The Himalayas – inhabited by 52.7 million people – are spread across five countries: India, Nepal, Bhutan, China and Pakistan, with the first three countries having sovereignty over most of the range. Some of the world's major rivers, the Indus, the Ganges, and the Tsangpo-Brahmaputra, rise in the Himalayas, and their combined drainage basin is home to roughly 600 million people. The Himalayas have profoundly shaped the cultures of the Indian subcontinent; many Himalayan peaks are sacred in Hinduism and Buddhism.
Lifted by the subduction of the Indian tectonic plate under the Eurasian Plate, the Himalayan mountain range runs, west-northwest to east-southeast, in an arc 2,400 kilometres (1,500 mi) long.
"Forming and breaking in the sky,
I fancy all shapes are there;
Temple, mountain, monument, spire;
Ships rigged out with sails of fire,
And blown by the evening air."
- J.K. Hoyt
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This shot was taken during a cruise on The Yangtze River, China.
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Masjid Wazir Khan is one of the famous remaining mosques from the Mughal era. Located near the Delhi gate of the Walled City, it is vastly different from the Badshahi mosque, both in form and style.
empty form I am
state of being
Illusion of reality
We are nothing but mere form before our next transition.
In Buddhism, it is believed that our body is only a temporary form before we transition into another form. It is merely a physical manifestation of our consciousness, not the essence of who we truly are.
One way to understand this concept is through the idea of "non-self." For example, a flower is composed of non-flower elements—water, sunlight, soil, weather, the gardener, the florist, and more. Without these elements, the flower would not exist. Similarly, a person is made up of countless elements outside of the self, including parents, ancestors (both human and non-human), water, sunlight, food, education, and life experiences. The body is in a constant state of change, and our thoughts and emotions are always in flux.
To depict this abstract concept, I have used a physical monk's robe draped over a pair of eyes—without a body—to symbolize the impermanence and non-self nature of existence of our form.
and forms ...
artist/architect unknown to me ...
in my Art Series ...
Taken Mar 21, 2019
Thanks for your visits, faves, invites and comments ... (c)rebfoto
Taken in Clear Creek Canyon, East of Idaho Springs in Colorado. The ice is starting to form around rocks and around the edges of the creek.
Threat of a storm above with leaden summer skies. Underneath these grasses and assorted plants just hold their own and regardless of what comes from the sky soon I am sure they will still be here tomorrow, fragile as they seem!
Artwork by Dutch artist Bob Bonies (b. 1937). Was an exhibition in Kunstmuseum The Hague. The monochrome planes of colour in his paintings are nothing other than what they appear to be: colour and form.
More of Bob Bonies at: