View allAll Photos Tagged Grounding

A series of photos showing the effort to remove the Sarah Spencer from her grounding near the Southwestern Sales dock in Windsor Ontario.

Paula Lucuara, fourth-year medical student and organizer of “Night of Stories and Art,” (left) with fourth-year student Naima Joseph. (Pauley Chea/UConn Health Center Photo)

To design an effective communication tower lightning protection system, LEC utilizes highly sensitive Smart Ground Testing audit system, advanced modelling software, patented products and years of experience and also Lightning Eliminators specializes in providing integrated lightning protection and prevention products, solutions and services by utilizing innovative patented charge transfer technology, grounding systems engineering, surge protection design. Get in touch with us: www.lightningprotection.com/

 

Taken off a sign on an electrical kiosk in Woodford Square, Port of Spain

Grounding: States of Gender

Gita Hashemi

Curated by Soheila Esfahani

Exhibition: January 9 – 29, 2026

Thursday, January 8 from 4–6PM

artLAB Gallery, JLVAC

 

Reproducing an Iranian woman’s auto-ethnography in a visually-striking immersive installation, Grounding was created over an 8-day livestreamed durational performance in February 2017. Heralding the global #Me-Too movement and the #WomanLifeFreedom uprising in Iran, in this installation Gita Hashemi puts gender-based violence and disparity – in fact, the very construction of gender itself – in sharp focus and places the audience fully immersed in it.

 

Grounding combines life writing with live writing – what Hashemi calls “embodied writing,” using Persian calligraphy only to break its traditional limits. Rather than transcribing sacred text or classical poetry (formal writing by men and about men) on intimate-sized gilded manuscript paper to be owned, here Hashemi writes and records in public – on her hands and knees and marking her own reactions in red ink thus making the labour and our witnessing of it inseparable from the artwork – on massive scrolls and in colloquial language, a woman’s highly intimate stories, what remains absented from formal discourse. The artist’s original statement reads:

 

“The narrative has been emerging through conversations between us about how being women has affected our lives . . . Writing the self in a public space is an act of liberation when it reveals what we are trained, co-opted, forced, or acculturated to hide. In talking and then writing about intimately personal and sometimes traumatic experiences, Zahra and I have had to overcome many inhibitions. We entered each other’s lives as witness. Therefore, the process has been not only revealing but healing.”

 

Grounding addresses the politics of gender in contemporary Iran and beyond:

 

“This piece started with the dream of a space where writing could fully intertwine with embodied gestures and performative expression to explore the potentials of written word in creating visual-emotional landscapes. While I was dreaming, voices and images from the outside world infiltrated in my dreamscape: There is the man who is now president saying “grab [women] by the pussy” and the over-exposed image of an imported made-up doll standing beside him. There is the campus rapist walking free, and the radio host acquitted of sexual assault. There were Pussy Riot in Russia, masses of women in rallies against rape in India, and Women’s March on Washington. There, is the Islamic State, and here, in the “West,” and around the globe is the state of poverty that increasing numbers of women are pushed into, courtesy of neo-liberalism and politics of austerity.”

 

Grounding was selected as the monographic exhibition of the year in 2017 by the Ontario Association of Art Galleries. The jury cited the work for “representations of freedom and gender that transgress geographical, political, and cultural boundaries.” It was originally created at Carlton University Art Gallery as part of Open Space Lab, curated by Anna Khimasia.

 

This installation at the artLAB includes the original scrolls written in 2017. The video combines the footage shot on days 1 and 2 of the livestreamed performance (the first 6 scrolls), played here at 2-20x normal speed.

 

Exhibition text by Mina Rastgu.

 

Read the review: “Grounding: States of Gender”: Persian calligraphy documents memoir of womanhood in Iran. Written by Incé Husain. Antler River Media Co-op

 

With generous support from: Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Centre for Research on Migration and Ethnic Relations, Department of Languages and Cultures, Department of Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

 

artLAB Gallery

JL Visual Arts Centre

Western University

London, Ontario, Canada

 

© 2026; Department of Visual Arts; Western University

Internet connection + Grounding (earth connection)

Here you can see the heads of the four CS4-4 blind rivets that hold on the Faston tabs.

Bank construction. Easton, Massachusetts.

Finally got this 3/4 ground rod seated!

grounding out, i believe, but oh well

Society increasingly depends on petroleum products, so storage management of crude oil and its products has become particularly important. The approach to solving the lightning induced fire issue is centred on eliminating voltage differential by installing a fuel tank lightning protection system such as LEC”s Retractable Grounding Assembly. To receive a quote or more information, feel free to contact us: www.lightningprotection.com/

 

2022 Grounding the Green New Deal: A Summit on Design, Policy, and Advocacy (Credit: Allison Shelley/Landscape Architecture Foundation)

Lightning protection and prevention system, the downtime and the resulting expensive interruption of operations can be reduced to the minimum. We have performed works at numerous transportation facilities and ensure reliable lightning protection. LEC is dedicated to providing integrated, industrial lightning protection design and prevention solutions, patented charge transfer technology, grounding systems testing, surge protection and more. As always of you have any questions or need additional information please feel free to contact us: www.lightningprotection.com/choose-best-lightning-protect...

 

During the construction of the pad, heavy copper grounding cables were melted to the steel beams and woven through the rebar to aid in what is known as Ufer grounding. This picture shows an exothermic mould being prepared on the top of a ground rod, which was planted at the bottom of the hole.

 

Additional copper cables interspersed with ground rods, radiate from the tower legs. These divide the power of lightning strikes across a larger area of land. These were also exothermically welded to the steel legs, in the early stages of construction.

 

For further information on tower grounding, visit:

www.comm-omni.com/polyweb/ufertower.htm

 

Manly grounding

Come and treat yourself to a grounding experience which includes daily yoga and pranayama, meditation, mindfulness and free flowing movement.

 

Get more info: bit.ly/3rqAKFS

 

Email us at: info.nydum@gmail.com

Grounding: States of Gender

Gita Hashemi

Curated by Soheila Esfahani

Exhibition: January 9 – 29, 2026

Thursday, January 8 from 4–6PM

artLAB Gallery, JLVAC

 

Reproducing an Iranian woman’s auto-ethnography in a visually-striking immersive installation, Grounding was created over an 8-day livestreamed durational performance in February 2017. Heralding the global #Me-Too movement and the #WomanLifeFreedom uprising in Iran, in this installation Gita Hashemi puts gender-based violence and disparity – in fact, the very construction of gender itself – in sharp focus and places the audience fully immersed in it.

 

Grounding combines life writing with live writing – what Hashemi calls “embodied writing,” using Persian calligraphy only to break its traditional limits. Rather than transcribing sacred text or classical poetry (formal writing by men and about men) on intimate-sized gilded manuscript paper to be owned, here Hashemi writes and records in public – on her hands and knees and marking her own reactions in red ink thus making the labour and our witnessing of it inseparable from the artwork – on massive scrolls and in colloquial language, a woman’s highly intimate stories, what remains absented from formal discourse. The artist’s original statement reads:

 

“The narrative has been emerging through conversations between us about how being women has affected our lives . . . Writing the self in a public space is an act of liberation when it reveals what we are trained, co-opted, forced, or acculturated to hide. In talking and then writing about intimately personal and sometimes traumatic experiences, Zahra and I have had to overcome many inhibitions. We entered each other’s lives as witness. Therefore, the process has been not only revealing but healing.”

 

Grounding addresses the politics of gender in contemporary Iran and beyond:

 

“This piece started with the dream of a space where writing could fully intertwine with embodied gestures and performative expression to explore the potentials of written word in creating visual-emotional landscapes. While I was dreaming, voices and images from the outside world infiltrated in my dreamscape: There is the man who is now president saying “grab [women] by the pussy” and the over-exposed image of an imported made-up doll standing beside him. There is the campus rapist walking free, and the radio host acquitted of sexual assault. There were Pussy Riot in Russia, masses of women in rallies against rape in India, and Women’s March on Washington. There, is the Islamic State, and here, in the “West,” and around the globe is the state of poverty that increasing numbers of women are pushed into, courtesy of neo-liberalism and politics of austerity.”

 

Grounding was selected as the monographic exhibition of the year in 2017 by the Ontario Association of Art Galleries. The jury cited the work for “representations of freedom and gender that transgress geographical, political, and cultural boundaries.” It was originally created at Carlton University Art Gallery as part of Open Space Lab, curated by Anna Khimasia.

 

This installation at the artLAB includes the original scrolls written in 2017. The video combines the footage shot on days 1 and 2 of the livestreamed performance (the first 6 scrolls), played here at 2-20x normal speed.

 

Exhibition text by Mina Rastgu.

 

Read the review: “Grounding: States of Gender”: Persian calligraphy documents memoir of womanhood in Iran. Written by Incé Husain. Antler River Media Co-op

 

With generous support from: Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Centre for Research on Migration and Ethnic Relations, Department of Languages and Cultures, Department of Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

 

artLAB Gallery

JL Visual Arts Centre

Western University

London, Ontario, Canada

 

© 2026; Department of Visual Arts; Western University

Grounding: States of Gender

Gita Hashemi

Curated by Soheila Esfahani

Exhibition: January 9 – 29, 2026

Thursday, January 8 from 4–6PM

artLAB Gallery, JLVAC

 

Reproducing an Iranian woman’s auto-ethnography in a visually-striking immersive installation, Grounding was created over an 8-day livestreamed durational performance in February 2017. Heralding the global #Me-Too movement and the #WomanLifeFreedom uprising in Iran, in this installation Gita Hashemi puts gender-based violence and disparity – in fact, the very construction of gender itself – in sharp focus and places the audience fully immersed in it.

 

Grounding combines life writing with live writing – what Hashemi calls “embodied writing,” using Persian calligraphy only to break its traditional limits. Rather than transcribing sacred text or classical poetry (formal writing by men and about men) on intimate-sized gilded manuscript paper to be owned, here Hashemi writes and records in public – on her hands and knees and marking her own reactions in red ink thus making the labour and our witnessing of it inseparable from the artwork – on massive scrolls and in colloquial language, a woman’s highly intimate stories, what remains absented from formal discourse. The artist’s original statement reads:

 

“The narrative has been emerging through conversations between us about how being women has affected our lives . . . Writing the self in a public space is an act of liberation when it reveals what we are trained, co-opted, forced, or acculturated to hide. In talking and then writing about intimately personal and sometimes traumatic experiences, Zahra and I have had to overcome many inhibitions. We entered each other’s lives as witness. Therefore, the process has been not only revealing but healing.”

 

Grounding addresses the politics of gender in contemporary Iran and beyond:

 

“This piece started with the dream of a space where writing could fully intertwine with embodied gestures and performative expression to explore the potentials of written word in creating visual-emotional landscapes. While I was dreaming, voices and images from the outside world infiltrated in my dreamscape: There is the man who is now president saying “grab [women] by the pussy” and the over-exposed image of an imported made-up doll standing beside him. There is the campus rapist walking free, and the radio host acquitted of sexual assault. There were Pussy Riot in Russia, masses of women in rallies against rape in India, and Women’s March on Washington. There, is the Islamic State, and here, in the “West,” and around the globe is the state of poverty that increasing numbers of women are pushed into, courtesy of neo-liberalism and politics of austerity.”

 

Grounding was selected as the monographic exhibition of the year in 2017 by the Ontario Association of Art Galleries. The jury cited the work for “representations of freedom and gender that transgress geographical, political, and cultural boundaries.” It was originally created at Carlton University Art Gallery as part of Open Space Lab, curated by Anna Khimasia.

 

This installation at the artLAB includes the original scrolls written in 2017. The video combines the footage shot on days 1 and 2 of the livestreamed performance (the first 6 scrolls), played here at 2-20x normal speed.

 

Exhibition text by Mina Rastgu.

 

Read the review: “Grounding: States of Gender”: Persian calligraphy documents memoir of womanhood in Iran. Written by Incé Husain. Antler River Media Co-op

 

With generous support from: Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Centre for Research on Migration and Ethnic Relations, Department of Languages and Cultures, Department of Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

 

artLAB Gallery

JL Visual Arts Centre

Western University

London, Ontario, Canada

 

© 2026; Department of Visual Arts; Western University

Grounding: States of Gender

Gita Hashemi

Curated by Soheila Esfahani

Exhibition: January 9 – 29, 2026

Thursday, January 8 from 4–6PM

artLAB Gallery, JLVAC

 

Reproducing an Iranian woman’s auto-ethnography in a visually-striking immersive installation, Grounding was created over an 8-day livestreamed durational performance in February 2017. Heralding the global #Me-Too movement and the #WomanLifeFreedom uprising in Iran, in this installation Gita Hashemi puts gender-based violence and disparity – in fact, the very construction of gender itself – in sharp focus and places the audience fully immersed in it.

 

Grounding combines life writing with live writing – what Hashemi calls “embodied writing,” using Persian calligraphy only to break its traditional limits. Rather than transcribing sacred text or classical poetry (formal writing by men and about men) on intimate-sized gilded manuscript paper to be owned, here Hashemi writes and records in public – on her hands and knees and marking her own reactions in red ink thus making the labour and our witnessing of it inseparable from the artwork – on massive scrolls and in colloquial language, a woman’s highly intimate stories, what remains absented from formal discourse. The artist’s original statement reads:

 

“The narrative has been emerging through conversations between us about how being women has affected our lives . . . Writing the self in a public space is an act of liberation when it reveals what we are trained, co-opted, forced, or acculturated to hide. In talking and then writing about intimately personal and sometimes traumatic experiences, Zahra and I have had to overcome many inhibitions. We entered each other’s lives as witness. Therefore, the process has been not only revealing but healing.”

 

Grounding addresses the politics of gender in contemporary Iran and beyond:

 

“This piece started with the dream of a space where writing could fully intertwine with embodied gestures and performative expression to explore the potentials of written word in creating visual-emotional landscapes. While I was dreaming, voices and images from the outside world infiltrated in my dreamscape: There is the man who is now president saying “grab [women] by the pussy” and the over-exposed image of an imported made-up doll standing beside him. There is the campus rapist walking free, and the radio host acquitted of sexual assault. There were Pussy Riot in Russia, masses of women in rallies against rape in India, and Women’s March on Washington. There, is the Islamic State, and here, in the “West,” and around the globe is the state of poverty that increasing numbers of women are pushed into, courtesy of neo-liberalism and politics of austerity.”

 

Grounding was selected as the monographic exhibition of the year in 2017 by the Ontario Association of Art Galleries. The jury cited the work for “representations of freedom and gender that transgress geographical, political, and cultural boundaries.” It was originally created at Carlton University Art Gallery as part of Open Space Lab, curated by Anna Khimasia.

 

This installation at the artLAB includes the original scrolls written in 2017. The video combines the footage shot on days 1 and 2 of the livestreamed performance (the first 6 scrolls), played here at 2-20x normal speed.

 

Exhibition text by Mina Rastgu.

 

Read the review: “Grounding: States of Gender”: Persian calligraphy documents memoir of womanhood in Iran. Written by Incé Husain. Antler River Media Co-op

 

With generous support from: Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Centre for Research on Migration and Ethnic Relations, Department of Languages and Cultures, Department of Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

 

artLAB Gallery

JL Visual Arts Centre

Western University

London, Ontario, Canada

 

© 2026; Department of Visual Arts; Western University

Corona-Ferien der Swissflotte auf dem Flugplatz Dübendorf

The crabapple tree by my apartment flowered, covering the parking lot with white petals that looked like snow. 24 hours later, they were all shriveled and grey.

Grounding of overhead at Middle Brighton Substation

While my wife and I have our "non eye to eye" moments, I am continually reminded that she is a grounding force for me so I don't go and live in a flighty world of fancy and no reality.

 

So when she shows faith in me and my ability to do something, I truly know that I can indeed do it. Time and again she has trusted that I will be able to do something I set my sights on. Without her belief in me, it would be a very different life I live.

 

(and no, she doesn't really "get" the whole concept of self-discovery and self-analysis that I'm putting myself through with Twitter365, hence the slightly bemused look on her face) :)

Grounding: States of Gender

Gita Hashemi

Curated by Soheila Esfahani

Exhibition: January 9 – 29, 2026

Thursday, January 8 from 4–6PM

artLAB Gallery, JLVAC

 

Reproducing an Iranian woman’s auto-ethnography in a visually-striking immersive installation, Grounding was created over an 8-day livestreamed durational performance in February 2017. Heralding the global #Me-Too movement and the #WomanLifeFreedom uprising in Iran, in this installation Gita Hashemi puts gender-based violence and disparity – in fact, the very construction of gender itself – in sharp focus and places the audience fully immersed in it.

 

Grounding combines life writing with live writing – what Hashemi calls “embodied writing,” using Persian calligraphy only to break its traditional limits. Rather than transcribing sacred text or classical poetry (formal writing by men and about men) on intimate-sized gilded manuscript paper to be owned, here Hashemi writes and records in public – on her hands and knees and marking her own reactions in red ink thus making the labour and our witnessing of it inseparable from the artwork – on massive scrolls and in colloquial language, a woman’s highly intimate stories, what remains absented from formal discourse. The artist’s original statement reads:

 

“The narrative has been emerging through conversations between us about how being women has affected our lives . . . Writing the self in a public space is an act of liberation when it reveals what we are trained, co-opted, forced, or acculturated to hide. In talking and then writing about intimately personal and sometimes traumatic experiences, Zahra and I have had to overcome many inhibitions. We entered each other’s lives as witness. Therefore, the process has been not only revealing but healing.”

 

Grounding addresses the politics of gender in contemporary Iran and beyond:

 

“This piece started with the dream of a space where writing could fully intertwine with embodied gestures and performative expression to explore the potentials of written word in creating visual-emotional landscapes. While I was dreaming, voices and images from the outside world infiltrated in my dreamscape: There is the man who is now president saying “grab [women] by the pussy” and the over-exposed image of an imported made-up doll standing beside him. There is the campus rapist walking free, and the radio host acquitted of sexual assault. There were Pussy Riot in Russia, masses of women in rallies against rape in India, and Women’s March on Washington. There, is the Islamic State, and here, in the “West,” and around the globe is the state of poverty that increasing numbers of women are pushed into, courtesy of neo-liberalism and politics of austerity.”

 

Grounding was selected as the monographic exhibition of the year in 2017 by the Ontario Association of Art Galleries. The jury cited the work for “representations of freedom and gender that transgress geographical, political, and cultural boundaries.” It was originally created at Carlton University Art Gallery as part of Open Space Lab, curated by Anna Khimasia.

 

This installation at the artLAB includes the original scrolls written in 2017. The video combines the footage shot on days 1 and 2 of the livestreamed performance (the first 6 scrolls), played here at 2-20x normal speed.

 

Exhibition text by Mina Rastgu.

 

Read the review: “Grounding: States of Gender”: Persian calligraphy documents memoir of womanhood in Iran. Written by Incé Husain. Antler River Media Co-op

 

With generous support from: Department of Visual Arts, Faculty of Arts & Humanities, Centre for Research on Migration and Ethnic Relations, Department of Languages and Cultures, Department of Gender, Sexuality & Women's Studies.

 

artLAB Gallery

JL Visual Arts Centre

Western University

London, Ontario, Canada

 

© 2026; Department of Visual Arts; Western University

Eric Chavez grounding weakly to short.

Series 2 XBee Radio (ZB Pro firmware) in Arduino XBee Shield. The Arduino uses the code.google.com/p/xbee-arduino/ library to send and receive packets with the XBee radio

 

rapplogic.blogspot.com/2009/08/droplet.html

 

I wanted good contact between the battery tray and the grounding plate, so I left the areas where they touch unprimed.

Grounding wire for the lightning rod on an old barn.

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