View allAll Photos Tagged HANDOFGOD

Hand of God 1949-53

Bronze

Height approx. 300 cm

 

A small man is standing on a large hand. He is looking upwards and his body is tense, with fingers splayed. The man is balancing on the index finger and thumb of the large hand, a feat that seems difficult enough in itself, but his exertion is of another nature. He is gazing with rapt attention at something in the sky, as though he were receiving a message or taking part in a dialogue.

 

Carl Milles worked on The Hand of God from 1949 to 1953. This was one of three major commissions he received in the 1950s and completed before his death in 1955. The original was made for the Swedish city of Eskilstuna, and today it can also be seen in other places around the world, for instance in Tokyo, Melbourne and Beijing.

From: www.millesgarden.se

 

-------------

 

Guds hand, 1949-1953

Brons

Höjd: ca 3 meter

 

En liten man står i en stor hand. Han tittar uppåt och kroppen är spänd med vitt utspärrade fingrar. Mannen balanserar på den stora handens tumme och pekfinger, något som verkar nog så krävande, men koncentrationen är av ett annat slag. Mannens uppmärksamhet är riktad mot något i himlen som om han tog emot ett meddelande eller förde ett samtal.

 

Carl Milles arbetade med Guds Hand mellan 1949 och 1953. Det var en av tre stora beställningar under 1950-talet som han slutförde före sin död 1955. Från början gjordes den för den svenska staden Eskilstuna och idag finns den på många håll i världen, bland annat i Tokyo, Melbourne och Peking.

1986 FIFA World Cup, Mexico.

Copyright © Germán Aczel

Join me at: www.facebook.com/pages/German-Aczel/275981167482

www.germanaczel.com

This small church in a Germigny des Pres (pop. 750), was built to serve as the private chapel of Bishop Theodulf of Orléans, who had a sumptuous "villa" here.

 

Theodulf, one of Charlemagne's important counselors, had written the Libri Carolini (aka "Opus Caroli regis contra synodum") at Charles´ request, before Charlemagne appointed him Bishop of Orléans as well as abbot of Fleury Abbey (= "St-Benoit-sur-Loire"), just 7kms east.

 

All the remains of the residence are gone. The "oratorium", that has many parallels to Charlemagne´s palace chapel in Aachen ("Aix-la-Chapelle"), is the last remaining structure. It was consecrated on January 3, 806.

 

In 817, three years after Charlemagne had died, Theodulf was accused of treason and imprisoned in Angers until he died in 821.

 

The church became part of a priory and was used by the parish since the 13th century, when the western wall and apse were removed to make way for a traditional Latin nave. That Romanesque nave was in turn replaced by the present larger one in the 15th or 16th century.

 

The renovation, that was completed end of the 19th century, was not done with much "respect": much of the Carolingian masonry was replaced, two flanking apsidioles were removed, the crossing tower was shortened, most capitals were replaced. But this is still a wonderful carolingian chapel and one of the oldest still existing in France.

 

This magnificent apse mosaic was hidden under whitewash (what may have saved it during the French Revolution). It got discovered in 1840, after local kids played with coloured glass cubes - of unknown origin.

 

This great work of medieval art has no parallel in France and was surely done by an artist from the East. At the time this mosaic was created, the controvery over Iconoclasm was still going on in the Byzantine Empire. All forms of religious imagery were banned in the East - and many gifted artists fled to the West. Maybe the artist, who worked here, was one of them.

  

The mosaic, made of glass and colored stone, is symmetrical, centering on the Ark of the Covenant. In a small area of starry sky the Hand of God descends. Two angels flank the scene. They enclose the sky with their wings and look down at the Ark. Two smaller angels stand atop the Ark, reaching down to it. The Ark of the Covenant is shown as a gold box with side rails for carrying.

 

Along the bottom of the mosaic is a Latin text, which reads:

 

ORACLUM SCM ET CERUBIN HIC ASPICE SPECTANS ET TESTAMENTI MICAT ARCA DEI HAEC CERNENS PRECIBUSQUE STUDENS PULSARE TONANTEM THEODULFUM VOTIS IUNGITO QUAESO TUIS

 

"As you gaze upon the holy propitiatorium and Cherubim, beholder,

and see the shimmering of the Ark of God's covenant, perceiving these things, and prepared to beset the Thunderer with prayers, add, I beg you, Theodulf's name to your invocations." (transation from Wikpedia)

 

For a total of the mosaic see the previous uploads. Here is a detail ..

“If it is by the finger of God that I cast out demons, then the kingdom of God has come upon you” – Lk 11:20, which is part of today's Gospel. What is the finger of God? Read my sermon for today, here.

 

Detail from the apse mosaic of St Agnes outside the Walls in Rome, which shows God's hand holding a wreath of victory.

🌌 The Hand of God Nebula (CG4) – A Celestial Masterpiece 🌌

 

follow - share - credit

www.instagram.com/ale_motta_astrofotografia

 

Feast your eyes on the stunning CG4 Nebula, nicknamed "The Hand of God," a fascinating cometary globule located in the constellation Puppis. This wide-field image showcases its ghostly tendrils of gas and dust, accompanied by a tapestry of vibrant interstellar clouds and a backdrop of countless stars and distant galaxies.

 

✨ Distance from Earth: ~1,300 light-years

📏 Size: About 1.5 light-years across

⭐ Absolute Magnitude: ~13.0

📍 Coordinates (J2000): Right Ascension 07h 19m 38s | Declination -46° 10′ 00″

 

CG4’s eerie "hand-like" shape results from radiation winds sculpting its dense core, creating this breathtaking sight. This image reveals the interplay between the remnants of star formation and the cosmic environment.

 

What do you see when you look at this celestial artwork? Let me know in the comments! 🌠

 

Date: 10/03/2024

Lights: 72x300" (LRGB)

Instruments: Telescope Takahashi FSQ-106ED, Camera QHY 600M, Filters Astrodon

Sant'Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, Italy, c. 533-49 (apse mosaic, 6th century, triumphal arch mosaics, likely c. 7th-12th centuries)

Learn More on Smarthistory

Poster design for a fictional chocolate company. The hand is from the sistine chapel painting, painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512.

The background was paintedby me =)... Designs were me too. Made in Australia.

 

Also visit my blog, Designing my life.

By Freshalex

Thessaloniki's Museum of Byzantine Culture (mbp.gr/html/en/) houses early Christian frescoes from the fourth and fifth centuries in tombs that were discovered in a necropolis outside the ancient city walls. These frescoes feature scenes from the Bible, portraits of the deceased, and decorative motifs common to the Roman funerary art of the period.

 

The example here has deteriorated a bit, but a careful observation shows the figure of a bearded man in the center (Abraham) wielding a knife which he is about to plunge into the neck of a smaller figure (Isaac). He looks to the right corner from which a very large hand (hand of God) emerges with its index finger pointing. A ram stands by the side of the central figure.

 

In the left corner, the Greek letters "ABPAC" (presumably a form of Abraham?) can be made out. In the center, the Greek word "thusia", meaning "sacrifice", and by the hand the Greek word "fone", meaning "voice" (presumably of God).

 

The scene of Abraham's sacrifice is commonly found in both Jewish and Christian art of late antiquity. For Christians, the story signified both God's faithfulness to the covenant promises made to Abraham and his descendants, and, typologically, the sacrificial death of God's only beloved Son, Jesus, on the cross.

 

Follow me on Twitter @arturoviaggia

  

close to the Halfmens Pass you can see this rock-formation, where the locals believe it's the imprint of gods hand. It's nearly 3 m in hight.

Icon with the Virgin and Child, Saints, Angels, and the Hand of God, 6th century, encaustic on panel, 68.5 × 49.5 cm (The Holy Monastery of Saint Catherine, Sinai)

Learn More on Smarthistory

This small church in a Germigny des Pres (pop. 750), was built to serve as the private chapel of Bishop Theodulf of Orléans, who had a sumptuous "villa" here.

 

Theodulf, one of Charlemagne's important counselors, had written the Libri Carolini (aka "Opus Caroli regis contra synodum") at Charles´ request, before Charlemagne appointed him Bishop of Orléans as well as abbot of Fleury Abbey (= "St-Benoit-sur-Loire"), just 7kms east.

 

All the remains of the residence are gone. The "oratorium", that has many parallels to Charlemagne´s palace chapel in Aachen ("Aix-la-Chapelle"), is the last remaining structure. It was consecrated on January 3, 806.

 

In 817, three years after Charlemagne had died, Theodulf was accused of treason and imprisoned in Angers until he died in 821.

 

The church became part of a priory and was used by the parish since the 13th century, when the western wall and apse were removed to make way for a traditional Latin nave. That Romanesque nave was in turn replaced by the present larger one in the 15th or 16th century.

 

The renovation, that was completed end of the 19th century, was not done with much "respect": much of the Carolingian masonry was replaced, two flanking apsidioles were removed, the crossing tower was shortened, most capitals were replaced. But this is still a wonderful carolingian chapel and one of the oldest still existing in France.

 

This magnificent apse mosaic was hidden under whitewash (what may have saved it during the French Revolution). It got discovered in 1840, after local kids played with coloured glass cubes - of unknown origin.

 

This great work of medieval art has no parallel in France and was surely done by an artist from the East. At the time this mosaic was created, the controvery over Iconoclasm was still going on in the Byzantine Empire. All forms of religious imagery were banned in the East - and many gifted artists fled to the West. Maybe the artist, who worked here, was one of them.

  

The mosaic, made of glass and colored stone, is symmetrical, centering on the Ark of the Covenant. In a small area of starry sky the Hand of God descends. Two angels flank the scene. They enclose the sky with their wings and look down at the Ark. Two smaller angels stand atop the Ark, reaching down to it. The Ark of the Covenant is shown as a gold box with side rails for carrying.

 

Along the bottom of the mosaic is a Latin text, which reads:

 

ORACLUM SCM ET CERUBIN HIC ASPICE SPECTANS ET TESTAMENTI MICAT ARCA DEI HAEC CERNENS PRECIBUSQUE STUDENS PULSARE TONANTEM THEODULFUM VOTIS IUNGITO QUAESO TUIS

 

"As you gaze upon the holy propitiatorium and Cherubim, beholder,

and see the shimmering of the Ark of God's covenant, perceiving these things, and prepared to beset the Thunderer with prayers, add, I beg you, Theodulf's name to your invocations." (transation from Wikpedia)

 

For a total of the mosaic see the previous uploads. Here is a detail (rotated).

Sant'Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, Italy, c. 533-49 (apse mosaic, 6th century, triumphal arch mosaics, likely c. 7th-12th centuries)

Learn More on Smarthistory

Hand Holding - Christian Photography View more one of a kind photography at www.inspirationalpics.com

"The Creation of Adam has become a universal expression of the creation ideal. The creative act of God was conceived of as a large, dynamic, almost abstract composition and yet the visual forces within the composition direct the elements to a point of profound tension between Adam's and God's fingers. The dynamic force of God, who is surrounded by his hosts, sweeps earthward while Adam, the individual man of the earth, listlessly raises his arm to await the divine energy of the divine breath of life and power." -(Lindsay Farrell)

 

The famous painting on the ceiling of Sistine chapel' in Vatican by Michelangelo completed in 1541. He took 4 years to finish a series of 9 paintings to fill the immense space of 5,800 square feet of the Sistine Chapel ceiling with the themes of creation and redemption.

 

Shot during my second visit to Vatican in 2008. Photography is prohibited in the chapel.

 

La Main de Dieu (The Hand of God), also called Creation, was executed by Auguste Rodin in 1891. The technique, placing a recumbent or contorted nude in one monumental hands, a specialty he became known, was also used in 1902's The Hand of the Devil. La Main de Dieu carries the dual symbolism of God creating humanity and the artist inventing a world. Rodin's original study for this piece was created useing two characters from The Burghers of Calais.

 

The Musée Rodin, displaying the works of the French sculptor, Auguste Rodin, was opened in 1919 in the Hôtel Biron and surrounding grounds. Rodin used the Hôtel Biron as his residence from 1908, and subsequently donated his entire collection of sculptures (along with paintings by Vincent van Gogh and Pierre-Auguste Renoir that he had acquired) to the French State on the condition that they turn the building into a museum dedicated to his works. The Musée Rodin contains most of Rodin's significant creations, including The Thinker, The Kiss and Gates of Hell.

This is from the Pond Market.

 

The world of the young koi must seem stark. Black bottom, black walls, artificial light from above.. occasional visitors staring down at them. For interest, they have pretty much nothing but themselves and the occasional viewers and ALL their sustenance comes from above. It is little wonder then that they flock to the hand that reaches in, the hand that supplies their food, the hand that is their only real contact with the wider universe. I wonder then, if for them, this is the hand of a god?

 

I snapped the pic and continued to watch as some of these little fellows actually propelled themselves up OUT of the water onto his fingers... I mean, yes these are just little conditioned fish but it is still an amazing thing to see, probably because they ARE just fish.

  

close to the Halfmens Pass you can see this rock-formation, where the locals believe it's the imprint of gods hand. It's nearly 3 m in hight.

Santa Maria in Trastevere ist die älteste Marienkirche der Stadt. Sie wurde 313 fertiggestellt, später vergrössert und um 12. Jh. weitgehend umgebaut, ohne jedoch den mittelalterlichen Charakter zu verlieren. Die Mosaiken gehörten zu den schönsten Roms.

 

In der Apsiskalotte ist Maria erstmals mit Krone und königlichen Gewändern zusammen mit Christus auf einem Thron dargestellt, umgeben von Papst Calixtus (links) und dem hl. Petrus sowie den heiligen Päpsten Cornelius und Julius (rechts).

 

Das Foto hat Notizen.

.

The name of the mural is fitting for its locale - dockside in downtown Reykjavik, Iceland. Mural's name inspired by a song recorded by Iceland's Of Monsters and Men.

Mural painted by Wes21 and Onur. Onur is based in Solothurn, Sweden. though with Turkish roots, the artist is part of the photorealist scene. He has been working together with the Swiss artist Wes21 for the past three years.

On display at 'Pier 24 Photography' in San Francisco, California, Hiroshi Sugimoto's 'Last Supper: Acts of God' was created in 1999. It is a photograph of a life-size wax reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci's 'The Last Supper'. The five-panel work is more than 24 ft. long.

 

Hurricane Sandy was the deadliest and most destructive hurricane of the 2012 Atlantic hurricane season, and the second-costliest hurricane in US history. Sugimoto, living in New York City at the time, watched as the storm flooded and devastated his gallery storeroom where he kept this work. It took months for the print to dry and it remained marred by ripples, warps and discoloration. But, throughout the drying process, Sugimoto watched and, as he stated, "took daily enjoyment" as he watched the expressions of the twelve apostles change. He wrote, "I chose to interpret this as the invisible hand of God coming down to bring my monumental, but unfinished Last Supper to completion. Leonardo completed his Last Supper over five hundred years ago, and it has deteriorated beautifully. I can only be grateful to the story for putting my work through a half-millennium's worth of stresses in so short a time."

  

www.redcarpetreporttv.com

 

Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report host Kaitlyn Durocher were invited to cover the premiere screening of Amazon Studios’ Brand-New, Original Hour-Long Drama Series, Hand of God, at Ace Theater Downtown Los Angeles.

 

All ten episodes to premiere Friday, September 4 exclusively for Amazon Prime members in the US, UK, Germany and Austria.

 

Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:

twitter.com/TheRedCarpetTV

www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV

www.youtube.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

About Amazon Studios’ Hand of God

Created and written by Ben Watkins (Burn Notice), Hand of God marks the television debut of renowned filmmaker Marc Forster (World War Z), and stars Golden Globe winner Ron Perlman in his first lead television role since Sons of Anarchy. The show centers on Judge Pernell Harris (Perlman), a hard-living, law-bending married man with a high-end call girl on the side, who suffers a mental breakdown and goes on a vigilante quest to find the man who raped his daughter-in-law and tore his family apart. With no real evidence to go on, Pernell begins to rely on “visions” and “messages” he believes are being sent by God through Pernell's ventilator-bound son, PJ, who attempts suicide shortly after his wife, Jocelyn, is raped in front of him. Is he inspired or is he insane?

www.facebook.com/pages/Hand-of-God/479377635571174

www.amazon.com/Hand-of-God-Season-1/dp/B00MR9W36Q

twitter.com/handofgodamazon

 

About Amazon Studios

Amazon Studios launched in 2010 as a new way to develop feature films and episodic series—one that’s open to great ideas from creators and audiences around the world. Last year Amazon Studios launched its first two prime time series, Alpha House and Betas, and recently debuted its first three children’s series, the Annecy International Animated Film Festival Award-winning Tumble Leaf from Bix Pix Entertainment, as well as Creative Galaxy from Angela Santomero, the creator of Blue’s Clues, and Annedroids, from Emmy nominated Sinking Ship Entertainment. Amazon Original Series are available exclusively to Prime members through Prime Instant Video. For more info, visit www.amazonstudios.com

 

For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:

www.minglemediatv.com

www.facebook.com/minglemediatvnetwork

www.flickr.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

www.twitter.com/minglemediatv

Follow our host Kaitlyn on Twitter at twitter.com/katedurocher11

Sant'Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, Italy, c. 533-49 (apse mosaic, 6th century, triumphal arch mosaics, likely c. 7th-12th centuries)

Learn More on Smarthistory

Sant'Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, Italy, c. 533-49 (apse mosaic, 6th century, triumphal arch mosaics, likely c. 7th-12th centuries)

Learn More on Smarthistory

Can you see the shape of a hand in this new X-ray image? The hand might look like an X-ray from the doctor's office, but it is actually a cloud of material ejected from a star that exploded. NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or NuSTAR, has imaged the structure in high-energy X-rays for the first time, shown in blue. Lower-energy X-ray light previously detected by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory is shown in green and red.

 

Nicknamed the "Hand of God," this

object is called a pulsar wind nebula. It's powered by the leftover, dense core of a star that blew up in a supernova explosion. The stellar corpse, called PSR B1509-58, or B1509 for short, is a pulsar: it rapidly spins around, seven times per second, firing out a particle wind into the material around it -- material that was ejected in the star's explosion. These particles are interacting with magnetic fields around the material, causing it to glow with X-rays. The result is a cloud that, in previous images, looked like an open hand. The pulsar itself can't be seen in this picture, but is located near the bright white spot.

 

One of the big mysteries of this object is whether the pulsar particles are interacting with the material in a specific way to make it look like a hand, or if the material is in fact shaped like a hand.

 

NuSTAR's view is providing new clues to the puzzle. The hand actually shrinks in the NuSTAR image, looking more like a fist, as indicated by the blue color. The northern region, where the fingers are located, shrinks more than the southern part, where a jet lies, implying the two areas are physically different.

 

The red cloud at the end of the finger region is a different structure, called RCW 89. Astronomers think the pulsar's wind is heating the cloud, causing it to glow with lower-energy X-ray light.

 

In this image, X-ray light seen by Chandra with energy ranges of 0.5 to 2 kiloelectron volts (keV) and 2 to 4 keV is shown in red and green, respectively, while X-ray light detected by NuSTAR in the higher-energy range of 7 to 25 keV is blue.

 

January 9, 2014

Madame Tussauds Wax Museum

Los Angeles, CA

1 bencher, 1 print, winner gets all prints.

Moses removes his sandals when God speaks to him through the miraculously burning bush (Exodus 3), represented here by multiple small flames and the Hand of God descending from heaven. Detail of Byzantine mosaic on the right wall of the presbytery. San Vitale Basilica, Ravenna, Italy.

 

www.sacred-destinations.com/italy/ravenna-san-vitale

Halcyon Gallery. New Bond Street, London

yo, this is a design for the don't panic pack competition. There aren't that many in the running this month so i stand a reasonable chance of getting somewhere. your votes would fill me with such joy! end date is the 15/09/08. big love

 

www.dontpaniconline.com/designthepack/entry/?id=4475

 

I will also be posting a high res version so you can see the glorious screen tone in all its crisp edged wonder.

I saw this billboard while taking my son to Sunday School (strangely enough).

Abraham & Isaac from a Spanish Haggadah c1300; Sacred Exhibition, British Library, 2007

The Flaming Lotus Girls are a San Francisco-based group of of female and male artists collaborating all year round to create exceptional fire art and provide a resource for learning metalworking and other essential shop skills. Their installations incorporate flame effects and enticing design on a gargantuan scale.

 

In the wonderful--even heavenly--place I discovered this week in western Midtown, (a neighborhood ironically known as Hell's Kitchen), I found these amulets, made of glass & silver-tone base metal. We see the blue eye, a symbolic amulet traditionally believed to protect someone, notably a newborn baby, from the "evil eye"--the eye of someone who is envious of the child's birth, good looks, health, etc. Some version of the eye, often in the context of a hand, is pinned to their clothing.

 

Used, or rather displayed, by people of the three religions "belonging to the Book," i.e., the Bible. Whether they are called the 'Hand of Fatima,' the 'Hand of God,' or the 'Good Luck Hand,' or 'The Five Fingers' these amulets hand are also made into gold or silver filigree hand-shaped pendants worn by girls and women, usually made of gold or silver. But they also adorn and/or "protect" houses and cars, for example.

 

I love them and have a pendant, earrings, and even a barrette, featuring the Hand of Fatma, as it is most frequently known in English; I've also given them as gifts. Aside from their beauty, I love the fact that they do not symbolize any particular religious affiliation. Of course, people from a given religion may assume that you are of their faith, but that happens with ethnicity as well...

 

Another interesting aspect of the blue eye amulet is that it is a part of so many traditions and ethnicities. In Iran, there is a pre-Islamic decorative/protective tradition of bright blue ceramic beads, which continues until today. The store owner where I saw explained to me that these gorgeous amulets were made in Jordan. I am most familiar with the various Turkish & North African varieties and was amazed to discover the Jordanian innovations made to the evil eye symbol. Not only have they changed the format of the hand--making it horizontal--but they are also using using fish symbols for their blue-eyed amulets...that's one exciting innovation!

 

For further info on the Evil Eye, see the following Wikipedia link:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_eye

.

Midtown, New York City

www.redcarpetreporttv.com

 

Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report host Kaitlyn Durocher were invited to cover the premiere screening of Amazon Studios’ Brand-New, Original Hour-Long Drama Series, Hand of God, at Ace Theater Downtown Los Angeles.

 

All ten episodes to premiere Friday, September 4 exclusively for Amazon Prime members in the US, UK, Germany and Austria.

 

Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:

twitter.com/TheRedCarpetTV

www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV

www.youtube.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

About Amazon Studios’ Hand of God

Created and written by Ben Watkins (Burn Notice), Hand of God marks the television debut of renowned filmmaker Marc Forster (World War Z), and stars Golden Globe winner Ron Perlman in his first lead television role since Sons of Anarchy. The show centers on Judge Pernell Harris (Perlman), a hard-living, law-bending married man with a high-end call girl on the side, who suffers a mental breakdown and goes on a vigilante quest to find the man who raped his daughter-in-law and tore his family apart. With no real evidence to go on, Pernell begins to rely on “visions” and “messages” he believes are being sent by God through Pernell's ventilator-bound son, PJ, who attempts suicide shortly after his wife, Jocelyn, is raped in front of him. Is he inspired or is he insane?

www.facebook.com/pages/Hand-of-God/479377635571174

www.amazon.com/Hand-of-God-Season-1/dp/B00MR9W36Q

twitter.com/handofgodamazon

 

About Amazon Studios

Amazon Studios launched in 2010 as a new way to develop feature films and episodic series—one that’s open to great ideas from creators and audiences around the world. Last year Amazon Studios launched its first two prime time series, Alpha House and Betas, and recently debuted its first three children’s series, the Annecy International Animated Film Festival Award-winning Tumble Leaf from Bix Pix Entertainment, as well as Creative Galaxy from Angela Santomero, the creator of Blue’s Clues, and Annedroids, from Emmy nominated Sinking Ship Entertainment. Amazon Original Series are available exclusively to Prime members through Prime Instant Video. For more info, visit www.amazonstudios.com

 

For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:

www.minglemediatv.com

www.facebook.com/minglemediatvnetwork

www.flickr.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

www.twitter.com/minglemediatv

Follow our host Kaitlyn on Twitter at twitter.com/katedurocher11

www.redcarpetreporttv.com

 

Mingle Media TV and Red Carpet Report host Kaitlyn Durocher were invited to cover the premiere screening of Amazon Studios’ Brand-New, Original Hour-Long Drama Series, Hand of God, at Ace Theater Downtown Los Angeles.

 

All ten episodes to premiere Friday, September 4 exclusively for Amazon Prime members in the US, UK, Germany and Austria.

 

Get the Story from the Red Carpet Report Team, follow us on Twitter and Facebook at:

twitter.com/TheRedCarpetTV

www.facebook.com/RedCarpetReportTV

www.youtube.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

About Amazon Studios’ Hand of God

Created and written by Ben Watkins (Burn Notice), Hand of God marks the television debut of renowned filmmaker Marc Forster (World War Z), and stars Golden Globe winner Ron Perlman in his first lead television role since Sons of Anarchy. The show centers on Judge Pernell Harris (Perlman), a hard-living, law-bending married man with a high-end call girl on the side, who suffers a mental breakdown and goes on a vigilante quest to find the man who raped his daughter-in-law and tore his family apart. With no real evidence to go on, Pernell begins to rely on “visions” and “messages” he believes are being sent by God through Pernell's ventilator-bound son, PJ, who attempts suicide shortly after his wife, Jocelyn, is raped in front of him. Is he inspired or is he insane?

www.facebook.com/pages/Hand-of-God/479377635571174

www.amazon.com/Hand-of-God-Season-1/dp/B00MR9W36Q

twitter.com/handofgodamazon

 

About Amazon Studios

Amazon Studios launched in 2010 as a new way to develop feature films and episodic series—one that’s open to great ideas from creators and audiences around the world. Last year Amazon Studios launched its first two prime time series, Alpha House and Betas, and recently debuted its first three children’s series, the Annecy International Animated Film Festival Award-winning Tumble Leaf from Bix Pix Entertainment, as well as Creative Galaxy from Angela Santomero, the creator of Blue’s Clues, and Annedroids, from Emmy nominated Sinking Ship Entertainment. Amazon Original Series are available exclusively to Prime members through Prime Instant Video. For more info, visit www.amazonstudios.com

 

For more of Mingle Media TV’s Red Carpet Report coverage, please visit our website and follow us on Twitter and Facebook here:

www.minglemediatv.com

www.facebook.com/minglemediatvnetwork

www.flickr.com/MingleMediaTVNetwork

www.twitter.com/minglemediatv

Follow our host Kaitlyn on Twitter at twitter.com/katedurocher11

Aroe's' living in the past' footie piece with Maradona's 'Hand of God' i know nuthin' about football. Can't figure out another way to get a pic of this. Anyway i think the idea involves another one of those lost 'S' bits turning up way back in time and jamming up the scene or clunking him on the nut or something (Maradona not Aroe)

Messi holding "The Hand of God", when I met him in Germany.

Join me at: www.facebook.com/pages/German-Aczel/275981167482

1 3 5 6 7 ••• 62 63