View allAll Photos Tagged Humiliated
Hardly surprising, but ouch!
England's football humiliation took another dive today following our disastrous World Cup 2014 run.
We slumped to our lowest Fifa ranking for 18 years, plummeting ten places to 20th in the world.
World Cup winners, Germany, climbed into the No.1 shot.
Runners-up Argentina have risen to second and World Cup semi-finalists Holland have climbed from 15th to third,
completing the new-look at the top of world football.
Andrieu d'Andres, Monumental (Andrieu d'Andres, monumental)
In the wake of its humiliating defeat at the hands of Prussia in 1870, the French Third Republic sought to reinvigorate notions of heroism and citizenship. To this end, in 1884 the city council of Calais commissioned Rodin to create a monument to Eustache de Saint-Pierre. In 1347, while Calais was under siege by the English, Eustache and five other important citizens of the town had offered themselves as hostages, pleading for mercy for their long-suffering city.
In his first maquette of 1884, Rodin proposed a conventional monument, with his figures united as a group on a tall pedestal. By the following year, however, the six figures were placed on a low rectangular plinth, at the same level as the viewer. As Rodin later wrote: "I wanted to have my statues placed in front of the Calais city hall on the very paving of the square like a living rosary of suffering and sacrifice."
Rodin first made nude figure studies, which he then draped in wet canvas to model the sackcloth worn by the burghers when they surrendered. To create the expressive figures possible, he used the radical technique of combining studies of hands and feet from different figures. Creating the very antithesis of conventional heroic sculpture, Rodin here set out the terms of a modern, anti-monumental tradition that resonates to this day.
o Artist: Auguste Rodin, French, 1840-1917
o Cast By: Fonderie de Coubertin, Saint-Rémy-les-Chevreuses
o Medium: Bronze
o Place Made: France
o Dates: 1888; cast 1983
Red-tailed Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) Michaelbrook Marsh, Kelowna, BC.
With a lot of post-processing I've sort of saved this shot of Re'ddy backing around and back to a safer part of his territory.... I've taken much better shots of him over the years. This was a surprise encounter....
The Armistice Clearing at Compiègne:
Memorial Hall. Some 1940 photos on display in the hall -- these record the signing of the French surrender
momentary entertainment :-) Karen Crockett
early Higan cherry, ' Scott Early', j c raulston arboretum, ncsu, Raleigh, north carolina
The Armistice Clearing at Compiègne: Replica of the Wagon de l'Armistice.
Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et des Grands Express Européens.
11 novembre 1918:
Dans le Wagon No. 2419D a été signé l’Armistice mettant fin à guerre 1914-1918.
Les Plénipotentiaires des Gouvernements Alliés étaient:
France:
Maréchal Ferdinand Foch , Général Maxime Weygand.
Le Commandeur Bagot (interprêre).
Britain:
British naval officer Captain Jack Marriott, Rear-Admiral George Hope, First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss
Germany:
Matthias Erzberger, head of the German delegation Admiral Ernst Vanselow, German Count Alfred von Oberndorff of the Foreign Ministry, German General Detlof von Winterfeldt.
We went to the forest with my friends. It had been raining for two days so there was mud everywhere. I decided to take off my shoes and go barefoot. My feet and soles were all covered in mud. It was very pleasant and relaxing. What do you think about that? I felt very humiliated when everyone with shoes could look at my dirty feet.
Pierre de Wiessant, Monumental (Pierre de Wissant, monumental)
In the wake of its humiliating defeat at the hands of Prussia in 1870, the French Third Republic sought to reinvigorate notions of heroism and citizenship. To this end, in 1884 the city council of Calais commissioned Rodin to create a monument to Eustache de Saint-Pierre. In 1347, while Calais was under siege by the English, Eustache and five other important citizens of the town had offered themselves as hostages, pleading for mercy for their long-suffering city.
In his first maquette of 1884, Rodin proposed a conventional monument, with his figures united as a group on a tall pedestal. By the following year, however, the six figures were placed on a low rectangular plinth, at the same level as the viewer. As Rodin later wrote: "I wanted to have my statues placed in front of the Calais city hall on the very paving of the square like a living rosary of suffering and sacrifice."
Rodin first made nude figure studies, which he then draped in wet canvas to model the sackcloth worn by the burghers when they surrendered. To create the expressive figures possible, he used the radical technique of combining studies of hands and feet from different figures. Creating the very antithesis of conventional heroic sculpture, Rodin here set out the terms of a modern, anti-monumental tradition that resonates to this day.
Artist: Auguste Rodin, French, 1840-1917
Cast By: Fonderie de Coubertin, Saint-Rémy-les-Chevreuses
Medium: Bronze
Place Made: France
Dates: 1887; cast 1979
The Armistice Clearing at Compiègne: Position of the carriage of the German delegation during the armistice negotiations of 8–11 November 1918, Clairière de l’Armistice (The Forest Clearing of the Armistice), Compiègne.
"Humiliation of Niki". Author: Yamazaki Naokora
Blow of contrition that love has brought?. I became assistant of "popular photographer Niki". Arrogant in her one-year-old under, I was drawn heart is swayed by both public and private. .... Long-awaited love story since "Do not Laugh of man". 145th Akutagawa Prize finalist.
‘Can we not sacrifice ourselves?’: Thoughts from the intifada “The people must defend themselves, but they must not sacrifice themselves. The people must not let themselves be destroyed or riddled with bullets, but they cannot be humiliated either.” – Salvador Allende This is what we always wish for here – Palestine – to defend ourselves without sacrificing ourselves. Now the Intifada is being documented with phone-cameras every second of every day. We can see everything! When people are being shot, are being arrested, are being paralyzed, are dying … and sometimes when they’re lucky enough to survive. And it’s then we say, “Can’t this always happen? Can’t they live and cheat death every time?” Why can’t they live every time … Read more: ift.tt/1NTxYOU - ift.tt/1Q8d6a4
Pi: this is not funny at all
Me: but we need a photo for the 365 groups.
Pi: I suffer, LORD how I suffer.
74 / 366 for ABAD
89 / 365 for 365blythe
The Armistice Clearing at Compiègne: Replica of the Wagon de l'Armistice.
Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et des Grands Express Européens.
11 novembre 1918:
Dans le Wagon No. 2419D a été signé l’Armistice mettant fin à guerre 1914-1918.
Les Plénipotentiaires des Gouvernements Alliés étaient:
France:
Maréchal Ferdinand Foch , Général Maxime Weygand.
Le Commandeur Bagot (interprêre).
Britain:
British naval officer Captain Jack Marriott, Rear-Admiral George Hope, First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss
Germany:
Matthias Erzberger, head of the German delegation Admiral Ernst Vanselow, German Count Alfred von Oberndorff of the Foreign Ministry, German General Detlof von Winterfeldt.
The Armistice Clearing at Compiègne: Replica of the Wagon de l'Armistice.
Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits et des Grands Express Européens.
11 novembre 1918:
Dans le Wagon No. 2419D a été signé l’Armistice mettant fin à guerre 1914-1918.
Les Plénipotentiaires des Gouvernements Alliés étaient:
France:
Maréchal Ferdinand Foch , Général Maxime Weygand.
Le Commandeur Bagot (interprêre).
Britain:
British naval officer Captain Jack Marriott, Rear-Admiral George Hope, First Sea Lord Admiral Sir Rosslyn Wemyss
Germany:
Matthias Erzberger, head of the German delegation Admiral Ernst Vanselow, German Count Alfred von Oberndorff of the Foreign Ministry, German General Detlof von Winterfeldt.
The title? Well, in Norway public restrooms cost 10 Norwegian Kroner...I didn't have a 10NKr coin, but did have a mighty strong call of nature so I used a sort-of private (I didn't know it) WC and got yelled at by the owner, he let me out after giving me a good speech about using the public facilities!
It was almost 10 pm and I popped into this McDonald's at Mostecká 273/21 for a coffee and apple pie. I sat down and watched in disbelief this female employee (probably in her late teens) on her hands and knees using a straight pointed tool slowly scraping around the table's metal base. Her female manager dressed in a standard McDonald's corporate blue striped shirt appeared to be ordering her to work more diligently at cleaning around the base.
I have never seen this type of detailed cleaning at any McDonald's or other restaurant for that matter. What did she do to deserve this humiliating task?
Ten minutes later, she was still under that table scraping when I was leaving.
She gave me a whole new meaning to McDonald's current slogan "i'm lovin' it", not!
Prague, Czech Republic ~ October 8, 2008.