View allAll Photos Tagged InvisibleMan
2013 - Londres
Pour en savoir plus :
1/ Sur l'origine du mot "bobbies"
darialalala.tumblr.com/post/90686887/origine-du-mot-bobby...
2/ Sur David Mc Callum, célèbre homme invisible....et anglais!
A scientist by the name of Griffin (we never learn his full name) finds a way to make himself invisible but doesn’t know how to reverse the process. He becomes consumed with power, resorts to crime for survival and, eventually, goes crazy. It paints an unflattering picture of a scientist as someone who is selfish and lacks a conscience and humanity. Bah humbug! Ripping good story, though.
Inspired by Rene Magritte and DP mag tutorial...! If you have time view large and look inside the collar.....!
Bokeh Thursday: What goes Up, Must come Down, Gravity...
Damn My weeks theme and I nearly forgot! Ok tossed a pair of shades up into the apple tree at the bottom of my garden and caught them as they fell... took a few frames! :-) While I do some PP I am now listening to a great little three piece from Texas who did a wonderful track about these things-
"Now go out and get yourself some big black frames
With the glass so dark they won't even know your name
And the choice is up to you cause they come in two classes:
Rhinestone shades or cheap sunglasses"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=-u9vMo4bEFw
These really are cheap too, I cant remember whether they were £1 or £3... good shades they are too, made from CR39 the same acrylic coating the NASA astronauts have on their visors I am led to believe!
Created for the Down Under Challenge Group with thanks to Rab Hau for the original costume which I have combined with my own image from Dunster Castle to create The Invisible Man.
Ralph Waldo Ellison (named after Ralph Waldo Emerson) was born on March 1, 1914 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. In 1933, he won a scholarship to Tuskegee Institute and opted to study music. Unable to finish his senior year due to financial problems, Ellison moved to Harlem, New York in 1936. Not long after his arrival, he met Richard Wright, who convinced Ellison to write for a living. He went to work for the Federal Writer’s Project in 1939 doing research for a book called Negroes in New York. It was while he was recovering from an illness in Vermont that he typed out “I am an Invisible Man,” the first words of the novel for which he is best known. Ralph married Fanny McConnell in 1946 and settled in New York where he continued to work on his novel. In 1952, Invisible Man was published. One of the first novels to portray modern racial issues in America from an African-American perspective, the book garnered much critical acclaim. Ellison began working on his second novel in 1954. On the verge of completing it, Ellison lost hundreds of pages in a house fire in 1967. He spent the rest of his life rewriting it.
Ralph Ellison died in April of 1994 at the age of 80 from pancreatic cancer. At the time of his death, his second novel, now a nearly 1,500 page manuscript, was still unfinished. His widow, Fanny, appointed John F. Callahan, a professor at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon, her husband’s literary executor. From the manuscript, Callahan extracted a story about the shared history of a race-baiting senator, and an old black minister. The book is called Juneteenth, in honor of June 19, 1865, the day Union soldiers brought news to Texas slaves of the Emancipation Proclamation, which had taken effect two years earlier. Callahan also discovered several short stories written by Ellison between 1937 and 1954 and put them together in a book called Flying Home and Other Stories, published in 1996.
In 2009, another updated compilation of Juneteenth (expanded) will be published.
source: www.riversideparkfund.org/visit/ralph-ellison-memorial
A shadowy figure walks down a street in the City of London, mid afternoon, with strong directional light turning up the contrast. One figure enters the shadow to the left while the cyclist flies by.
The title relates to "Invisible Man" by Ralph Ellison.
Published in 2004 . We've uploaded a digital version of
Refill 4 online withextensive feat on Michael C Place of
We are Build,Lee Quinones, SSUR, Martha Cooper, Katayama of WonderWall
Pablo Ferro, Mike Mills, Ron English, Jose Parla, Andy Howell, Mark Bode
Invisible Man and many more. Hit the Download button
in ISSUU and read it on your comp.
Enjoy!
Joy Jones as Slave Girl, Mattie-Lou, Old Woman, and Ensemble in the Huntington's production of INVISIBLE MAN, adapted for the stage by Oren Jacoby from the novel by Ralph Ellison and directed by Christopher McElroen, playing Jan. 4 - Feb. 3, 2013 at the Avenue of the Arts / BU Theatre. Learn more at huntingtontheatre.org/invisibleman
This Slideshow link will always start with my Most Recent Flickr Photo. See Mikey G Ottawa's Flickr Slideshow HERE: www.flickr.com/mikeygottawa/show
See Mikey G Ottawa's most popular Flickr Photo Albums HERE:
www.flickr.com/photos/mikeygottawa/albums
I'm Not Shy to promote my Flickr work. Told CTV that I had more than 1M views here. Since then it's climbed to 4.2M views. CTV Regional Contact gave me 3 minutes on the local CTV News here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=3C2U_01ajdw
Camera Talk on Rogers Cable gave me ten minutes of TV time HERE: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-s4ZpS_t1Y
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Looks better viewed large. Why does it look weird? I don't like this new uploading thing.
Work towards my final photography exam unit based on shade and shadows. Inspired by Pol Ubeda Hervas' 'Invisible Man' series. Many more of these to come!
After years of tracking proof of the Invisible mans existence. Proof was captured on a busy Street in Cardiff near the Torchwood location coincidence or not ?
Tinta sobre papel Couché, tamaño carta.
Basado en la personificación de Claude Rains en The invisible man (1933).
How come the simplest ideas take the longest to get right? This was a pen suspended by a piece of wire, which I then digitally removed. I've just spent two hours putting the text in there - couldn't settle on the font, couldn't get the angles right. Now why didn't I just write it in the first place? ;O)
REPLACED 21.10.07, a subtle change - hope it doesn't affect anyone's comments :O)