View allAll Photos Tagged LABYRINTH+
Harmandir Sahib aka the Golden Temple of Amritsar, India
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The construction of this mughal monument was done in 1784. This photo is taken from top of the labyrinth, which has 1024 similar looking doorways, 4 floors, walkways inside the walls. You can see the entire Lucknow city from top of it.
The Church of the Holy Trinity in downtown Toronto near the Eaton Centre has a pavement labyrinth on its grounds. These arches form the approach to the labyrinth.
Labyrinth spider sitting at the entrance of its funnel-shaped web. Not poisonous like similar beasties you find in Australia! I've read that the web is more about protecting the egg sac hidden deep inside than anything else.
Labyrinth
Motus Serie
by Light Painting & LightArt- Photography Master JanLeonardo
Worked with Canon 5D MK III, Carl Zeiss Distagon T* 1.4/35, Manfrotto Carbon 057 & Gearhead 405,
#JanLeonardo #LedLenser #LightPainting #Light #Torch #lightart #lightartphotography #denissmith #lightgraff #lightdraw #canon #carlzeiss #manfrotto #Lenovo #LenovoIn
Diana Ng is the labyrinth designer. More information about her and this labyrinth here: "Labyrinth Lady" - labyrinthlady.ca/ .
From the monographic work "The Labyrinth"
“There is no route out of the maze. The maze shifts as you move through it, because it is alive. ” ― Philip K. Dick
Combining techniques: Photo / Photoshop / Cinema 4D / AI
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Argentine coin that commemorates the centenary of the birth of the writer Jorge Luis Borges. The labyrinth is one of the most frequent symbols in the work of Borges. In the background, his short history "El Jardín de Senderos que se Bifurcan" (The Garden of Forking Paths).
Posted for Macro Monday Group theme: Line Symmetry
7DWF : Anything goes Mondays
model: akvile
hair: the wind
shooting on sylt with jan scholz.
unfortunately we had no luck with the weather and i had only the chance to take one roll of 120 fuji acros with my plaubel. that means 10 photos. these are two of them.
A view of the How Lovely Are Thy Branches Temporary Labyrinth Project by artist, Lillian Sizemore in Olbrich park.
Just like a Labyrinth sequence but sadly without the enigmatic Goblin King in his tight pants... Millie appeared in the middle of the stone staircase - on her tricycle! <3
~
Tricycle kitty by Annie Montgomerie
Found this labyrinth on top of the ridge at Mori Point. I wonder how long it would take to make something like this.
Film: Kodak Portra 160
Camera: Nikon FM2n
Lens: Carl Zeiss Distagon 25mm F2.8ZF
Deciding whether or not to plunge into life's maze.
Image imagined in MidJourney AI and finished with Topaz Studio and Lightroom Classic.
Regular users of the London Underground can’t fail to have noticed a certain style of art work on display at every station in the system – and this is it.
Mark Wallinger created 270 individual but similar works, one for each station on the network. Each one has its own unique circular labyrinth, and is produced in vitreous enamel, a material used for signs throughout London Underground.
Positioned at the entrance of each labyrinth is a red ‘X’. This simple mark, says the artist, is an invitation to the viewer to trace the route with a finger, and to see the labyrinth as a single meandering path into the centre and back out again – a route perhaps reminiscent of the Tube traveller’s journey.
Mark Wallinger is a winner of the Henry Moore Fellowship and the Turner Prize for modern art, and his work has appeared all over the world, including the ‘Fourth Plinth’ in Trafalgar Square, London. He represented Britain at the Venice Biennale in 2001.
I photographed this particular work, numbered 64/270, at Waterloo station on London’s South Bank.
Forming the border of Nocturnus, the Kelra Labyrinth serves as a deterrent on any soul foolish enough to enter. Guarded by the minotaurs and reptrians, fresh meat is always welcome in the maddening mazes within Kelra. Doomed souls will often head towards the watch tower at the center in the hopes of spying an exit, yet they aren't the only species looking to exploit the tower.
See more here on Flickr or over at Eurobricks in the Guilds of Historica
This is the most mysterious and exotic place in Kyoto. You must visit here when you come to Kyoto.
Located : Senbon-Torii gates, Fushimi-Inari shrine, Rakunan area in Kyoto. May 12, 2011.
A slowly changing light - one of the installations during the event "Lights in Alingsås 2022" (Swedish: Labyrinten).
Workshop head: Meike Goessling, Germany/Hong Kong.
Every year in September/October leading international lighting designers come to Alingsås to hold a week's workshop. The participants comes from different countries around the world. Together they light a number of locations around the town centre. Around 70,000 visitors walk the spectacular lighting trail every year or participate in events associated with the festival.
www.lightsinalingsas.se/en (website in English and Swedish)
"What is that in your hand?"
"The portal will only open if we offer the blood of an innocent. Just a drop of blood: a pinprick, that's all. It's the final task."
('Faun' by NECA / The Guillermo del Toro Signature Collection)
Leica M6
Leica Summicron-M 1:2/35mm ASPH
Kodak Tri-X 400
Ilfosol 3 (1+9) 7:30min @ 20C
Epson Perfection V600