View allAll Photos Tagged LABYRINTH
On Fridays, the cathedral moves the chairs off the labyrinth so visitors can walk it. Such a cool experience for me.
The far side of Labyrinth mountain was heather slopes, not the cliffs we went through on the other side.
Here are the two webs of a Labyrinth Spider (genus Metepeira) in the family Araneidae of Orb Weavers showing both its orb web on the left and its separate cobweb-like home web of the right. This web is spun in a shrub of Lavender (Lavandula, Lamiaceae) in our garden, and the spider's house is decorated with old lavender buds. They use what ever plant material is handy, compare this photo on a different shrub. (San Marcos Pass, 11 February 2016)
B1 Labyrinths (Part of My Fierce Festival)
Needless Allies
A guided tour of the city centre where actors
mingle with crowds and audiences find dramas
in neglected alleyways.
One city. Six performers. Countless characters.
Multiple directions. All beginning whilst
travelling on a bicycle, ‘B1 Labyrinths’ is a
guided performance tour round Birmingham city
centre. Familiar places will be made unfamiliar,
landmarks turned inside out, forgotten places
will be brought centre stage. Somewhere in the
thronging city streets are actors, but will you be
able to spot them as they mingle with crowds and
find drama in neglected alleyways?
This is the labyrinth at the Kanuga Conference Center in Hendersonville, NC. These are both librarians I work with.
This commission may be the best thing I’ve done. The details took a lot out of me, and although I’m not a big fan of the film, I had a lot of fun doing this one. Like most people who grew up before the 90’s, Jim Henson was and is a hero of mine. I hope this is what @the.lost.attic had in mind when she asked me to draw it! Grab a print of this for $12 bucks. (Message me to purchase or email polardproductions@gmail.com)
A stone labyrinth in the classical, unicursal style, made from local rocks. I've no idea who built it, but from the overgrowth, it's a couple of years old, maybe more (those sheep make it hard to date).
A meditative journey in a compressed amount of space could describe one way people use a prayer labyrinth, and it occurred to me the Christian Lenten season which comes to a close today, is also used by some people of faith for a meditative journey through 40 days of growing unease and disorientation to the hopelessness of death and darkness and then the surpising shift at the transforming center: a brilliant Easter morning with death overturned. I am wishing everyone who celebrates it a lovely close to Holy Week.This outdoor labyrinth is open to the public in the courtyard of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in the Uptown neighborhood. Whenever I walk by I admire the unique "Googie" style 60s roof that fits in so well with similar design elements of nearby landmarks like Key Arena and Seattle Center.
Check out the labyrinth post on my blog at www.mitchster.com/2008/04/10/snow-labyrinth-revisited/ for a detailed description
Discovered the labyrinth by Merri Creek. It's tucked away, someone had to help me find it. But it's beautiful, secluded enough without feeling completely apart from the world, and nicely overgrown with grass and plants. From what I've found it's been there awhile, but no one knows who constructed it.