View allAll Photos Tagged LIBRARY
Joella Orr, Director of the Denton Public Library. Mrs. Orr was great at finding where the money was (and a state grant), and she filled up the library a lot quicker than anyone expected. She was Emily Fowler's successor, and she was a member of an old Denton County family--the Allens. You can find an interview with her father that I conducted for the library in the library's collection.. Her interest in local history was sincere, and she started the oral history program at the Emily Fowler Library. She also got E. J. Headlee to donate his collection of his own publication--DENTON DOINGS--to the library. These are a gold mine of Denton social history. NOTE: NOT ALL MY THANK YOUS ARE BEING SAVED. I APPRECIATE ALL COMMENTS, AND I WANT TO THANK ALL OF YOU.
The Biblioteca Palatina or Palatina Library was established in 1761 in the city of Parma by Philip Bourbon, Duke of Parma.
It is one of the cultural institutions located in the Palazzo della Pilotta complex in the center of Parma
I have lived in Washington DC almost twenty years and have visited most of the museums, buildings and attractions at one time or another. To me, the most impressive is the Thomas Jefferson Building, the oldest and most recognizable Library of Congress building.
I have visited the LOC a few times but never attempted to get photos until my last visit. The scale is simply overwhelming. My lack of experience for indoor, architectural photography did not do justice to the grandeur of the place, but hopefully this short series will be of some interest. To me it's a must-see for any visit to DC.
Another shot from the "Main Reading Room." View LARGE for much more detail
The new Queanbeyan Library (2024). Photographed for the BookSpaces project - www.frame49.photography .
Some reviewers have asked why I do not include more people in my library photographs, after all, a library is worthless unless there are people to borrow items. A modern library is more than a storehouse for books.
Most libraries impose limits on my BookSpaces photography. More often than not, the difficulties associated with including people in my photographs outweigh the benefits. Libraries do not have control over their patrons. It would be too disruptive to seek permission from every person likely to be in shot.
I am planning to have models work with me in future shoots - to make these spaces look more inhabited.
My posts are also on Instagram
Prints are available at my Webstore EU and Webstore US or feel free to contact me :)
Free shipping available
With all respect, No Awards and post 1 comment etc & self promoting signatures (high risk for permanent ban)
Visit my website : Reinier
Photographer Spotlight Nov 2024 : Blog
ND Awards Brons Medal :
ndawards.net/winners-gallery/nd-awards-2024/non-professio...
Borrego Springs Library. Project Architect/Designer: RNT Architects (Ralph Roesling, Partner in Charge; Raúl Díaz, Project Architect; Brandon Martella, Architect; Summer Spencer, Designer). Completed in 2019 for the County of San Diego.
What do you think: the original title mentions the "Three Graces," but is the tree in the foreground the Bachelor tree in the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias?
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Detroit Photographic Co., photographer
Mariposa Grove of big trees. "Three graces"
[ca. 1900]
1 photograph : photochrom print ; sheet 23 x 18 cm.
Summary: Photograph shows giant sequoia tree at Mariposa Grove, Yosemite National Park, California, with man standing next to it and a horse-drawn carriage driving nearby.
Notes:
- Title from Catalogue J. - part two, plain, platinum and hand colored photographs of American scenery and architecture. Detroit: Detroit Photographic Company. 1901, page 7, no. 06258.
- Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection (Library of Congress). Information about the collection is available at Detroit Publishing Company - About this Collection - Prints & Photographs Online Catalog (Library of Congress)
- Exhibited as a digital copy in: "Not an Ostrich: And Other Images from America's Library" at the Annenberg Space for Photography, 2018; Detroit Publishing Co. section.
Subjects:
Giant sequoias--California--Mariposa Grove--1890-1910.
Format:
Photochrom prints--1890-1910.
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/ppmsca.53299
Call Number: LOT 9057
west-facing detail view of the Los Angeles Central Library. Inscriptions & sculpture in limestone designed by Hartley Burr Alexander.
Los Angeles, California
P1220152
I found sunlight's Innovative creative beauty in public library children's section. This indoor rainbow is from cheap crepe paper blocking out harsh south sunlight as high temperatures average 95-100+ on most summer afternoons in deep South Texas U.S.A. .
While showing off this foto, my visitor # 25,000 arrived on Dec. 9, 2007. Thanks to each of you for continuing to share joy, beauty, creativity, and art with this newbie to FLICKR..
EXPLORE # 100 on Monday, December 10, 2007, for 12-09.
Different from my other work, I still can't help but like this shot. It's from the interior of the Seattle Public Library. Rem Koolhaas and Joshua Prince-Ramus of OMA/LMN were the principal architects.
Now we are going to the library :)
The library building was designed in 1920 by the southern California architect Myron Hunt in the Mediterranean Revival style. The library contains a substantial collection of rare books and manuscripts, concentrated in the fields of British and American history, literature, art, and the history of science. Highlights include one of copies of the Gutenberg Bible (from 1455), and letters and manuscripts by George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Abraham Lincoln. It also holds the manuscript of Benjamin Franklin's autobiography and Isaac Newton's personal copy of his "Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica" with annotations in Newton's own hand. The library's main exhibition hall showcases some of the most outstanding rare books and manuscripts in the collection, while the West Hall of the library hosts rotating exhibitions.
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens is a collections-based educational and research institution established by Henry E. Huntington and his wife in San Marino, California. In addition to the library, the institution houses an extensive art collection with a focus on 18th and 19th century European art and 17th to mid-20th century American art. The property also has specialized botanical landscaped gardens. The Huntington's botanical gardens cover 120 acres (49 ha) and showcase plants from around the world. The gardens are divided into more than a dozen themes, including the Australian Garden, Camellia Collection, Desert Garden, Herb Garden, Japanese Garden, Lily Ponds, Palm Garden, Rose Garden, the Shakespeare Garden, Subtropical and Jungle Garden, and the Chinese Garden.
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Powoli zbliżamy się do biblioteki :)
Budynek biblioteki został zaprojektowany w 1920 roku przez architekta z południowej Kalifornii Myrona Hunta w stylu śródziemnomorskiego odrodzenia. Biblioteka zawiera pokaźny zbiór rzadkich książek i rękopisów, głównie z dziedziny brytyjskiej i amerykańskiej historii, literatury, sztuki i historii nauki. Najważniejsze pozycje w zbiorach to jedna z kopii Biblii Gutenberga (z 1455 r.) oraz listy i rękopisy George'a Washingtona, Thomasa Jeffersona, Benjamina Franklina i Abrahama Lincolna. Biblioteka posiada też rękopis autobiografii Benjamina Franklina i osobistą kopię "Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica "Isaaca Newtona z własnoręcznymi adnotacjami autora. W głównej sali wystawowej biblioteki prezentowane są jedne z najwybitniejszych rzadkich książek i rękopisów w kolekcji, podczas gdy w zachodniej sali biblioteki odbywają się wystawy rotacyjne.
Biblioteka Huntingtona, Muzeum Sztuki i Ogrody Botaniczne to instytucja edukacyjna i badawcza oparta na zbiorach, założona przez Henry'ego E. Huntingtona i jego żonę w San Marino w Kalifornii. Oprócz biblioteki instytucja posiada bogatą kolekcję dzieł sztuki, ze szczególnym uwzględnieniem sztuki europejskiej XVIII i XIX wieku oraz sztuki amerykańskiej od XVII do połowy XX wieku. Wokół biblioteki rozciągają się specjalistyczne ogrody botaniczne, które zajmują powierzchnię ok. 49 ha i prezentują rośliny z całego świata. Ogrody są podzielone na kilkanaście tematów, w tym ogród australijski, kolekcja kamelii, ogród pustynny, ogród ziołowy, ogród japoński, stawy liliowe, ogród palmowy, ogród różany, ogród szekspirowski, ogród subtropikalny i dżungla oraz ogród chiński.
Domed expansion/addition by architects Mosher Drew was completed in 1997. Original library project completed in 1970, and named for university president Malcolm A. Love in 1971.
This is Vancouver, Washington's latest addition to the library system I photographed about 2 years ago.
I have lived in Washington DC almost twenty years and have visited most of the museums, buildings and attractions at one time or another. To me, the most impressive is the Thomas Jefferson Building, the oldest and most recognizable Library of Congress building.
I have visited the LOC a few times but never attempted to get photos until my last visit. The scale is simply overwhelming. My lack of experience for indoor, architectural photography did not do justice to the grandeur of the place, but hopefully this short series will be of some interest. To me it's a must-see for any visit to DC.
This shot is from the "Main Reading Room." View LARGE for much more detail
Panorama mode on the iPhone required, as normal photo just couldn’t get wide enough to include the tram and the Library building together
The library of Celsus is an ancient Roman building in Ephesus, Anatolia, now part of Selçuk, Turkey. It was built in honour of the Roman Senator Tiberius Julius Celsus Polemaeanus[ (completed in 135 AD) by Celsus' son, Gaius Julius Aquila (consul, 110 AD). The library was built to store 12,000 scrolls and to serve as a mausoleum for Celsus, who is buried in a crypt beneath the library.
The interior of the library was destroyed, supposedly by an earthquake in 262 A.D., and the façade by another earthquake in the tenth or eleventh century A.D. It lay in ruins for centuries, until the façade was re-erected (anastylosis) by archaeologists between 1970 and 1978. (From Wikipedia)