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Dieppe. France. August 2015

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LACPIXEL 2018 - 184/365

 

Fluidr

 

Please don't use this image without my explicit permission.

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A l'ère de l'informatique, la lecture reste un formidable moyen d'évasion où notre cerveau à l'entière maîtrise de notre imagination ...!

 

Website : www.fluidr.com/photos/pat21

 

www.flickriver.com/photos/pat21/sets/

 

"Copyright © – Patrick Bouchenard

The reproduction, publication, modification, transmission or exploitation of any work contained here in for any use, personal or commercial, without my prior written permission is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved."

www.celle-tourismus.de/celle-reisetipps/skulpturen-in-cel...

Wie entspannend es sein kann, sich in ein Buch zu vertiefen, zeigt das lesende Mädchen vor der Bibliothek: Es sitzt mit übergeschlagenen Beinen, eine Hand hält das Buch, die andere krault eine Katze, die sich auf ihrem Schoß niedergelassen hat.

Photo prise dans la rue à l'improvise.

Explore: Aug 27, 2008 #329. Lecture Block, University of Cambridge. (Photo by permission.)

One of the larger lecture theaters at an abandoned university.

Parce que ma petite puce Griffondor a reçu un merveilleux cadeau réalisé par sa Marraine, Mori, et que cela faisait trop longtemps qu'elle n'avait pas eu droit à son cliché !

Ma jolie Hermione s'est plongée cet après-midi dans l'Histoire de Poudlard, en profitant des derniers rayons de soleil de la journée :)

 

Encore un énorme MERCI à sa Marraine pour avoir réalisé une miniature aussi bien faite, et surtout, dont Hermione ne se sépare plus !!

Le Grand tag 2018 (47)

Les gens, la rue, la vie. Juste la poésie de l' instant, et si humblement dans la lignée inscrite pour l' éternité par tant d' illustres artistes.

Une bonne photo par jour est un sacré bonheur, un coup de chance inespéré, une grâce du destin...

"Une fois que les gens ont vu l' appareil, ça devient une autre photo" . Robert Frank.

Et comme disait Brassaï : “Chance is always there. We all use it. The difference is a poor photographer meets chance one out of a hundred times and a good photographer meets chance all the time.”

 

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Toute personne qui serait en mesure d' apporter la preuve d' un grave préjudice (licenciement, divorce, maladie (?lol?), etc...) du fait de la publication de sa photo dans le cadre de mon projet artistique est priée de me contacter.

Je ne supprimerais pas la photo incriminée et ferais cadeau d' un tirage papier, signé.

On n' est pas des sauvages, nondidiou ! ! ! Juste des esthètes...

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

gbarr566@gmail.com

Mon budget vacances passe dans les livres. A chaque histoire je m'évade dans des pays lointains et dans des endroits plus proches mais toujours avec autant de plaisir à "voyager" ....

Je vous souhaite à toutes et tous un bel été et continuez à bien prendre soin de vous et de la planète.

« Lire est le seul moyen de vivre plusieurs fois ». Pierre Dumayet

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On the road Click art Angelica 2016

© Michel Guillet

Abandoned reading room abandoned for about 20 years

The cartel announcing my lecture at the school of Architecture of Alcalá de Henares, last thursday, march the 31th. This cartel was kindly composed by the cátedra de Expresión Gráfica of the University.

     

Join me Monday night for a slide show and discussion on my low-budget night shooting techniques, the strange attraction of abandoned places and junkyards, Highway Hypnosis, the best breakfast place in Lancaster, and anything else you want to talk about.

 

I'll be showing a lot of new work from (as yet) unreleased new locations.

 

This presentation is free and open to the public, so all you Bay Area-types, come on by and say hello!

 

San Francisco City College

50 Phelan Avenue: Conlan Hall

San Francisco

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Proposals for a university in Queensland began in the 1870s. A Royal Commission in 1874, chaired by Sir Charles Lilley, recommended the immediate establishment of a university. Those against a university argued that technical rather than academic education was more important in an economy dominated by primary industry. Those in favour of the university, in the face of this opposition, distanced themselves from Oxford and Cambridge and proposed instead a model derived from the mid-western states of the USA. A second Royal Commission in 1891 recommended the inclusion of five faculties in a new university; Arts, Law, Medicine, Science and Applied Science. Education generally was given a low priority in Queensland's budgets, and in a colony with a literacy rate of 57% in 1861, primary education was the first concern well ahead of secondary and technical education. The government, despite the findings of the Royal Commissions, was unwilling to commit funds to the establishment of a university.

 

In 1893 the Queensland University Extension Movement was begun by a group of private individuals who organised public lecture courses in adult education, hoping to excite wider community support for a university in Queensland. In 1894, 245 students were enrolled in the extension classes and the lectures were described as practical and useful. In 1906 the University Extension Movement staged the University Congress, a forum for interested delegates to promote the idea of a university. Opinion was mobilised, a fund was started, and a draft Bill for a Queensland University was prepared. Stress was laid on the practical aspects of university education and its importance for the commerce of Queensland. The proceedings of the Congress were forwarded to Premier Kidston. In October 1906, sixty acres in Victoria Park were gazetted for university purposes.

 

The University of Queensland was established by an Act of State Parliament on the 10th of December 1909 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Queensland's separation from the colony of New South Wales. The Act allowed for the university to be governed by a senate of 20 men and Sir William MacGregor, the incoming Governor, was appointed the first chancellor with RH Roe as the vice chancellor. Old Government House in George Street was set aside for the University following the departure of the Governor to the Bardon residence, Fernberg, sparking the first debates about the best location for the university.

 

In 1910 the first teaching faculties were created. These included Engineering, Classics, Mathematics, and Chemistry. In December of the same year, the Senate appointed the first four professors; BD Steele in chemistry, JL Michie in classics, H. Priestly in mathematics and A Gibson in engineering. In 1911 the first students enrolled.

 

Practically from the start there was controversy about a permanent site for the University. Old Government House was too small and was seen by many as evidence merely of government parsimony. There was not much room for expansion and there were conflicts with the neighbouring Brisbane Central Technical College. Victoria Park had been chosen in 1906 for a permanent site and in 1922 a further 170 acres were vested in the University. The high cost of preparing the steeply sloping land at Victoria Park for building made it a less than ideal site despite its central location and proximity to the Royal Brisbane Hospital. Yeronga Park and Saint Lucia were considered as options. But in 1926 the whole issue was transformed when Doctor James O'Neil Mayne and Miss Mary Emilia Mayne made £50,000 available to the Brisbane City Council to resume land at Saint Lucia and present it to the University. Opinion was divided with Professor Steele and many members of the medical profession against Saint Lucia because of its isolation and lack of public transport. A meeting of the Senate, on the 10th of December, voted for the Saint Lucia site on the condition that the city council provided access. Those voting for Saint Lucia included Archbishop Duhig, EJD Stanley, ACV Melbourne, and Professor Richards. Doctor Lockhart Gibson, Chancellor AJ Thynne and Archbishop Sharp were amongst those who voted for Victoria Park. In 1930 the Senate handed over Victoria Park, less eleven acres reserved for a medical school, to the Brisbane City Council in exchange for the Saint Lucia site.

 

During the years of the Depression that followed the university suffered progressive reduction of government funding. Cuts were made to both staff salaries and numbers, while student numbers trebled between 1923 and 1933. There was no prospect of building the new university until 1935 when the Premier, W. Forgan Smith, announced that the Queensland Government would undertake construction at Saint Lucia. This was one of the three major development projects initiated in the mid 1930s by the Queensland government to create employment, the others being the Stanley River Dam and the Story Bridge. The University Senate called for and received schemes from various enthusiasts, including Professor Hawken, Dr FW Robinson, AB Leven, and Dr JJC Bradfield. Taking ideas from these suggestions the Senate committee produced its own preliminary design. The principle building, containing Arts, Law and administration, was E-shaped and enclosed one side of an arcaded quadrangle. Related outer buildings contained Engineering, Biology, Medicine, Physics, Chemistry, Geology, a museum and a teachers' training college. The Queensland government, despite hopes for a competition, appointed the Sydney firm of Hennessy, Hennessy & Co as architects for the project; and Jack Francis Hennessy (1887 - 1955) produced the coherent and logical plan that still lies at the heart of the University.

 

The foundation stone was laid in 1937 by Forgan Smith but it was another year before building commenced. Construction began in March 1938 with the main building, now known as the Forgan Smith Building, and was followed shortly afterward with the lower floors of the library and the Chemistry Building. It was to proceed, due to financial constraints, in stages clockwise around the court.

 

Work was disrupted by the Second World War (WWII). The main building served its first use, from 1942 - 1944, as the headquarters of General Sir Thomas Blamey (head of the Australian Defence Forces). The army evacuated the building and work re-commenced by 1948. The Forgan Smith Building was officially opened in May 1949 by Premier Hanlon. The Duhig Library (two-stories only and named for Archbishop Sir James Duhig) was also ready by this time, as was the Steele Building (named for the first professor of chemistry, Professor Bertram Steele).

 

In 1951 the Richards Building (named for the first professor of geology, Henry Casselli Richards) was completed. In 1955 the Parnell Building (named for the inaugural professor of physics, Thomas Parnell) and an addition to the west wing of the Forgan Smith Building were completed. In 1962, jointly funded by State and Commonwealth Governments, the Goddard Building (named for the second professor of biology, Ernest Jones Goddard) was completed. In 1965 three extra floors were added to the Duhig Library to the design of James Birrell.

 

The final building at the western end of the Forgan Smith was to have been a Great Hall. JD Story, the vice chancellor from 1938 until 1960, proposed in 1959 that this be replaced by a western Arts building and in 1972 construction began on the Michie Building (named for first the professor of classics, J.L. Michie). The state government announced in 1974 that it would provide the funding to clad the building in sandstone. The Michie Building was completed in 1978.

 

In March 1979 the colonnade between the Michie Building and the Goddard Building was completed enclosing the Great Court Complex.

 

A number of changes have been made over the years to the Great Court Complex. Some of buildings have been augmented or altered: there are various structures on top of the Goddard Building, and a new, discreet addition to the Law Library at the western end of the Forgan Smith Building which was designed by Robert Riddell. Perhaps the most significant change is that the planting within the Court is less formal than originally intended, and takes little account of Hennessy's plans for strong visual axes to tie the whole Court together. Notable also in this respect are Professor Gareth Robert's master plan for the university which involved the closing of the circular drive and the placement of the Main Library and the Great Hall in front of the Forgan Smith Building.

 

The Sculptors:

 

As part of Hennessy, Hennessy & Co's original concept, it was intended that the Great Court would include extensive sculptural work portraying historical panels, statues, coats of arms and panels of Australian plant and animal life. Many of the designs were done by Leo Drinan, who was the principle architect with Hennessy, Hennessy & Co. Work on the sculptures began in 1939, with German born John Theodore Muller and Frederick James McGowan as the principle stonemasons. Work was halted by the war in 1942 and McGowan died before it resumed three years later. Muller continued to carve until his death at more than 80 years of age, in 1953. At the time of his death, all of the friezes, most of the statues, and half of the grotesques, coats of arms, arches and roundels were completed.

 

Carving virtually stopped at the University after Muller's death and resumed only after the Michie Building was under construction. A competition amongst several Queensland sculptors in 1976 led to the commissioning of Mrs Rhyl Hinwood. Mrs Hinwood has since continued to carve numerous grotesques and coats of arms for the Court, as well as the two monumental figures at the main entrance to the Goddard Building.

 

Source: Queensland Heritage Register.

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