View allAll Photos Tagged MASKS
Found this mask laying about a friend's house. The history of masques is interesting enough. Especially when we all struggle with our own identities at times.
for the masquerade ball festivities at Uppark House, National Trust
for orange day = Tuesday at CWMD_orange
I like to imagine the dancing to a fav piece: a bassoon concerto by Vivaldi (turn down the volume - to about half!)
This linocut is one of eight that I'm working on that will be published in Noel Sloboda's "Our Rarer Monsters" in 2012. The publisher is sunnyoutside press.
linocut
5" x 7"
This mask grants the wearer a very destructive ability to overdrive the functions of an opponent’s body. It emits waves which go through the victim to the brain, which cause the body to overdo itself, making the victim go into a weakened state.
best of luck to everyone entering the contest!
Even before the coronavirus pandemic hit Mainland China and then eventually the world, putting masks up in public was a rather common and ordinary thing in East Asian countries such as China, Taiwan and South Korea.
Masks are a feature of Venetian festivities and are on display throughout the city. Some are simple tourist souvenirs and others are works of art.
Charlene Chartrand (just click her name in the tags) is not just a beautiful face. She's also a talented artist. Richard photographed her canvases earlier this year.
Mask wetfolded from a rectangle - leftover from the last model (acrylic paint on Bütten-Papier, ca 8,5x21cm)
technique inspired by [https://www.flickr.com/photos/28744631@N06/] Daniel Chang and [https://www.flickr.com/photos/94167965@N08/] Beata Kupczak
© by PST 2016
It's the time of the sand sculpture exhibition at Ludwigsburg and I went there early this morning when the park opened to avoid the worst heat. They have some amazing sculptures again this year and I will show a few more in the next days. This one is called "Venitian Masks" and was created by a team of sand artists. They used 32 tons of sand for this sculpture. There is another capture in the comments which shows the other side of the sculpture.
He follows an early patristic formulation (Dionysius) when he terms it a “ray of darkness . . . a bright ray of His secret wisdom . . . a divine and dark spiritual light . . . a wisdom so simple, general and spiritual”, that is, a knowing far beyond all limited, finite details and concreteness. These paradoxes are crowned by a supreme one, “knowing by unknowing”. To grow in a deep encounter with God as He truly is in Himself, unconstrained by the limited concepts we tend to have of Him, we must relinquish familiar ways of knowing. We must “unknow” in order properly to perceive Him, that is, in a manner beyond finite categories.
-THOMAS DUBAY, S.M. FIRE WITHIN St. Teresa of Avila, St. John of the Cross, and the Gospel—on Prayer
3D digital creation, made by #blender
Mask of sorrow.
Inspired by Russian monument Mask of sorrow.
This monument is located on a hill above Magadan, Russia, commemorating the many prisoners who suffered and died in the Gulag prison camps in the Kolyma region of the Soviet Union during the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s.
Sculptor: Ernst Neizvestny
Built Year: 1996
Made by Bender
Follow me on:
Instagram: @inhiu
My last attempt at the Condor was *checks notes* six years ago.
Geez, really? Six years?
Anyway, it was time to revisit.
This new version is shaped a little more like the original toy and includes all the bells and whistles. Even the tiny little headlight cannon.
“Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.”
Oscar Wilde quotes
See Tyreke's mask:
As it becomes more of an order to wear masks in so many places ~ I've become very busy with so many orders. I've participated at a few markets and have sold many of these.
El tema de "Looking close... on Friday!" de esta semana (1 de marzo) es "Antifaz".
No olvides de etiquetar tu imagen con "Looking close... on Friday!" y "Antifaz".
The theme for this week in "Looking close... on Friday!" (on March 1) is "Mask".
Please don't forget to tag your image with "Looking close... on Friday!" and "Mask".
mask = 2cm