View allAll Photos Tagged Narrative
Availabale @ the Narrative Event
Opening on Ocotber , 15th 2021
Your Taxi : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Murdock%20Heights/197/152/755
"The #narrative #illusion introduces a '#mind #virus', which is a syntactical contagion that spreads through communicative vectors and colonizes the cognitive biases of the targeted individual's #psychology, thus transforming the #mental processes of that target." - James Scott
Storyboards by animator Alex Hart, who will be teaching an Applied Arts Workshop in storyboarding in spring 2010
Design Principle: Emphasis
Camera Settings: Exposure 1/10, Aperture 1/22, ISO 100
Intended Narrative: Today when helping my cousins take down their trampoline, I wanted to capture the end of season by using black and white to memorialize the trampoline's use. I ended up taking a shot of my cousin jumping on it first, keeping the camera in the exact same spot, and then taking another when just the frame was left. I used Photoshop to blend the images together.
Editing: No exposure or color correction, just the merging of the color and BW images.
Work in Progress: Images from Jawaharlal Nehru Architecture and Fine Arts University (JNAFAU), Hyderabad where the work on 24 Mural Narratives for the National Salt Satyagraha Memorial, Dandi is going on. The JNAFAU mural team is led by Prof Shantiswaroopini Roy, Head of Sculpture Department and team members include Junapudi Ramesh, Komari Ranganath, Rayana Rambhupal Gowd and Menda Suresh. (Photograph: Shiv Kumar Akula)
Totem poles are monumental carvings, a type of Northwest Coast art, consisting of poles, posts or pillars, carved with symbols or figures. They are usually made from large trees, mostly western red cedar, by indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest coast of North America (Washington, Oregon, and Canada's western province, British Columbia). The word totem derives from the Algonquian (most likely Ojibwe) word odoodem [oˈtuːtɛm], "(his) kinship group". The carvings may symbolize or commemorate cultural beliefs that recount familiar legends, clan lineages, or notable events. The poles may also serve as functional architectural features, welcome signs for village visitors, mortuary vessels for the remains of deceased ancestors, or as a means to publicly ridicule someone. They may embody a historical narrative of significance to the people carving and installing the pole. Given the complexity and symbolic meanings of totem pole carvings, their placement and importance lies in the observer's knowledge and connection to the meanings of the figures and the culture in which they are embedded.
Totem poles serve as important illustrations of family lineage and the cultural heritage of the Native peoples in the islands and coastal areas of North America's Pacific Northwest, especially British Columbia, Canada, and coastal areas of Washington and southeastern Alaska in the United States. Families of traditional carvers come from the Haida, Tlingit, Tsimshian, Kwakwaka’wakw (Kwakiutl), Nuxalk (Bella Coola), and Nuu-chah-nulth (Nootka), among others.[1][2] The poles are typically carved from the highly rot-resistant trunks of Thuja plicata trees (popularly known as giant cedar or western red cedar), which eventually decay in the moist, rainy climate of the coastal Pacific Northwest. Because of the region's climate and the nature of the materials used to make the poles, few examples carved before 1900 remain. Noteworthy examples, some dating as far back as 1880, include those at the Royal British Columbia Museum in Victoria and the Museum of Anthropology at UBC in Vancouver.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totem_pole
Ketchikan (/ˈkɛtʃɪkæn/, KETCH-ih-kan)[8] (Tlingit: Kichx̱áan) is a city[5][9] in the Ketchikan Gateway Borough, Alaska, United States, the southeasternmost city in Alaska. With a population at the 2010 census of 8,050,[5] it is the fifth-most populous city in the state, and tenth-most populous community when census-designated places are included. The surrounding borough, encompassing suburbs both north and south of the city along the Tongass Highway (most of which are commonly regarded as a part of Ketchikan, albeit not a part of the city itself), plus small rural settlements accessible mostly by water, registered a population of 13,477 in that same census.[10] Estimates put the 2014 population at 13,787 people.[11] Incorporated on August 25, 1900, Ketchikan is the earliest extant incorporated city in Alaska, because consolidation or unification elsewhere in Alaska resulted in dissolution of those communities' city governments. Ketchikan is located on Revillagigedo Island, so named in 1793 by Captain George Vancouver.
Ketchikan is named after Ketchikan Creek, which flows through the town, emptying into the Tongass Narrows a short distance southeast of its downtown. "Ketchikan" comes from the Tlingit name for the creek, Kitschk-hin, the meaning of which is unclear. It may mean "the river belonging to Kitschk"; other accounts claim it means "Thundering Wings of an Eagle".[12] In modern Tlingit this name is rendered as Kichx̱áan.[13] Ketchikan Creek served as a summer fish camp for Tlingit natives for untold years before the town was established by Mike Martin in 1885. The area near the mouth of Ketchikan Creek later earned Ketchikan a measure of infamy during the first half of the 20th century for a red-light district known as Creek Street, with brothels aligned on either side of the creek. According to the U.S. Postal Service, one of Ketchikan's two zip codes, 99950, is the highest-numbered in the United States.[14]
Ketchikan's economy is based upon government services, tourism and commercial fishing. Civic boosters have dubbed the community the "Salmon Capital of the World."[15] The Misty Fiords National Monument is one of the area's major attractions, and the Tongass National Forest has long been headquartered in Ketchikan, mostly in the city's historic Federal Building. For most of the latter half of the 20th century, a large portion of Ketchikan's economy and life centered on the Ketchikan Pulp Company pulp mill in nearby Ward Cove. The mill closed in 1997 in the wake of the passage of the Tongass Timber Reform Act of 1990, which reduced timber harvest targets in the national forest.[16]
Ketchikan has the world's largest collection of standing totem poles, found throughout the city and at four major locations: Saxman Totem Park, Totem Bight State Park, Potlatch Park, and the Totem Heritage Center. Most of the totems at Saxman Totem Park and Totem Bight State Park are recarvings of older poles, a practice that began during the Roosevelt Administration through the Civilian Conservation Corps. The Totem Heritage Center displays preserved 19th-century poles rescued from abandoned village sites near Ketchikan.
Gundam Narrative Novel by Kiyoto Takeuchi is Adaptament Gundam Narrative NT ( Movie)
"NT" is a sequel depicting the future of OVA "UC" based on Fukui Haruhito's novel. By the way, the basis of "NT" was written as a Gaelic (?) novel of "UC" is "Mobile Suit Gundam UC Phoenix hunting",
Scan by Giovanni Nino
Availabale @ the Narrative Event
Opening on Ocotber , 15th 2021
Your Taxi : maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Murdock%20Heights/197/152/755
As seen at Christopher Bachmann Photography » A Halloween Triptych Narrative.
For "Narrative in Photography" class at Photographic Center NW.
The assignment was a two- or three-photo (diptych or triptych) narrative. I had the scenario in mind early on, although not with a pumpkin at first. Fate intervened though, and I like the result. Definitely wanted to play the order of the story as well, start at the end, so to speak, and give little clues that it wasn't exactly a literal narrative (at least one of the scenes is impossible!).
Critique in class was pretty hilarious, as they wondered aloud what relationship the man had with the pumpkin, based on his facial expressions. And also they asked how many pumpkins I went through, which I counted as small personal Photoshop victory.
This one you probably should view large on black
"A 19-2 View" depicts the Libby Scarlett's observations of the fifteen balconies she overlooked from her apartment in the east of Amsterdam. After a request to take a photograph and meet a neighbor went by without a single reply, she made up stories of the inhabitants and their surroundings: the things they might have told her had they accepted her offer. Read more about her book at bit.ly/a19-2view.
Project: Bleeding Heart Narrative "Tongue Tangled Hair"
Client: Tartaruga Records
Process: Offset
Inks: 2/0 (Pantone Inks)
Paper: Chipboard, Insert: Desert Storm
A Cyanotype version of the previous photo like this. The original photo can be found further down my photo feed.
Robert J. Shiller, Sterling Professor of Economics, Yale University, USA capture during the Session: The Power of Economic Narratives at the Annual Meeting 2018 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, January 23, 2018
Copyright by World Economic Forum / Sikarin Thanachaiary
Result: NMH vs Worcester Academy 82-0 win, NMH vs St. Thomas More 72-12 win.
Game Narrative, significant accomplishments/highlights: Our NMH wrestling team got off to a great start in our home opener on December 5, 2018. Neither Worcester nor St. Thomas More were able to offer much resistance, as the hoggers rolled easily over our Class A opponents. The squad collectively only dropped two matches, out of a possible 28 bouts. Nick Newbold, Adrian Purba, Tristan Keyser-Parker, Jake Shaifer, Gunnar Garriques, Will Cha, Mursalin Rahman, and Melvin Mercado Bulacia all recorded their first varsity wins in an NMH singlet, earning them a varsity letter. Photography by Glenn Minshall.
The Narrative Innovation Showcase
Matthew Weise | Game Designer and Game Writer, Fiction Control
Clara Fernandez Vara | Associate Arts Professor, NYU
Katie Chironis | Team Lead, Writer, Golden Glitch Studios
Nina Freeman | Level Designer, Fullbright
Aaron Reed | Storytelling Guru, Independent
Richard Rouse III | Director/Designer/Writer, Paranoid Productions
Samantha Gorman | Game Designer/Co-Founder, Tender Claws
Location: Room 3016, West Hall
Date: Monday, March 14
Time: 10:00am - 11:00am