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The sun sets on the 45-foot-tall, 140-foot-wide Blueprints sculpture at Addison Circle in Addison, Texas.
Mist is illuminated by the morning sun on a branch of Lake Worth at the Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge, Texas.
Artist Pat Johanson’s serpentine sculptures snake and undulate through Leonhardt Lagoon in Dallas’ Fair Park.
Sculptor Allie Victoria Tennant’s Tejas Warrior guards the entrance to the Hall of State at Fair Park, Dallas.
The Hunt Oil Company headquarters building rises into the clouds over North Texas in Downtown Dallas.
A speed limit sign on the eastbound approach to Dallas’ Santiago Calatrava-designed Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge.
The Dallas skyline rises over the Trinity River bottoms at the far end of the Ronald Kirk Bridge park (formerly the Continental Avenue Bridge) as the sun sets on the city.
Sun spills through gaps in the wooden walls of a dilapidated barn at Penn Farm, Cedar Hill State Park, Texas.
Steady traffic streams through the Downtown Dallas’ Woodall Rodgers Freeway as night sets on North Texas.
A panoramic view of the Trinity River floodplain as seen from under Dallas’ Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge.
The port-side engine cowling of a DHC-4 Caribou airplane opened to reveal the Pratt & Whitney R-2000 Twin Wasp nestled inside. This aircraft was in the collection of Addison, Texas' now-defunct Cavanaugh Flight Museum.
The hood ornament of a 1941 Chevrolet Special Deluxe in the collection of Addison, Texas’ Cavanaugh Flight Museum.
Dallas’ iconic symbol—the 11-foot-tall neon Pegasus atop downtown’s Magnolia Petroleum Building—rises above the neighboring Gulf States Building.
The sun sets on the Santiago Calatrava-designed Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge and Dallas’ Uptown neighborhood.
The main arch and cables of Dallas’ Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge, reflected in a large puddle in the Trinity River floodplain.
Downtown Dallas’ 72-story-tall Bank of America Plaza is reflected in the windows of the adjacent Texas Club building.
The late-evening sun illuminates this architectural detail of the I.M. Pei-designed Dallas City Hall.
Dallas’ iconic symbol—the 11-foot-tall neon Pegasus atop the Magnolia Petroleum Building—rises into the sky over Downtown.
One of the component sentries of sculptor Jaume Plensa‘s La Llarga Nit watches over a stoplight in the Dallas Arts District.