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Most of today has been spent making notes. Zoom meetings, phone calls, reading student work, planning for further socially distanced course delivery and drafting sections of a paper that I should have had finished *ages* ago. I'm still one for old-fashioned pen and paper. I'm also quite OCD when it comes to pens and notebooks. For example - in this particular work notebook I have to use a fountain pen with a specific blue ink. Yeah, I know. Weird.
Ever wanted an outfit but just never got around to getting it as there were many other outfits you wanted more? There are SO many Francie outfits I wanted that ‘Note The Coat’ always got passed over for something else, but I always really loved its simple, clean lines and that wonderful bark-like texture of the crepe fabric! I also LOVE those short 60’s double breasted coats, and the fact that its white reminds me of something that Courregés or even Valentino would have done, as in that famous all-white collection he designed in 1968. This coat of course, was released a year earlier, as Francie was always a trendsetter! I decided to go ‘all-white’ here and do a typical 60’s head-to-toe monochromatic look on my 1966 bend-leg Francie, using the stylish white cotton hat from the later ‘That Girl’ doll from 2002 and the white pleather pants from ‘Leather Limelight’. She also borrowed Tressy’s camera for the day, as I needed something black, white and graphic swinging from her arm! I may do another look without the pants and substitute some space age white Mod boots next…
Maxxis Babes Scottish Modified Car Show 2011
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Photography by JOB/MSI Ireland
© MSI Ireland 2015
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A little note from me to some admins:
Please do not place any invitation likns on my images if you really insist on my giving awards in your groups because I have no intentions of upsetting you by violating your group rules. Please read carefully before you place any invite links for any invites placed under will be regarded as those that require no compulsory awarding.
Nevertheless, I appreciate anyone who visits my photostream. Thanks for your kind understanding!!!
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If you are interested in my works, they are available on Getty Images.
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一張可以完全表達一個人對照片內容的最深沈的感受的照片才是張絕佳的照片。
A great photograph is one that fully expresses what one feels, in the deepest sense, about what is being photographed.
~Ansel Adams
As part of the hidden gardens in Vannes, this garden of pots was not hidden but beautifuly laid out in a wave.
2015 07 30 142846 France Brittany Vannes 1HDR
An example of politically correct representation of Marsyas' myth according to the new Augusatus canons
At the two opposite sides of the painting we can see Apollo, seated, and Marsyas “adligatus” or tied to a tree. Near the winner god, a Musa offers him a wreath. In front of Apollo is Olympus, Marsyas’ pupil, pleading on behalf of his master. Particularly interesting, in the center of the composition, is the presence of the Scythian ready to flay the Satyr with the knife he holds in his right hand. This character appears for the first time in Hellenistic statuary; there is not trace of him in Ovid. However, he is mentioned by Hyginus, a freedman and librarian to Augustus, who in is Fabulae [165] introduces the figure of the Barbarian tasked with safeguarding the image of Apollo from the execution of impure or profane acts. Hyginius, in keeping with imperial directives, may have been influenced by contemporary figurative art, interpreting a “revisitation” of the myth designed to preserve the figure of Apollo – so dear to the “Princeps” – from the profanation of blood.
Source: exhibition notes by G. Salvo
Fresco 43 cm x 23 cm
AD 60 - 79 (4th style)
From Ercolano
Naples, “Museo Archeologico Nazionale”
Exhibition: “Ovidio: Loves, Myths & Other Stories”
Scuderie del Quirinale, Rome
What would life be without music?
The world would be a very quiet place. Music is in many ways the fabric of our lives and the definition of society.
Music has had a very strong impact on my life. I have been brought up in a musical environment. My parents are great musicians and my idols. Musical melodies bound my family together. I believe that music has healing powers. If we had arguments or family problems, we used to sit together, sing, dance and spend a musical evening. These musical evenings are embedded in my soul as beautiful memories. I dedicate this project to those precious moments.
In this project, I desire to emphasize that common men, women and children practise the art of music besides their daily routine work. Firstly It seems in recent years being busy has become the rule rather than the exception. Anywhere you go you would find people who have no time for themselves and therefore no time for exploring their musical talents.
Secondly in India we do not really appreciate careers in the unconventional fields of music and arts. The mindset of parents and society is such that it does not allow such talents to come out. They want their children to grow up to be either doctors or engineers. Any field in which the future is uncertain or risky is strongly discouraged.
The fact remains that there are so many people who are very talented but are either not able to explore their talent or not able to use it. It is due to this reason that these people go unheard.
However there are people who fight against all odds to follow their dreams. They take time out from their busy schedules be it their work or studies to practise music. Through this project I would like the highlight and bring to limelight the hidden musical talent in people; people who obey Shakespeare when he says, “If music be the food of love, play on...!”
The other photographs related to this project will be published as part of a book... The preview can be seen in my facebook profile...
model: Abhilash Sudhindran
musical instrument: flute
profession: student @NID
love note
to the me
i am becoming
new challenges
i am confronting
and what
is this to me
hiding
in contemplation
a reevaluation
that surges
with delight emergent
pushing forward
expectant yet
having
a cascade of vitality
continuance rather than longing
unfolding aimlessly
the former
opened and flourishing
a blueprint of my future
individuality
B I R D
© 2006, Frederick Douglass Perry, All Rights Reseerved
This little ice crystal is in the exact shape of an eighth note! (Click on my photo to view it large.)
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Frost and ice in Florida? Yes! We have many winter days with temps (F) in the 20s. Hard freezes and frost are not uncommon. One year it was so cold that the giant wild pythons in the Everglades were freezing to death, and it even got to freezing temps in the Keys. Not anywhere near as severe as the NY winters I used to experience, but 25 degrees anywhere is cold!
These are micro shots of ice crystals from the frost on various bits of vegetation in my yard. I have to shoot them early in the morning because even the heat from my breath will start them to melting, and even if the temp is 30F, when the sun hits the yard the frost vanishes in minutes so I have to move fast.
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An assortment of micro (macro) photographs of various and sundry subjects in my set, "Assorted Micros:"
www.flickr.com/photos/motorpsiclist/sets/72157631525787513/
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Copyright © notice: My photographs and videos and any of my derivative works are my private property and are copyright © by me, John Russell (aka "Zoom Lens") and ALL my rights, including my exclusive rights, are reserved and protected by United States Copyright Laws and by the Berne Convention and the Universal Copyright Convention.
ANY use without my permission in writing is forbidden by law, including use on blogs; pin boards such as Pinterest; Tumblr; Facebook; or any other use without my specific written permission.
Do not rip these photos off; they do not belong to you!
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Note: My images are posted here for your enjoyment only. All Rights are Reserved. Please contact me through flickr if you are interested in using the photos for any reason.
Compositionally Challenged Week 7 is Still Life. To get the light and shadows the way I wanted took some experimentation with manual exposure and a handheld external flash.
This is my way of saying that old-fashioned note cards, written and addressed by hand, and sent via snail-mail still have their place in our modern world.
Bottle of Notes is a sculpture by internationally renowned artists and creators of public artworks, Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen. Unveiled in 1993, it was commissioned by Middlesbrough Borough Council as the first public artwork to be installed as part of a regeneration initiative for the Tees Valley region.
Situated in Middlesbrough Centre Square, outside Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art (MIMA), the sculpture takes the form of a giant bottle, standing nine metres high – twice the height of a giraffe. The shape of the bottle is made from a continuous, off-white swirl of steel letters. Blue letters spiral upwards from the inside.
The artists took their inspiration from the local area’s industrial heritage, its relationship with the sea and from Captain Cook, one of the area’s most famous sons. The intricate steel lettering reflects the region’s rich heritage in steel production and fabrication. It was constructed in Hebburn, helping to provide employment for steel workers in the shipyards.
For the outside of the bottle, van Bruggen selected a line of text from Captain Cook’s Journals, written during his first voyage of exploration in the Pacific in 1769: We had every advantage we could desire in observing the whole of the passage of the planet Venus over the Sun’s disk. The text on the inside comes from a poem she wrote, ‘Recalling Amsterdam’, which links the English shore to the European continent: “I like to remember seagulls in full flight gliding over the ring of canals.”
The sculpture is positioned on a slant, to appear as if it had been left stuck in the sand by a receding wave – a giant message in a bottle to local people and the wider world.
While visiting the Jagadish in Udaipur, India, I sat upon the steps of the temple and noticed this man across the street. He was sitting in a doorway quietly observing the crowd as he wrote in his notebook. Eventually I came over and introduced myself and took a portrait of him. He was a quiet and soft spoken but a very kind individual who welcomed the short chat. Vijay was his name.
Instagram: Leif4Life