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Participants in my Learning Objects workshop are watching DVD video from Learning Objects: Believe It or Not! where Maricopa faculty talk about using content from the MLX.
Circa 1995. I remember being fascinated with these (presumably) buildings used to change in, but I can't remember where they are.
Maker: Fratelli Alinari
Born: Italy
Active: Italy
Medium: albumen print
Size: 10" x 7.5"
Location:
Object No. 2017.893
Shelf: D-15
Publication:
Other Collections:
Provenance: i-s-burr
Rank: 20
Notes: TBAL
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For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE
From 'A History of Costume in the West' by Francois Boucher. pub Thames and Hudson pg 207
15th c
New york, Metroplitan Museum (museum photo)
Please use this object or texture in your work.
I'd love to see how you use this object or texture.
If you use this object or texture please post a small image, or link, showing what you did with it.
Thank you.
This work by Stephen Clulow is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
Maker: based on a photograph by Antoine-Samuel Adam-Salomon (1818-1881)
Born: France
Active: France
Medium: engraving
Size:
Location:
Object No. 2018.615aa
Shelf: B-69
Publication: Victor Fronds, Panthéon des illustrations françaises au XIXe siècle, comprenant un portrait, une biographie et un autographe de chacun des hommes les plus marquants, Abel Pilon, Lemercier, Paris, 1865
Other Collections:
Notes: Alexandre-Pierre-Thomas-Amable Marie de Saint Georges, known as Marie, was a minister in the provisional government. "It is necessary to have at the head of the capitol, as at the head of the country, first of all an imposing government. I demand that a provisional government be constituted." Mounting the tribune of the chamber of deputies with these words, on February 24, 1848, Marie was one of the first to oppose the regency of the Duchess d'Orleans. The words proclaim his credentials as a "républican de la veille" and an important player within the moderate faction of the Provisional Government.
Antoine Samuel Adam-Salomon (9 January 1818 – 28 April 1881 was a French sculptor and photographer. Antoine Samuel Adam-Salomon was born to a French Jewish family on 9 January 1818 in La Ferté-sous-Jouarre, Seine-et-Marne, France. Following a brief career as a modeler for the Jacob Petit pottery factory in Fontainebleau, he received a scholarship to study sculpture in Paris. He also traveled for studies to Switzerland and England. His notable sculptures include busts of Victor Cousin, Odilon Barrot, Pierre-Jean de Béranger, Alphonse de Lamartine, Gioachino Rossini, and Marie Antoinette. After becoming established as a sculptor, Adam-Salomon studied photography under the portraitist Franz Hanfstaengl in Munich in 1858. He became a leading portrait photographer. Adam-Salomon returned to Paris where he opened a portrait studio in 1859; in 1865 he opened a second Paris studio. In 1870 Adam-Salomon was made a member of the Société française de photographie and received the Légion d’honneur the same year. Adam-Salomon's portrait photographs were considered to be among the best existing works during his lifetime, and were renowned for their chiaroscuro produced by special lighting techniques. The photography of Adam-Salomon played a pivotal role in the mainstream acceptance of photography as an art form. For example, in 1858 the poet Alphonse de Lamartine described photography as "this chance invention which will never be art, but only a plagiarism of nature through a lens." A short time later, after seeing the photographs by Adam-Solomon, Lamartine changed his opinion.
To view our archive organized by Collections, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS
For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE
I was cycling through Rotterdam when I saw this weird object in the sky. It was not too big, I guess 1 meter maximum. It seemed to float along with the wind. It was gone in 30 seconds or so. Don't know what it is. It doesn't look like debris of a toy balloon.
A close up here:
Artist: Beverley Coraldean
Title: Fear of Missing Out - The Objects
Material: sculptures
NUA MA Degree Show 2013
Friday 30th August to Wednesday 4th September 2013
Norwich University of the Arts (NUA)
Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK
Every Spring I buy a new pair of sunglasses and no matter how I care for them by Winter they have met with some unfortunate demise.
I have never lost a pair ~ that would be too bland.
Instead they are crushed under lorry wheels, snapped in castle doors or in this case break the fall of an over-full rucksack.
I liked these ones too.
Oh and listen to this too www.contactmusic.com/video/the-jesus-and-mary-chain-rever...