View allAll Photos Tagged Physicians,
São Caetano do Sul (city), São Paulo (State) and Brazil.
***
Neighbors always ask to cut down this tree.
They will always be defeated by our laws and me.
The sibipiruna, also known as sebipira, is a large tree, native to Brazil, perennial, reaching up to 28 meters in height with up to 6 meters in diameter with rounded crown and very showy.
It is called SIBIPIRUNA, also called SEBIPIRA. (Caesalpinia pluviosa var. Peltophoroides - Caesalpinioideae),
The generic name honors the botanist, physician and philosopher Andrea Cesalpino (1519-1603).
23ºC today. Hot as hell. We need to protect our trees.
Cannaregio one of the six sestieri of Venice in Veneto, Italy.
Cannaregio is the northernmost of the six historic sestieri (districts) of Venice. It is the second largest sestiere by land area and the largest by population, with 13,169 people as of 2007. Isola di San Michele, the historic cemetery island, is associated with the district.
The Cannaregio Canal, which was the main route into the city until the construction of a railway link to the mainland, gave the district its name (Canal Regio is Italian for Royal Canal). Development began in the eleventh century as the area was drained and parallel canals were dredged. Although elegant palazzos were built facing the Grand Canal, the area grew primarily with working class housing and manufacturing. Beginning in 1516, Jews were restricted to living in the Venetian Ghetto.
It was enclosed by guarded gates and no one could leave from sunset to dawn. However, Jews held successful positions in the city such as merchants, physicians, money lenders, and other trades. Restrictions on daily Jewish life continued for more than 270 years, until Napoleon Bonaparte conquered the Venetian Republic in 1797. He removed the gates and gave all residents the freedom to live where they chose.
In the 19th century, civil engineers built a street named Strada Nuova through Cannaregio, and a railway bridge and road bridge were constructed to connect Venice directly to Mestre. Today, the areas of the district along the Grand Canal from the train station to the Rialto Bridge are packed with tourists, but the rest of Cannaregio is residential and relatively peaceful, with morning markets, neighbourhood shops, and small cafés.
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love this house and the time it represents. Not sure if the doctor is still living and if this was his office. I have enjoyed this sign in the window for at least twenty years.
Gerrit Dou's The Physician
Gerrit Dou, a leading figure in Dutch painting's Golden Age, was Rembrandt's first pupil for three years from the age of fourteen in 1628. Before long, he had eclipsed his master's reputation; his meticulous, highly detailed paintings were prized by the wealthiest collectors.
In Mexico, it is Physician's Day, and what a better homage than this wonderful re-version of this magnificent song. Tower of strength, by The Mission.
She is my Tower of Strength, she is the best hepatologist in the world.
Please sit down, look the photo, and listen the song and the video, it is so emotional too.
En México, el 23 de octubre se celebra el Día del Médico, y qué mejor homenaje en estos tiempos que esta magnífica re-versión de este himno que es "Tower of Strength" de The Mission, llena de gran significado. Todas las ganancias provenientes de esta canción van destinadas a hospitales que han atendido pacientes con COVID-19.
Por favor, siéntense, disfruten la música y vean el video, vale mucho la pena también.
Wayne Hussey and friends remake the classic Mission anthem
'Tower Of Strength' in support of Covid-19 related charities globally.
All proceeds to charities personally chosen by each contributorNominated charities:
UK NHS - St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital, Memphis - Music Venue Trust - Covenant House, New Orleans - Disasters Emergency Committee - MusiCares - Plan International - Direct Relief - Alzheimer’s Scotland - Liberty Hill Foundation - The Shrewsbury Ark - Memorial Sloan Kettering Center, NYC - Prostate Cancer UK - The Teddy Bear Clinic - RedRover - Help Musicians UK - Crew Nation - Venice Family Clinic - Anthony Walker Foundation - The San Francisco City Covid-19 Fund - Projeto Cáo Communitário
"You raise me up
When I'm on the floor
You see me through
When I'm lonely and scared
And I'm feeling true to the written word
And you're true to me
And still I need more
It would tear me apart
To feel no one ever cared
For me
Me
For me
You are a tower of strength to me
You stand firm and proud
When the wind blows in your face
And when the sun shines in your eyes
You just turn your head away
To me
To me
To me
You are a tower of strength to me
You rescue me
You are my faith, my hope, my liberty
And when there's darkness all around
You shine bright for me
You are the guiding light..."
TOS2020: youtu.be/VE1I6q-s6Vo
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia is the oldest private medical society in the United States. Founded in 1787 by 24 Philadelphia physicians "to advance the Science of Medicine, and thereby lessen human misery, by investigating the diseases and remedies which are peculiar to our country" and to promote "order and uniformity in the practice of Physick," it has made important contributions to medical education and research. The College hosts the Mütter Museum, a gallery of 19th-century specimens, teaching models, instruments, and photographs, as well as the Historical Medical Library, which is one of the country's oldest medical libraries.[3][4][5]
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Building, designed by the firm of Cope & Stewardson and built in 1909, was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in October, 2008. It was also then listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Detail from The Spine - the new Royal College of Physicians' building in the Knowledge Quarter, Liverpool
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia is the oldest private medical society in the United States. Founded in 1787 by 24 Philadelphia physicians "to advance the Science of Medicine, and thereby lessen human misery, by investigating the diseases and remedies which are peculiar to our country" and to promote "order and uniformity in the practice of Physick," it has made important contributions to medical education and research. The College hosts the Mütter Museum, a gallery of 19th-century specimens, teaching models, instruments, and photographs, as well as the Historical Medical Library, which is one of the country's oldest medical libraries.
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Building, designed by the firm of Cope & Stewardson and built in 1909, was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in October, 2008. It was also then listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 129
What there is to say? I love medicine, i love the ability to heal, to aid people, the knowledge about human body and the responsability in taking desitions that can change a person's life.I just enjoy Med School, I want to be a better doctor, i WANT to, i dont feel obligated to be one... and that feels good.
Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
I can't fool myself, I don't want nobody else to ever love me
You are my shinin' star, my guiding light, my love fantasy
There's not a minute, hour, day or night that I don't love you
You're at the top of my list 'cause I'm always thinkin' of you
I still remember in the days when I was scared to touch you
How I spent my day dreamin' plannin' how to say I love you
You must have known that I had feelings deep enough to swim in
That's when you opened up your heart and you told me to come in
Oh, my love
A thousand kisses from you is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Oh, my love
A million days in your arms is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Too much, never too much, never too much, never too much
I'm too good to you
I'm way too good to you
You take my love for granted
I just don't understand it
No, I'm too good to you
I'm way too good to you
You take my love for granted
I just don't understand it
I don't know how to talk to you
I don't know how to ask you if you're okay
My friends always feel the need to tell me things
Seems like they're just happier than us these days
Yeah, these days I don't know how to talk to you
I don't know how to be there when you need me
It feels like the only time you see me
Is when you turn your head to the side and look at me differently
And last night I think I lost my patience
Last night I got high as your expectations
Last night, I came to a realization
And I hope you can take it
I hope you can take it
Oh, my love
A thousand kisses from you is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Oh, my love
A million days in your arms is never too much
I just don't wanna stop
Too much, never too much, never too much, never too much
Physician Response Unit
Skoda Kodiaq - H06 - LY69 OJN
Thanks for viewing my Photos - NO UNAUTHORISED USE
seated figure of the physician Sesheshen-sa-Hathor
Middle Kingdom, 12th Dynasty, c. 1880 BC, Ezbet Rushdi
Staatliches Museum Ägyptischer Kunst, München, Deutschland / State Museum of Egyptian Art, Munich, Germany
Mütter Museum, College of Physicians of Philadelphia
From series James G. Mundie's Cabinet of Curiosities
[Copyright © 2008 James G. Mundie. Image may not be reproduced in any form without express written permission.]
- ♫ Sound
- EVENT
→ «GENRE» – March 15th – April 12th
→ «The Arcade» March 1st – 31st
- 📷 taken at NATHAN ART Studio (ephemeral scenery)
Physician Response Unit
Skoda Kodiaq - H06 - LY69 OJN
Thanks for viewing my Photos - NO UNAUTHORISED USE
At a conference in London which was held at the Royal College of Physicians. It is an impressive building.
In the 17th century Edinburgh physicians began to meet in their own homes to discuss the regulation of medical practice and ways in which standards in medicine could be improved. Sir Robert Sibbald, an eminent physician and noted historian, was a member of this group. Through his friendship with the King’s Physician, he had the opportunity to petition King Charles II who granted the College its Royal Charter in 1681.
The founding Fellows of the College were concerned not only with the advancement of medicine as a reputable science, but also with alleviating the miseries of the city’s poor and needy. In 1682 the College established the first dispensary in Britain to distribute free medicine to the sick poor and was
instrumental in founding the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 1729.
For more than 300 years, the College has remained independent of control by government and its mission today remains close to the ideals of its founders, namely to promote the highest standards in internal medicine.
Art&Ko - Healer Set
Doux - Venezia
SFU - Ruevit Bindi
Violent Seduction - Hera Ring (White)
Pepe Skins - Leanne V2 / Moonbeam / LE
Pepe Skins - Toned V2 / Moonbeam
TF: Body Veins :: Heavy :: Light
Gloom. - Rhys Collection - Light Gray
Maitreya Mesh Body
LeLUTKA.Head.Lake.
Cassandra Shape
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Cassandra-Shape-Lelutka-Evo-Lake/20788536
Royal College of Physicians, St Andrew's Place, at the south-eastern end of Regent's Park. The building opened in 1964 and was designed by architect Denys Lasdun. It is Grade I listed by Historic England.
Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle was a British writer and physician. He created the character Sherlock Holmes in 1887 for A Study in Scarlet, the first of four novels and fifty-six short stories about Holmes and Dr. Watson. The Sherlock Holmes stories are milestones in the field of crime fiction.
Nearly 3 years after getting my medical license as a physician, I finally thought of getting me a Parker Jotter pen and have my name engraved. Sadly, my name can't fit, thus I chose to have my surname engraved instead.
I must say, it looks good alongside a prescription pad and my Littmann Cardiology III stethoscope that I happen to have engraved my name as well.
Shooting Information:
•Nikon D7200 with MB-D15 Battery Grip
•Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 EX DC OS HSM
•Manual Mode
•1/250th @ 50mm zoom, f/5.6
•ISO 200
•2x Off Shoe Nikon SB-600 Flash Fired
Off Shoe Flash Information:
•Commander/Trigger: Nikon SU-800 Wireless Speedlight Commander
•Flash 1: Nikon SB-600 with no modifier on the left, manually at 1/16th power
•Flash 2: Nikon SB-600 with no modifier on the right, manually at 1/32nd power
Post Processing Information:
•Adobe Lightroom Classic CC 7.1
•Not Cropped
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Being a physician I have always been fascinated with traditional healing rituals. While in Ha Giang I was lucky enough to encounter this Hmong shaman performing a spirit negotiation ceremony in a family home. The real life patient is the young woman wearing a hooded jacket seated against the wall to his left who had just been hospitalized with pneumonia. Here the shaman is wearing a ceremonial cloth mask and grasping a musical instrument somewhat similar to a tambourine. Holding the instrument he shakes and jerks his arms and legs up and down while uttering incantations and enters into a trance like state. The idea is that his soul leaves the body and journeys into the spirit world to communicate with spirits or ancestors, where he bargains for the patient's health and well-being.
Narcolepsy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Narcolepsy /ˈnɑrkəˌlɛpsi/, also known as hypnolepsy, is a chronic neurological disorder caused by the brain's inability to regulate sleep-wake cycles normally.[1] People with narcolepsy often experience disturbed nocturnal sleep and an abnormal daytime sleep pattern, which often is confused with insomnia. Narcoleptics, when falling asleep, generally experience the REM stage of sleep within 5 minutes, while most people do not experience REM sleep until an hour or so later.
One of the many problems that some narcoleptics experience is cataplexy, a sudden muscular weakness brought on by strong emotions (though many people experience cataplexy without having an emotional trigger).
Narcolepsy is a neurological sleep disorder. It is not caused by mental illness or psychological problems. It is most likely affected by a number of genetic mutations and abnormalities that affect specific biologic factors in the brain, combined with an environmental trigger during the brain's development, such as a virus.
The term narcolepsy derives from the French word narcolepsie created by the French physician Jean-Baptiste-Édouard Gélineau by combining the Greek νάρκη (narkē, "numbness" or "stupor"), and λῆψις (lepsis), "attack" or "seizure".
Hair - DURA
Head - CATWA
Beard - VOLKSTONE
Glasses - CONTRAPTION
Body - SIGNATURE
Hand wrap - MUSU
Outfit - HOTDOG
Pipe - Kunst
Necklace - Moonstone
Emergency physicians conduct an acute trauma resuscitation of a young gang member, with three gunshot wounds, in the emergency department of a public hospital in San Salvador, El Salvador. © Jan Sochor Photography
Prompt: Create a digital fine art illustration depicting a skeleton couple, wearing old clothing, sitting on separate wooden chairs in a doctor’s waiting room. Their postures should appear patient yet weary, with subtle humor in their skeletal expressions — one skeleton may have legs crossed, the other holding a tattered old magazine.
The waiting room should appear aged and dusty, with cobwebs draping over the chairs, corners, and light fixtures. Include a sign on the back wall that clearly reads “Physician Waiting Room” in an old-fashioned serif font.
The walls should have a faded beige tone with peeling paint, a vintage wall clock stopped at an arbitrary time, and a dim overhead light casting a soft glow that emphasizes the eerie yet humorous atmosphere. A small side table with outdated magazines or a dead potted plant adds to the neglected charm. vertical aspect ratio
This digital fine art was created using OpenAI Sora AI and Photoshop
I had become altitude sick in the mountains and walked to a Hilary Medical Clinic in Kunde. The volunteer physician there was from the States and invited me to dinner with his family. During our time together a knock came to the door and these local children were there, celebrating the Nepalese equivalent of Halloween. He suggested they sing and dance to earn their treats and I took this shot as they did so...
To celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who, I've made this little scene depicting the last moments of the Eighth Doctor, just before regenerating into the War Doctor (John Hurt), from the miniepisode "The Night of the Doctor" by Steven Moffat.
Georgian National Museum, Shalva Amiranashvili Museum of Fine Arts, Tbilisi
Niko Pirosmani’s Albertina Museum exhibition
Exhibición de Niko Pirosmani en La Albertina
Niko Pirosmanashvili (georgiano: ნიკო ფიროსმანაშვილი; Mirzaani, Georgia; 5 de mayo de 1862 - 1918), conocido también como Niko Pirosmani, fue un pintor primitivista georgiano.
Niko Pirosmanashvili nació el 5 de mayo de 1862 en el poblado de Mirzaani, provincia de Kajeti, Georgia, hijo de una familia de campesinos, propietarios de un pequeño viñedo. Pronto se encontró huérfano y fue puesto bajo el cuidado de sus dos hermanas mayores. Hacia 1870 se mudó a Tiflis, y en 1872 entró a trabajar como sirviente de familias opulentas. Aprendió a escribir ruso y georgiano. En 1876 regresó a Mirzaani y se empleó como pastor.
Autodidacta, una de sus especialidades fue la pintura directa sobre hule negro. En 1882 abrió un taller en Tbilisi el cual no prosperó. En 1890 trabajó como conductor de trenes, y en 1895 se empleó creando carteles. En 1893 cofundó una granja en Tbilisi que abandonó en 1901. A lo largo de su vida, la cual pasó siempre en la pobreza, se empleó en trabajos comunes que iban desde pintar casas hasta encalar fachadas. A pesar de que sus pinturas lograron una popularidad local su relación con artistas profesionales fue difícil. Ganarse la vida siempre fue una tarea más importante para él que la estética abstracta. En abril de 1918 murió de desnutrición e insuficiencia hepática. Fue enterrado en el cementerio Nino, aunque el lugar exacto se desconoce puesto que no fue registrado.
A inicios del Siglo XX Niko Pirosmanashvili vivió en un pequeño departamento no lejos de la estación de ferrocarriles de Tbilisi. Sus pinturas incluyeron vastas escenas locales y retratos imaginarios de figuras históricas georgianas, como aquellas de Shota Rustaveli y la Reina Tamar, además de retratar georgianos comunes y su quehacer diario.
En 1910 se ganó el entusiasmo crítico del poeta ruso Mijaíl Le-Dantue y del artista Kiril Zdanévich y su hermano Iliá Zdanévich. Éste escribió una carta sobre Pirosmanashvili en el periódico Zakavkázskaia Rech, publicada el 13 de febrero de 1913. También tomó la empresa de publicitar a Piroshmanashvili en Moscú. La edición del 7 de enero del periódico moscovita Moskóvskaia Gazeta contenía una nota sobre la exhibición Mishen en donde se exhibieron algunas obras de pintores autodidactas, entre las cuales se encontraban cuatro de Pirosmanashvili: Retrato de Zdanévich, Naturaleza muerta, Mujer con un jarro de cerveza, y El corzo. Los críticos que escribieron después en el mismo periódico quedaron impresionados por su talento. Ese mismo año se publicó un artículo sobre la obra de Niko Pirosmanashvili en el periódico georgiano Temi.
La Sociedad de Pintores Georgianos, fundada por Dito Shevardnadze en 1916, invitó a Pirosmanashvili a sus reuniones en donde lo acogieron, sin embargo, su relación con la sociedad no fue fácil. A pesar de haber mostrado a la sociedad su pintura Boda georgiana, uno de los miembros publicó una caricatura de él que lo ofendió considerablemente. Su continua pobreza, aunados a los problemas económicos derivados de la Primera Guerra Mundial, provocaron que su vida terminara con su obra sin reconocimiento.
Tras la guerra desarrolló una reputación internacional, al ganarse la admiración como pintor naïf en París y en otros lugares. El primer libro sobre Pirosmanashvili fue publicado en georgiano, ruso y francés en 1926. Inclusive su figura inspiró a Pablo Picasso hacer un esbozo de retrato en 1972. A pesar de que hoy en día han sobrevivido alrededor de 200 pinturas, se han hecho exhibiciones de su obra en diferentes ciudades, desde Kiev (1931), Varsovia (1968), París (1969), Viena (1969), Niza y Marsella (1983), Tokyo (1986), Zurich (1995), Turín (2002), Istanbul (2008), y Vilnius (2008-2009).
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niko_Pirosmani
elhurgador.blogspot.com/2018/08/niko-pirosmani-pintura-pa...
Niko Pirosmani (Georgian: ნიკო ფიროსმანი), simply referred to as Nikala (ნიკალა) (1862–1918), was a Georgian naïve painter who posthumously rose to prominence.
Pirosmani was born in the Georgian village of Mirzaani to a peasant family in Kakheti province. His parents, Aslan Pirosmanashvili and Tekle Toklikishvili, were farmers, who owned a small vineyard, with a few cows and oxen. He was later orphaned and left in the care of his two elder sisters, Mariam and Pepe. He moved with them to Tbilisi in 1870. In 1872, while living in a little apartment not far from Tbilisi railway station, he worked as a servant to wealthy families and learned to read and write Russian and Georgian. In 1876, he returned to Mirzaani and worked as a herdsman.
Pirosmani gradually taught himself to paint. One of his specialties was painting directly into black oilcloth. In 1882, with self-taught George Zaziashvili, he opened a painting workshop, where they made signboards. In 1890, he worked as a railroad conductor. In 1893, he co-founded a dairy farm in Tbilisi, which he left in 1901. Throughout his life, Pirosmani, who was poor, was willing to take ordinary jobs including housepainting and whitewashing buildings. He also worked for shopkeepers in Tbilisi, creating signboards, paintings, and portraits, according to their orders. Although his paintings had some local popularity (about 200 survive) his relationship with professional artists remained uneasy; making a living was always more important to him than aesthetic abstractions.
In April 1918, he died in the 1918 flu pandemic resulted from malnutrition and liver failure. He was buried at the Nino cemetery; the exact location was not registered and is unknown.
Pirosmani’s paintings were influenced by the social conditions of his time and place. There are many works about merchants, shopkeepers, workmen, and noblemen groups. Pirosmani was fond of nature and rural life. He rarely employed city landscapes. He made many animal paintings. He was the only Georgian animalist. Pirosmani also was attracted by historical figures and themes such as Shota Rustaveli, Queen Tamar, Giorgi Saakadze, as well as ordinary Georgian people and their everyday lives.
Usually, Pirosmani painted on oilcloth. Unlike other artists, Niko didn’t aim at a pure imitation of the nature and paid no attention to details. Some of his paintings are monochrome. His paintings demonstrate the author's sharp compositional consideration. Placements of the figures are frontal, while faces do not demonstrate a specific mood.
In the 1910s, he won the enthusiasm of the Russian poet Mikhail Le-Dantyu and the artist Kirill Zdanevich and his brother Ilia Zdanevich. Ilia Zhdanevich wrote a letter about Pirosmani to the newspaper Zakavkazskaia Rech, which it published on February 13, 1913. He undertook to publicise Pirosmani's painting in Moscow. The Moscow newspaper Moskovskaia Gazeta of 7 January wrote about the exhibition "Mishen" where self-taught painters exhibited, among them four works by Pirosmani: "Portrait of Zhdanevich", "Still Life", "Woman with a Beer Mug", and "The Roe". Critics writing later in the same newspaper were impressed with his talent.
In the same year, an article about Niko Pirosmani and his art was published in Georgian newspaper Temi.
The Society of Georgian Painters, founded in 1916 by Dito Shevardnadze, invited Pirosmani to its meetings and began to take him up, but his relations with the society were always uneasy. He presented his painting "Georgian Wedding" to the Society. One of the members published a caricature of him, which greatly offended him. His continuing poverty, compounded by the economic problems caused by the First World War, meant that his life ended with his work little recognised.
After his death, Pirosmani gained international reputation when he became admired as a 'naïve' painter in Paris and elsewhere. His paintings were represented at the first big exhibition of Georgian painters in 1918. From 1920 onwards, a number of articles were published about him. The first monograph on Pirosmani was published in 1926 in Georgian, Russian, and French.
Interest in Pirosmani increased in the 1950s.
In 1969, a film about him was made, titled Pirosmani. He inspired a portrait sketch by Pablo Picasso (1972). Pirosmani is also depicted on a Georgian lari bill. A periodic newspaper titled Pirosmani is published in two languages in Istanbul.
Exhibitions of his work have been held in Kiev (1931), Warsaw (1968), Paris (The Louvre) (1969), Vienna (1969), Nice and Marseilles (1983), Tokyo (1986), Zurich (1995), Nantes (1999), Turin (2002), Kiev, Istanbul (2008), Minsk, Vézelay and Vilnius (2008–2009), and Vienna again (2018/19).
Today, 146 of his works are shown in the Art Museum of Georgia and sixteen paintings are exhibited in the Historical-Ethnographic Museum of Sighnaghi. A monument was installed in Tbilisi. There is also the Niko Pirosmanashvili Museum in Mirzaani, Georgia, in one of his abodes.
In March 2011, it was discovered that the writing on the door of Qvrivishvilebi’s wine-cellar in Ozaani was made by Pirosmani. On 31 May 2011, during an investigation, experts discovered a painting, which proved to be "Wounded Soldier" by Pirosmani. The painting was given to the National Gallery of Georgia.
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Photography’s new conscience