View allAll Photos Tagged ROISE
I am currently working on my Final Major project, moving on from my Final Minor project. Because my final illustrations for this project will be for Nylon magazine i firstly researched previous illustrators that had completed commissioned work for the magazine. Above are pages from my sketch book showing my artist research. I started to look at Esra Roise, Fumi Nakamura and Malin Bergstorm.
roise, Acoocks green, I can tell that my cat likes whiskas because she doesnt just lick the jelly of like she does to other cat food .
Village of Traditional Crafts is located on the grounds of an old farm, a place called "the Roises"
On its heights, the forest is still the scars of the Great War.
Since 1991, the village developed on 17 hectares.
That train was fucking awesome. That is actually half real live puppet; and half fake puppet. That train is purely fake.
Roise, Tunbridge Wells, Rosie would never resist a Whiskers meal. She licks the bowl clean every time and looks at me for more and now I don't buy anything else !
Full body Cyanotype of myself on an A1 piece of paper. Work created by myself (Rebecca) and Roise Jones.
The Rosie Hackett Bridge (Irish: Droichead Róise Haicéid) is a road and tram bridge in Dublin, Ireland, which opened on 20 May 2014.
Spanning the River Liffey and joining Marlborough Street to Hawkins Street, it is used solely by public transport, taxis, cyclists and pedestrians. It is 26 metres wide and 48 metres long, and is a single span, smooth concrete structure, with the underside of the bridge designed to be as high above the water as possible so that river traffic is not impeded.
It was built to carry the extended Luas Green line, and was budgeted at €15 million.
It is named for trade unionist Rosie Hackett.
Rosanna "Rosie" Hackett (25 July 1893 – 4 May 1976) was an Irish insurgent and trade union leader. She was a founder-member of the Irish Women Workers' Union, and supported strikers during the 1913 Dublin Lockout. She later became a member of the Irish Citizen Army and was involved in the 1916 Easter Rising. In the 1970s, the labour movement awarded Hackett a gold medal for decades of service