View allAll Photos Tagged React,
Luis Guzman #10 of the Temple Owls reacts late in the game against the Cornell Big Red during the first round of the 2010 NCAA men's basketball tournament at Jacksonville Veteran's Memorial Arena on March 19, 2010 in Jacksonville, Florida.
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
REact2021 Real Estate Conference | Miami, FL, October 8, 2021. To learn more about the FIU Hollo School of Real Estate please visit realestate.fiu.edu.
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
The Trailblazers Jake Stone (11) reacts after he heads the ball to gain possession for Lewis and Clark during the Aug. 30, 2013 game against Allen Community College. The Lewis and Clark Community College men's soccer team won 4-1. Photo by S. Paige Allen, Lewis and Clark Community College photographer.
10 January - 6 May 2015, Perth Museum & Art Gallery
React-Reflect-Respond
This is a unique exhibition curated by Perth Museum & Art Gallery to support the touring exhibition Tim Stead MBE: Object Maker and Seed Sower. From January to May 2015 this major touring exhibition is on show in Perth and React Reflect Respond is showing in the adjacent gallery.
The "reactable" has an intuitive user interface sensitive for physical contact which makes music visible and almost graspable. It is based on a luminous round table and can be played simultaneously by several performers. A work by Sergi Jordŕ (ES), Günter Geiger (AT), Martin Kaltenbrunner (AT) and Marcos Alonso (ES) that was awarded with a Golden Nica in the Digital Musics category.
credit: rubra
Cat reacts after seeing my dog near Minstroom (Utrecht). See also www.flickr.com/photos/dearharry/24335441/
I wasn'tgoing to include this photo - I had tongue prints on my glasses and the focus was a bit off, but then I noticed Link. He was not happy with Frank trying to lick me.
U.S. Army Soldiers assigned to 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment, Tennessee Army National Guard, react to simulated chemical attack while continueing to carry out their duties in a command post during Decisive Action Rotation 18-07 at Fort Irwin, Calif., May 13, 2018. Decisive Action Rotations at the National Training Center ensure units remain versatile, responsive, and consistently available for current and future contingencies. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Courtney Hubbard, Operations Group, National Training Center)
I was hired to paint graff for the set of a TV show shot here in Boston. They wanted it to look "authentic." so it had to be a little messy.
Senator Scott Brown reacts to a scene from "You're A Good Man, Scott Brown," a new musical at Improv Asylum.
For permission to use this photo, or for a high resolution version, please contact me at richiemoriarty@gmail.com
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
Patrick McGivney (green T-short) reacts to the involuntary muscle spasms in his arm caused by the arm movement of Andrew Farkas (grey T-shirt) in the Neural Engineering,Talking and Listening to Nerves workshop of the Xplore Engineering camp on North Campus on July 1, 2022. Both participants muscles are connected by wires.
At the Neural Engineering,Talking and Listening to Nerves workshop, camp participants learn about how nerves work and how sensations are turned into feelings and ideas into actions. BME students and faculty use insects to teach camp participants how to engineer the nervous system and show how neuroscience can move robotic arms with brainpower to help paralyzed people walk.
Xplore Engineering summer camp is designed for Michigan Engineering alumni and the children in their life entering the 4th through 7th grade. Through a series of experiential workshops, participants get hands-on experience in a variety of engineering disciplines. Participants can choose to participate in 6 out of 18 workshops ranging from nanotechnology to rocketry.
Thursday, June 30, 2022
Photo by Marcin Szczepanski/Lead Multimedia Storyteller, University of Michigan College of Engineering
Riga Latvia,Mar23_2013.Titlus Womans World Curling Championship.Canadian skip Rachel Homan of Ottawa Ont,reacts after jamming her stone as Scotland's Eve Muirhead steals one to defeat Canada 8-7 in the semi-final. michael burns photo
Fans react in audience during the VCT Americas Opening Weekend 2023 at the Riot Games Arena on April 1, 2023. (Photo by Tina Jo/Riot Games)
Fans react as YG performs on the Chevy Park Stage at the NYS Fair on Saturday, Sept 4, 2021. (Photos by Michael J. Okoniewski-NYS Fair)
U.S. Military Academy cadets conduct a react to contact lane at West Point, N.Y. on July 23, 2025. The training lane is designed to teach basic Soldier skills including movement under fire, flanking maneuvers and searching enemy casualties for intelligence. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Alan Brutus)
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
www.learntek.org/product/react-js-training/
Learntek is global online training provider on Big Data Analytics, Hadoop, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, IOT, AI, Cloud Technology, DEVOPS, Digital Marketing and other IT and Management courses. We are dedicated to designing, developing and implementing training programs for students, corporate employees and business professional.
Maria Sharapova of Russia reacts during her match with Laura Siegemond of Germany which was abandoned due to the smoke from Australia's bushfires at the Kooyong Classic tennis tournament, in Melbourne on January 14, 2020. (Photo by William WEST / AFP) (Photo by WILLIAM WEST/AFP via Getty Images)
Crows fans react with surprise and joy as Ben Rutten's last kick in the AFL results in the last goal of his last game. I've seen the Adelaide Oval crowd more excited than that, but never as happy as that. It was a special moment.
Adelaide and St. Kilda meet on the last day of the home-and-away season. As Richmond had defeated Sydney the previous day to secure eighth spot, the Crows could not hope to win their way into the finals. St. Kilda was all but locked in for the wooden spoon, their first since 2000.
The match was a dead rubber, but it was significant in several other ways. It was Rory Sloane's 100th game, as well as the farewell for two veterans: Ben Rutten of Adelaide, and Lenny Hayes of St. Kilda. Both bowed out in style: although a career defender, Ben Rutten's last kick in the AFL resulted in a goal, as his first three kicks had back in 2003. Lenny Hayes, meanwhile, broke the all-time AFL record for most tackles laid. This would also turn out to be Brenton Sanderson's last game as Adelaide's coach
React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
Found this old 'Maniacs' outline in the loft. Came from a huge pile of flicks courtesy of the man D'Bate 1990.
MCS & HKT were some old Essex crews from way back when. Not sure who really was in them..maybe Skire can shed some light?
A beautiful bull in his twenties, with a small problem. He doesn't know how to act, react or behave when he is around the women..He keeps chasing them, and of course the females are not happy! Today he is exploring the female enclosure by his own, for enrichment and to see how he behaves.
At first he was very excited, but he loved it to be there.
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In het kader van verrijking en om zijn gedrag te beoordelen mocht de bull vandaag in zijn eentje het verblijf vd dames onder- en bezoeken, Hij is in de twintig, maar heeft nog geen nakomelingen. Hij jaagt de dames het hele verblijf door,(die daar niet blij mee zijn!) maar weet verder eigenlijk niet wat er van hem verwacht wordt.
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React, Respect, Intersect was created by two professional artists and a team of youth artists as part of the Groundswell Community Mural Project’s flagship Summer Leadership Institute (SLI). SLI teams spend seven weeks during working with artists and community-based organizations, learning job skills and creating public art throughout New York City. This mural depicts a utopian environment where vehicular traffic, pedestrians of all ages and abilities, bicyclists, skateboarders, and animals respectfully share the street. It focuses not only on traffic and pedestrian safety education, but also site-specific themes and cultural diversity.
The safety education focus of this mural was informed by workshops lead by NYCDOT Safety Education. The artists and youth artists researched safety issues near the mural site which influenced their final design. Speed of vehicular traffic, high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, and the need for all modes of transportation to respectfully share the streets are just a few of the themes beautifully integrated in to this mural.
NYCDOT Urban Art Program, Special Project
React, Respect, Intersect by Yana Dimitrova and Adam Kidder
Presented with NYCDOT Safety Education and Groundswell Community Mural Project
East 5th Street in Kensington, Brooklyn
Hohenfels, GERMANY - Soldiers from the Republic of Georgia’s 32nd Light Infantry Battalion establish security during a Situational Training Exercise Lane at Europe’s premiere training destination, the Joint Multinational Readiness Center at Hohenfels, Germany. Georgian soldiers were participating in a mission-rehearsal exercise for their upcoming deployment to Afghanistan. U.S. Marine advisors and enablers, who will deploy with the unit to combat, worked side by side with their counterparts during the exercise. (U.S. Army Europe photo by Spc. Joshua E. Leonard)