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repin from: www.pinterest.com/theuserduringsu
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© 2014 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
I miss Wisconsin...even in the winter!
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
Photo taken by my nephew on a recent trip to Myanmar and Nepal....his stuff is Nat Geo material!! See the other photos of this series.
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© 2013 Nicholas Bushnell. All Rights Reserved.
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
It all started by buying lots of 1001 peeps from Brenda quite a while ago......
I am a finalist for the "Your Andover" contest. Please like and repin my quilt on this link:
pinterest.com/andoverfabrics/your-andover-finalists/
Blogged here:
www.dresdenlane.com/2013/02/your-andover-finalist-competi...
As Russian electric locomotives classes go the Class ChS6 (ЧС6) are a very small class with only 30 built between 1979-81 by Skoda in Czechoslovakia. They are a twin section Bo-Bo+Bo-Bo 3000v DC machine rated at 2x4200kW and were built exclusively for heavy passenger work hence the red and cream livery rather than green.
ЧС6-024 is seen with a short five coach formation at Sankt Petersberg Finlandski station with train 33 the 07.00 to Helsinki Central which was a named service called the "Repin". The ЧС6 will work the train to Vyborg where a dual voltage class VL82 (ВЛ82) will take over for the cross border run between Vyborg and Vainikkala as the VR network is 25kV AC.
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© 2014 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
Sadko was a merchant and gusli musician from Novgorod.
Sadko played the gusli on the shores of a lake. The Sea Tsar appeared to express his gratitude. On the Tsar's advice, Sadko made a bet with the local merchants about a certain fish in the lake; then he caught it, and the merchants had to pay the bet, making Sadko a rich merchant.
Sadko traded on the seas with his new wealth, but one day, his ships stopped in the sea and would not move. He and his sailors tried to appease the Sea Tsar with gold, but finally Sadko had to jump into the sea. He played the gusli for the Sea Tsar, who offered him, already married man, a new bride. On advice, he took the last maiden in a long line, and lay down beside her.
He woke up on the shore and rejoined his wife.
This tale attracted the attention of several authors in 19th century with the rise of the Slavophile movement and served as a basis for a number of derived works.
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How mistakes end up OK....I snapped this little guy on the gate to the pool...broad daylight...forgot I was in manual mode and had the shutter speed cranked up...
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
View in "fullscreen" mode (double click on the photo) or Lightbox (press "L")....enjoy!
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
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Please do not duplicate, repin, post, link, copy or use any of my photographs without my permission.
© 2014 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
Les transporteurs de barges sur la Volga (1870, Musée d'Etat Russe, Saint Pétersbourg) d'Ilia Iefimovitch Répine (1844-1930)
today we made 4 new videos and they all turned out sweet!
you can check out of them out in the link below :D
and over the weekend i gauged my ears up to 4s so i can finally put in my bee colored plugs!
no blog today i'm super lazy! sorry myself!
for todays photo i thought it would be fun to do a Wii action shot haha even though i haven't played in a while lol
i'm repin a sweet Breathe Electric shirt in my shot and i love our feet haha
NEWEST BRUTAL BROTHERS VIDEO:
Super Cleanse Laxative Makes You Sh*t in Seconds
taken 03-27-10
uploaded 03-27-10
check out my brothers and i's youtube channel!
COMMENT :D
Zinaida Yevgenyevna Serebriakova was the first female Russian painter of distinction. She was born near Kharkov into one of Russia's most refined and artistic families. In 1900 she entered the art school founded by Princess M. K. Tenisheva. She studied under Repin in 1901, and Braz between 1903 and 1905. Between 1902–1903 she spent time in Italy, and from 1905–1906 she studied in Paris. At the outbreak of the October Revolution in 1917 Serebriakova's life suddenly changed. In 1919 her husband Boris died of typhus contracted in Bolshevik jails. She was left without any income, responsible for her four children and her sick mother. She did not want to switch to the futurist style popular in the art of the early Soviet period, nor paint portraits of commissars, but she found some work at the Kharkov Archaeological Museum.
In 1924, she went to Paris, having received a commission for a mural. She intended to return to the Soviet Union. However, she was not able to return, and although she was able to bring her younger children, she could not do the same for her two older children and did not see them again for many years. After this, Serebriakova traveled a great deal. In 1928 and 1930 she traveled to Africa, visiting Morocco. In 1947, she became a French citizen, and it was not until Khruschev's thaw that the Soviet Government allowed her to resume contact with her family. Serebriakova's works were finally exhibited in the Soviet Union in 1966. Her albums sold by the millions, and she was compared to Botticelli and Renoir. However, although she sent about 200 of her works to be shown in the Soviet Union, the bulk of her work remains in France today.
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
View in "fullscreen" mode (double click on the photo) or Lightbox (press "L")....enjoy!
Please do not duplicate, repin, post, link, copy or use any of my photographs without my permission.
© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
☆Private collection.
Sotheby's London, Russian Sale - Paintings, June 2007.
Sources: www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2007/russian-sale...
ru.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9A%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%B5%D1%81%D0...
paintingart.ru/gallery/kolesnikov.html
Stepan Fedorovitch Kolesnikoff (1879, Russian Empire - 1955, Yugoslavia), was a distinguished Realist painter.
Kolesnikoff was born in a peasant family in a southern province of the Russian Empire. His artistic potentials were recognized early. In 1897 he started attending an artistic school in Odessa, one of the topmost of its kind in the country. In 1903, Kolesnikoff was accepted into the Imperial Academy of Arts, where his paintings regularly won prizes in the annual Spring exhibitions. His prolific work in oil and especially in gouache won him the highest regards from the foremost Russian artist of his day Ilya Repin, as evidenced from the contents of their correspondence, now in the Russian archives. In 1919 he and his family emigrated to the Balkans, and in 1920 he settled in Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, (Yugoslavia after 1929) where he spent the rest of his life as an immigrant. Kolesnikoff was promptly welcomed in the royal court of his new country. Among others, he was given a state assignment to lead the restoration works on numerous paintings and frescoes. The last twelve years of his life Kolesnikoff suffered from Parkinsons' disease. His remains are buried in the Russian Necropolis, a section of the Belgrade New Cemetery
Photo taken by my nephew on a recent trip to Myanmar and Nepal....his stuff is Nat Geo material!! See the other photos of this series.
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Please do not duplicate, repin, post, link, copy or use any of my photographs without my permission.
© 2013 Nicholas Bushnell. All Rights Reserved.
A little deceptive - this "rock is really a small mountain at 570 ft tall.
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© 2013 Limin Kung, Jr. All Rights Reserved.
De componist Rimsky Korsakov geschilderd door Ilja Repin. Detail van het hele schilderij.
Expositie Peredvizhniki, Drents Museum, Assen.
Nog tot en met 2 april 2017. Een reis waard!
You might argue I was for wrong reasons in Russia - Russian women are unbelievable gorgeous - but I took hardly any photos of this great city. This is one of the few I could upload but actually the city itself deserves much more attention.
The Russian Academy of Arts, informally known as the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts, was founded in 1757 by Count Ivan Shuvalov under the name Academy of the Three Noblest Arts. Catherine the Great renamed it the Imperial Academy of Arts and commissioned a new building, completed 25 years later in 1789 by the Neva River. The academy promoted the neoclassical style and technique, and sent its promising students to European capitals for further study. Training at the academy was virtually required for artists to make successful careers. Formally abolished in 1918 after the Russian Revolution, the academy was renamed several times. It established free tuition; students from across the country competed fiercely for its few places annually. In 1947 the national institution was moved to Moscow, and much of its art collection was moved to the Hermitage. The building in Leningrad was devoted to the Ilya Repin Leningrad Institute for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, named in honor of one of Russia's foremost realist artists. Since 1991 it has been called the St. Petersburg Institute for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.