View allAll Photos Tagged Revolution
14Juy2015.
Our National Day in France !
The firework was shooted from Carcassonne Castle. Try once, you won't be disappointed :)
PEACE NOT WAR
STOP THE WAR, STOP PUTIN, SUPPORT UKRAINE
decadencE. supports artist supporting Ukraine
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Psyche/106/74/801
Photographed on an awesome Tokyo adventure with Daren, Eriko-san, Katsushi-san, Kiyoshi-san, Lonny, Nagasaki-san, Saito-san, Shinobu-san, Takahashi-san, Toshi-san, and Yoshinori-san. Nakano, Nakano-ku, Tokyo. November 23, 2017.
The sound interrupted by unknown armies
They make the petals of the now closed flowers tremble
The once free branches
They descend tangled to the ground, touching the unsafe ground
Ravens in love have left the nest that, naked,
he remains defenseless without a voice
the light that filters still asks in confusion why
so much fear and so much silence
someone, but I don't know who, answers in a weak but clear voice
indignant: the Revolution!
(my)
Cromford Mill, the world’s first successful water powered cotton spinning mill, was built in 1771 by Sir Richard Arkwright.
From then until around 1790, he continued to develop the mills, warehouses and workshops, which now form the Cromford Mills site. Considered as a whole, it presents a remarkable picture of an early textile factory complex.
Sir Richard Arkwright’s invention of the waterframe to spin cotton transformed the manufacture of cotton into England’s major industry and created a system of factory production that spread throughout the world. The cotton industry was a cornerstone of the industrial revolution.
Arkwright took out a patent for his waterframe in 1769 and moved from Preston to Nottingham to set up a horse powered mill to run his machines. Driven by the need for more power he searched for a site to build a water powered mill and settled upon Cromford, using the Bonsall Brook and the Cromford Sough. In 1771 he set about building the first mill here.
In the next few years, the site grew rapidly, and Arkwright needed to attract more workers to the area; he expanded Cromford Village with the building of Derbyshire’s first row of planned industrial housing on North Street in 1776. Arkwright later built the marketplace, the Greyhound Hotel, and further housing for his growing workforce to create the village you see today
- [ ] Having raised my three children in the borough of North Arlington NJ where I resided for over 20 years where a large portion of the borough lies within the New Jersey Meadows or Meadowlands which at one point was a area loaded with white cedar, which was utilized to build burgeoning metropolis across the North River or Hudson as it is called today. The remnants of cedar were overtaken by pervasive phragmites which include as they are often referred to cattails. A natural estuary of brackish water that is a stop for thousands of migratory birds, it is an amazing story of reversal of 100 years of the Industrial Revolution’s pollution of the Passaic and Hackensack Rivers that feed the estuary. I saw such over the two decades I resided there, often riding my bicycle through the nature center that bordered my old office. This image is of the cattail variety of phragmites as the sun was setting in the New Jersey Meadowlands. - [ ] #developportdev @gothamtomato @developphotoweek @omsystem.cameras #excellent_america #omsystem @bheventspace - [ ] #developportdev @gothamtomato @developphotonewsletter @omsystem.cameras #excellent_america #omsystem @bheventspace @bhphoto @adorama @tamrac @tiffen @bhphoto @adorama @tamracphoto @tiffencompany @njdotcom @njspots @njshooterz @newjerseyisntboring @newjerseyisbeautiful @bergencountynj
In order to “read” the photo, and for the non-portuguese:
Yesterday Portuguese celebrated the 1974 25th April revolution, which ended the dictatorship regime that lasted throughout several decades.
IMG_7663r
Notre-Dame de Paris; meaning "Our Lady of Paris", referred to simply as Notre-Dame, is a medieval Catholic cathedral on the Île de la Cité (an island in the Seine River), in the 4th arrondissement of Paris, France. The cathedral, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, is considered one of the finest examples of French Gothic architecture. Several attributes set it apart from the earlier Romanesque style, particularly its pioneering use of the rib vault and flying buttress, its enormous and colorful rose windows, and the naturalism and abundance of its sculptural decoration. Notre-Dame also stands out for its three pipe organs (one historic) and its immense church bells.
Built during medieval France, construction of the cathedral began in 1163 under Bishop Maurice de Sully and was largely completed by 1260, though it was modified in succeeding centuries. In the 1790s, during the French Revolution, Notre-Dame suffered extensive desecration; much of its religious imagery was damaged or destroyed. In the 19th century, the coronation of Napoleon and the funerals of many of the French Republic's presidents took place at the cathedral. The 1831 publication of Victor Hugo's novel Notre-Dame de Paris (in English: The Hunchback of Notre-Dame) inspired interest which led to restoration between 1844 and 1864, supervised by Eugène Viollet-le-Duc. On 26 August 1944, the Liberation of Paris from German occupation was celebrated in Notre-Dame with the singing of the Magnificat. Beginning in 1963, the cathedral's façade was cleaned of soot and grime. Another cleaning and restoration project was carried out between 1991 and 2000.
On 15 April 2019, while Notre-Dame was undergoing renovation and restoration, its roof caught fire and burned for 15 hours. The cathedral sustained serious damage. The flèche (the timber spirelet over the crossing) was destroyed, as was most of the lead-covered wooden roof above the stone vaulted ceiling. This contaminated the site and nearby environment with lead. Restoration proposals suggested modernizing the cathedral, but the French National Assembly rejected them, enacting a law in July 2019 that required the restoration preserve the cathedral's "historic, artistic and architectural interest". The task of stabilizing the building against potential collapse was completed in November 2020. The cathedral is expected to reopen on 8 December 2024; the date was confirmed by President Macron.
(source: Wikipedia)
in einem Stillleben eine Revolution darstellen ...
Nähe trifft Freiheit ...
Freiheit trifft Nähe ...
Die Jagd nach dem Augenblick ...
Mehr Licht ...
Wolken, Wellen, Lichtreflexe – ab 1820 nutzen Maler*innen wie Caspar David Friedrich und Camille Corot neue, schnell trocknende Farben, um den Augenblick des Naturerlebens direkt in farbige Ölstudien, meist nur auf Papier, zu übersetzen.
Hier seht ihr ein typisches Equipment (unserer Kameraausrüstung gleich), das mit hinaus in die Natur genommen werden konnte.
Bisher dachte ich immer, das die neuen Tubenfarben erst den Impressionisten zur Verfügung gestanden haben.
Sie standen aber schon früher zur Verfügung und anders, als die Impressionisten, die gleich ein fertiges Bild in der Natur mit groben Strichen und ohne den Einsatz von Braun und Schwarz malten, haben die Maler zuvor noch fast "fotorealistisch", eben kleiner und fein (damit es schneller ins Papier eintrocknete), aber schnelle Vorstudien in der Natur gemalt, die nicht für das Publikum gedacht waren ...
Erstmals widmet sich in Deutschland eine Ausstellung der Ölstudie als größte Revolution in der Kunst des 19. Jahrhunderts.
Mit zahlreichen, noch nie öffentlich gezeigten Werken aus musealen und privaten europäischen Sammlungen präsentiert die von Autor und Kunsthistoriker Florian Illies kuratierte Schau im Kunstpalast (8. Februar bis 7. Mai) den wertschätzenden Blick von Künstler*innen auf die Natur im Zeitalter der Romantik ... natürlich exklusiv in Ddorf !!!
Mit am Meisten haben mich Himmelsstudien fasziniert, die so perfekt waren, dass ich sie hier in ein Foto einbauen könnte, ohne das es euch auffallen würde ...
zudem traf ich eine Malerin und geriet mir in in das "Himmel-Wolken- und (natürlich) Lichtthema ... sie sagte mir, dass sie bei aufwendigen Himmlen, die sie immer wieder nacharbeite, manchmal die Geduld haben müsse 4-5 Wochen zu warten, bis dass sie trocken sind ... (damit nutzt sie mit Sicherheit keine schnelltrocknenden Farben ...
;-) ...
www1.wdr.de/mediathek/video-mehr-licht-der-kunstpalast-un...
_V0A4513_pa2
I had just applied Sam's 'revolution' for this month and was sitting at the computer when I felt something tickle my neck. I brushed this little tick off onto my desk. Ugh!! Out of curiosity, I decided to see if I could squeeze a drop of the selamectin onto the tick to kill it - however he was still crawling around so I ended up flushing him like I usually do when I find these guys. Don't know where I picked up the tick, but I am off to have a good shower and scrub now!
Revolution Lounge. Mirage. Las Vegas. 2008
En honor a la mejor banda de todos los tiempos, el hotel Mirage colocó un lounge que hace alusión a una de las canciones más emblemáticas de los Beatles: Revolution.
Feeling radical in Cotton
Purified in my Satin
But the bomb of the season
Is a Velvet Revolution
I look at the sky
And feel the tears of the
Prophets crying
I look at the sky
And feel the rain
The rain of tears
Feeling radical in Cotton
Purified in my Satin
But the bomb of the season
Is a Velvet Revolution
All you killers of the children
There's a new Commandment
The true Divine Creator wants a
Velvet Revolution
All you killers of the children
There's a new Commandment
The true Divine Creator wants a
Velvet Revolution
Decisamente una rivoluzione ribelle la "nuova" livrea Regionale di Trenitalia, che si discosta dai noiosi schemi precedenti. Qui un complesso della DTR Lazio, con la E464.172 in tiro, transita sopra il Viadotto di Fioranello.
See Revolution (part 5)+ Revolution (part 4) +
Revolution (part 2) + Revolution (part 1)
(more to come...)