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The Thinker (French: Le Penseur) is a bronze and marble sculpture by Auguste Rodin. It depicts a man in sober meditation battling with a powerful internal struggle.
Dance-ol-ogy participants danced their pants off at Club Fit's "So You Think You Can Choreograph?" event on 6-9-16. A fun time by many!
www.goherdwick.co.uk "Think for food" is one of sixty specially painted herdwick sheep located along the A591 between Bowness and Keswick.
I took this photo this morning. It probably doesn't need an explanation.
The head is felted by a wonderful artist and friend Sandra Althouse who was so kind to gift it to me. :o)
I think this was taken back in July after seeing George Clinton play the Comerica Cityfest (formerly Tastefest) We would have been walking back to my car. George and his current Parliament/Funkadelic crew were really great, the crowd was huge (and the sun was brutal). They nailed that psychedelic Detroit groove just like back in the day (which has certainly not been anything you could count on for a while now) I've heard some of the new disc and it is such a disappointment after this show (an album of snoozy cover versions, complete with "special guests")
I guess it's turning to Fall and I'm already missing the Summer...damn, Memphis was 99 degrees!
A friend deep in thought, his pose reminded me of the famous sculpture. Also my first roll of Ilford HP5.
St Peter's Library, Prospect Building, University of Sunderland. Refurb September 2009 showing think pod.
I think this is Biscuit or Sweet Potato, one of three tabby kittens in the same *apartment* together at Heartland Humane Society. I'll post a "normal" photo of her in a few minutes.
Think of how lucky you are about not dying in 9/11
I miss all the people that have died even though I didn't know them
Please keep a place in your heart for these people who died for no reason
I should have talked to the guy and find out why he would give this little tip on the back of his car. Maybe that's what he needs to drive the thing at his age.
I've decided to end this daily macro project on 50 days. Which I think is a good run.
Here's a close-up of the John Lennon action figure I bought Heather for Christmas. :)
Now to think of some more projects... although maybe just 7 day ones for a while.
I still think the other T was better. But I have to do it with this one.
I met the brewer twice. Had to ask for the T (the nicer one) in French.
My English is very mal, he said.
Je vends votre bière, I said. Je veux votre T-shirt aussi.
Oui, oui, oui.
& For the rest of the beerfestival we said nothing to each other.
A smile & that was it.
Smiles can look totally different in other languages.
I think this is Ranunculus acris but am a bit confused about the lack of fully developed petals. Now identified by ceterach and ian boyd as R. auricomus.
Think this lichen from the northeast Olympic Mts of WA is Rhizocarpon petaeum. It looks very similar to a R. umbilicatum from Alaska - mushroomobserver.org/108610?q=2av2x
on Si rock; thallus K neg; apothecium: crystals all soluble in KOH; hymenium 160u; paraphyses anastomosed; apical cell 3u; spores 8/ascus, average 38 x 20u, muriform, average 18 cells; don’t see any brown spores
lichen photos arranged by genus - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections/7215762439...
my photos arranged by subject - www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections
Justice. Just. Fair. One for all. Or is it? Think of justice, and we imagine suits; a gavel hitting a mahogany desk; or people coming together on the streets. Or maybe like Author Omid Safi wrote, “Justice is love, embodied.” Justice is restorative when empathetic and innovative solutions are brought to the forefront. Most importantly, justice is different. It looks different for each of us, and that sometimes makes it harder to understand. But we’re here for it. Which is why this time, we have not one but two speakers. They will talk to us about what justice means to them and get us thinking about what it might mean to live in a just world. We want to listen, learn, ask, and then continue to ask. Because it ain’t justice if it ain’t for all.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Maiya Michelle believes in the power of stories to evoke compassion and encourage action. Having worked with adults and young people within the UK justice system, she remains mindful of groups that are overrepresented in it. Maiya volunteers at ‘Appropriate Adult’ in South London, safeguarding the rights of young people when they are arrested, in addition to supporting the team at ‘100 Women I Know’ to raise the voices of victims of sexual violence, and hosting monthly Intimate Story Sessions with her creative partner Edith Whitehead.
Fiona Curran started the Koestler Arts programme when she joined the arts in criminal justice charity Koestler Trust, in 2009. Since then she’s led their artistic output across the UK, and its annual awards programme for people in prisons, secure forensic hospital settings, immigration centres, and on probation and community sentences. Around 3,500 people participate annually and their work is considered for exhibitions and events, inviting the public to think about the creativity of people in secure settings.
Photos from: Francis Augusto www.francisaugusto.co.uk