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“At sea there is no advocacy. We are free from that most noisome form of falsehood, which corrupts the very inward of the soul. Truth is one of the great gifts of the sea. You cannot persuade yourself nor listen to the persuasion of another that the wind is not blowing when it is, or that a cabin with half a foot of water in it is dry, or that a dragging anchor holds. Everywhere the sea is a teacher of truth. I am not sure that the best thing I find in sailing is not this salt of reality.”

— Hilaire Belloc, 1925

 

HEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01

Thank You fer da 3.7 million views

 

Gracias por las visitas y comentarios

Thanks for the visits and comments

Serie, Dia de Bueyes...- Series, Day of Oxen.... N 7

 

Gracias por las visitas, amables comentarios e invitaciones

Thank you for the visits, kind comments and invitations

7.5” x 9.5” Watercolor, Marker, Paint Pen

wit humble gratitude Thank You fer da 4.6 million views

For me, photography is all about light - how it dances off surfaces, how it changes mood with color, and how it captures my eye.

An homage to Mark Rothko, one of my favorite painters. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Rothko

micro details in nature, played with in Photoshop

detail from an abstract painted recently, enhanced by editor

Brutalism • Reimagined

 

Brutalist architecture is one of the most controversial styles of architecture to exist. It’s what people imagine when they think about what a prison looks like, with its cold and imposing exterior. Brutalism is also what people typically picture when they think of government buildings or schools built in the 1950s-1960s.

 

Brutalist style is known for its heavy, imposing appearance. If there’s one word that can sum up the entirety of brutalism, it’s the word “concrete.” The style came as a response to the sleek and polished Moderne style popular during the early 20th century.

 

(www.immerse.education/university/what-is-brutalist-archit...)

an expressionist abstract based on nothing in particular

Poking their way up from winter, prickly pear cacti blush purple and yellow as they plump their aereoles for spring's pow of pink.

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