View allAll Photos Tagged aftermath...
Shoot done in a shower depicting the aftermath of a violent encounter. (The only thing hurt making these images was the purple lipstick used to create the bruises.)
Bare branches in a sheath of ice, after Oregon's New Years ice storm of 2004.
Handheld shot with my old Olympus C-5050. It was so gorgous out that day, I wish I'd had an easier camera to work with. There certainly was a lot to shoot!
Smoke drifts across the Princes Freeway, trees are devastated, road signs melted......the results of fools lighting fires on a hot windy day. Morwell was lucky.
Over 250,000 homes in the Greater Toronto Area without electricity.
Markham, Canada ~ December 22, 2013.
Along Reems Creek in Weaverville, NC which had amazing torrents of water rip away trees, small buildings, and this one spot with the Sycamores held fast and caused the debris to pile up as you see.
I've forgotten over the years that I had these photos. Taken with my first digital camera roughly around November 2001 (possibly over Thanksgiving weekend).
At the time I was living in Norfolk, VA and I came up with my girlfriend at the time to visit with her grandparents. Her grandfather worked at the Pentagon and asked if we wanted to go see...
Soldiers of The Honourable Artillery Company (HAC, the City of London’s Reserve Army Regiment) preparing three L118 Ceremonial Light Guns for departure shortly after firing a 62 Gun Salute to mark the 92nd birthday of HM Queen Elizabeth II, Tower of London, London, England, United Kingdom.
The guns used to fire the 62-gun salute, across the Thames, at ten second intervals are similar to those used operationally in recent years in Afghanistan.
A Royal Salute normally comprises 21 guns or 41 if fired from a Royal Park or residence. Uniquely, at the Tower of London (regarded as a royal residence) a total of 62 rounds are fired as this also includes an additional 21 guns for the citizens of the City of London to show their loyalty to the Monarch.
The HAC dates its origins to 1537 making it the oldest regiment in the British Army. It took over the role of firing Gun Salutes from the Tower of London in 1924 when the regular detachment stationed there was disbanded.
© 2018 Michael Preston
Michael Preston asserts his moral right to be identified as the author of this work and the right to a credit in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
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A Unified Command was established when Firefighters responded to a HazMat incident with an overturned semi on the southbound 405 Freeway. The tractor was carrying approximately 8600 gallons of butane. The container was righted without incident. © Photos by Mike Meadows
Art installation of mixed media by Nakhon Si Thammarat (Thailand) exhibit at the Singapore Art Museum during the Singapore Biennale 2016.
Aftermath at the Kiwanis pool - Flood of May, 1974.
This major flood caused nearly $3 million in damages in Brantford, Cambridge, Kitchener, Paris and other communities.
Yayoi Kusama "Infinity Mirrors" exhibit, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC
Yayoi Kusama
Infinity Mirrored Room—Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity
2009
Wood, mirror, plastic, acrylic, LEDs, and aluminum
Collection of the artist
"In Infinity Mirrored Room—Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity, golden lanterns flicker, creating a shimmering pattern of light that contrasts with the seemingly endless void of the mirrored black space. For Kusama, obliteration is a reflection on the experience of death and the potential of the afterlife. The imagery in this work recalls the Japanese tradition of toro nagashi, a ceremony in which paper lanterns known as chochin float down a river to guide ancestral spirits back to their resting places on the final night of the summer obon festivals. The ceremony often commemorates the victims of the atomic bombs. Mesmerizing and intimate, Kusama’s poetic installation underscores the impermanence of life and the certitude of death."