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Art gallery window and reflections with John D Green's portrait of the iconic Julie Christie.

Ludovico Mazzolino (Ferrara, c. 1480 - Ferrara, 1528) - Triptych with Madonna and Child and Saints Anthony the Hermit and Magdalene (1509) - Gemäldegalerie, Berlin

 

Beach Landscape Wall Art,Beach Decor Oil Painting,Large Landscape Canvas Art,Abstract Wall Art

 

Overview

Handmade item

Subject: Beach & tropical

Framing: Unframed

Height: 30 Inches

Width: 40 Inches

Materials: Canvas, Oil Painting, Hand Painting

 

$172.80+(On Sale)

www.etsy.com/listing/641379220/original-abstract-seaside-...

Made with scraps of Art Gallery Pure Element solids, sewn at 45 degree angles into strips. The colored pieces range from 1/4" finished to 1.5" finished width. Added Linen White Pure Elements as the background. Bound in Cherry Lipstick.

 

Pieced and Quilted with Aurifil 2021.

 

41"x51"

This is a portrait of Lady Diana Bridgeman which I first assumed must be a self=portrait, but was painted by Harold Speed (1872-1957).. He first trained as an architect before he became a portrait painter. Lady Diana Bridgeman was an artist herself (obviously) and daughter of the Earl of Bradford. In this pose she certainly looks as though she could be painting Harold Speed at the same time – perhaps she was.

David Walsh has one of the largest private collections of art in the Southern Hemisphere. What makes him unique is that he is so willing to share it (and his eclectic tastes) with the world. Here is a little taste of what you'll see at MONA.

 

1. "Fat Car" by Erwin Wurm (2006). This is a Ferrari in need of a diet.

 

2. "Library". This is the original colour version of my most viewed photo ever. The monochrome version was my first Explore and has received 20,000 views (in the days when Explores attracted that kind of number and when Flickr still acknowledged me as a person).

 

3. "Cyborgs". This is my tenuous link of two separate works by contemporary artists. They are both very clever - the robot made of old TV sets, and an 'anatomical' diagram of a wired creation.

 

4. "Extractor". MONA might be the only art gallery in the world that has produced its own board game: Extractor. mona.net.au/stuff-to-do/simon-denny

 

This image is of one of Simon Denny's cardboard creations in "Mine". The exhibition and board game are designed to raise awareness about mining and the environment. Denny describes the aim of "Extractor" as "playing your friends in a competitive scramble for world data domination." Sounds very very contemporary in this world of Global Corporate dominance.

 

"Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin."- Mother Teresa

 

ART SHOP: etsy.me/2eQ7YJR

Mrs. Arthur Hammersley (Violet Mary Williams-Freeman 1877-1962),

painted in 1907 by Philip Wilson Steer (1860-1942), oil on canvas 214.0 x 153.7cm. The painting is called 'Violet Hammersley'.

Over 15,000 DeGrazia originals are housed at the Gallery In The Sun, including oils, watercolors, sketches, serigraphs, lithographs, sculptures, ceramics and jewelry. We are open daily from 10:00-4:00.

 

Honor the sacred.

Honor the Earth, our Mother.

Honor the Elders.

Honor all with whom we

share the Earth:-

Four-leggeds, two-leggeds,

winged ones,

Swimmers, crawlers,

plant and rock people.

Walk in balance and beauty.

 

Native American Elder

In the gallery: The top floor of the Bowes museum has three large rooms dedicated to art. This part of the gallery displays paintings and other artworks with a religious theme.

At Birmingham art gallery - and in the absence of any information on it, I don't know who created it, or even what to call it...

Well I do love spending time in Galleries ...even the less famous ones !

The Art gallery was built in 1883-5 in an Italianate style by Julius Chatwin of Birmingham. It was built for the Wolverhampton Exhibition. Following The Great Exhibition of 1851, Wolverhampton was one of several places that were inspired to hold their own, with exhibitions in 1859 and 1869. A particularly ambitious one was held in 1902, so the art gallery was ready in good time. It’s built of Bath stone, with six red granite columns indicating the main entrance. The decorative sculptural frieze on the facade is composed of sixteen characters representing the Arts and Crafts, including sculpture, painting, architecture, pottery, glassblowing, and wrought-iron work.

The Art gallery was built in 1883-5 in an Italianate style by Julius Chatwin of Birmingham. It was built for the Wolverhampton Exhibition. Following The Great Exhibition of 1851, Wolverhampton was one of several places that were inspired to hold their own, with exhibitions in 1859 and 1869. A particularly ambitious one was held in 1902, so the art gallery was ready in good time. It’s built of Bath stone, with six red granite columns indicating the main entrance. The decorative sculptural frieze on the facade is composed of sixteen characters representing the Arts and Crafts, including sculpture, painting, architecture, pottery, glassblowing, and wrought-iron work. These firgures, representing the arts and crafts, are all female.

Olympus Trip 35 - Fuji Superia X-tra 400

I've had this picture for ages, its one of those ones you keep coming back to, wondering what to do with it…. not quite sure if it works or not. Finally today I decided to do this with it, as it seemed to symbolise tentatively moving into the unknown future, ie 2014.

 

I hope everyone's well today :o)

  

The art gallery was bequeathed a number of Victorian paintings and objects by its founders. Not of great artistic merit, they are very much of their period, though I now wish I'd photographed one rather undistinguished painting that said it was 'Unknown sitter by unknown artist'. This seaside scene is by Charles Wynne Nicholls and dates from the 1860s. It looks more like a penance than a treat, but luckily they've all wrapped up warm. Quite why a young boy would take his drum with him I don't know.

Art Gallery interior

Rare for me not to remember a work ...I share

There are three sections of frieze around the gallery, and this one depicts science and exploration, I think. There was about an hour between the two photographs, while we visited St Peter's church nearby, during which time the pigeons had descended in force.

Sculpture: Maman by Louise Bourgeois

Yes, its me... me...me...me...meeeeee! We had fun in this installation in an art gallery in Auckland, NZ. My brother said "give me your camera, it looks good with you peering in the door". It was a cube of mirrors, and very scary to step out into the middle!!!

This Photograph was Made Pic.of the Day In The Evening Times Glasgow 23-1-2017

Copyright by Zooman2009

All rights reserved

Anyone wishing to use this Photograph

Please contact kylecamera@yahoo.co.uk

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