View allAll Photos Tagged arthouse
The building was constructed in 1884 by Harwood & Son as a dangerous-goods store, for the storage of kerosene. At the time, kerosene was used extensively for street lighting and heating. It is a single-storey limestone building with a hipped iron roof. In 1919 it was used by the state government's Harbour and Light Department as a warehouse and later as a shipwright's shed.
In 1972, the building was saved from demolition and restored as a space for the creative arts.
The site and building were vested in the City of Fremantle in 1982 and restored as part of the Commonwealth-funded Arthur Head Bicentennial Project in 1986-87.
Tues. the 15th Morning walkabout to Tanner Springs.
Later in the day edit images on Affinity Photo on my iPad.
And uploaded directly from there. But no adding description or tags it seems.
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When I was exploring the neighborhood, I found this shed near the place where I stayed. I think, this house, made from wood and flattened oil barrels is a real piece of art. Unfortunately the shed didn't get good light the whole day long, so I had to try with back light. You can see the whole series as a slideshow in my 'Art House' set.
Comments welcome!
" For his Arthouse commission, Feher has activated and transformed a typically overlooked architectural space within the building—the void between the ceiling and steel support beams—through a carefully considered deployment of everyday objects. Feher is well-known for his uncanny ability to reveal the innate beauty in mundane objects and here, via simple repetition and ingenious display, he magically recasts them as a poetic constellation that twinkles from above, a mysterious and captivating field suggestive of the night sky and inspiring wonder, awe, and delight." ~ from the source ~
A home of the arts, apparently? No idea what the building was, but the lyre symbol and theatrical mask seemed to refer to performing arts. The neo-art-deco style worked better than in some other new developments in the city.
Fri. the 18th and not many clicks as wrenched this old frame and back killing me.
So back to my cave to research the Internet for a replacement Android Body!:-)
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**View In Black**
“Let there be many windows to your soul, that all the glory of the world may beautify it.”
~ Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Still life of bountiful English roses. Discovered in ‘Quince’ florists, Brighton. Quince used to stand outside Libertys in London – I remember I once photographed and worked on a series of paintings 13 years ago based on their phenomenal colour and form flower displays. To find them again was a joy. Here there are Vuvuzela and Amnesia roses. The ground is poured wax and oil carved into – I wanted to have the textures and feelings of the fleshy petals and spiky stems. Not to paint with perfect representation but that feeling of fun and life.
50 x 37.5 cm Oil, wax and mixed media on plywood.
Find this work in exhibition until November 20th 2013 at Ffin y Parc Gallery
Can't resist colorful flowers.
Another page in the ArtHouse Sketchbook Project 2012
Neocolor II, a flourish of acrylic, and finished off with gelly roll pens.
The Arena Filmtheater is a snug little cinema in the trendy borough of Glockenbachviertel, thus close to various bars and cafés. Being situated at trendy Glockenbach, the program of the cinema is often different from others, but always interesting and fresh. The two owners of the Arena Filmtheater, Christian Pfeil and Markus Eisele (left on the photo), have been awarded a special Award for the diversity and quality of the program by the City of Munich multiple times.
English language films are always shown in the original version with German subtitles. The cinema is fully accessible for wheelchairs. The cinema does not show any advertising, only a few trailers to films coming soon, so it’s in your best interest to get there on time.
The cinema exists at the same spot since 1912 and has two halls, the smaller one only seats 38 people.
JFBbennett Poetry
The Conquest of My Terror Within
From traditional roots to digital dreams
There is repression over and over again
I try to find a word for it
A lifetime of SOS
My bug eye crawls through the night searching for venues and options
And yes, there is a hole in the wall
But I am too weak to stand and too weak to kneel
So I scratch and scrape and scurry from the light
To dwell in fantasy
Forever on alert to my terror within.
Poetry Genre: nihilist, dark ambient, industrial, avant-garde.
www.jjfbbennett.com/2025/08/the-conquest-of-my-terror-wit...
'80s arthouse damage drawn for the Video Vulture. His column concerns a 1989 "sequel" to the famous 1919 German-expressionist horror classic, "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari". I'd not seen this flick before, but it looks like a funnier 80's softcore shot-on-video (like a porno!) take on the kinda thing Nick Zedd was doing with stuff like "Geek Maggot Bingo" from earlier in the decade... and with sexier ladies.
Read all about it here: www.ffwdweekly.com/article/screen/video-vulture/adventure...
The Palas is Galway's new "world class" arthouse cinema and it opened to the public early this year. It has been described as being similar to the Lighthouse in Smithfield, Dublin. It was built in the garden of an 1820s merchant house to a design by Tom de Paor.
It has been reported that the complex the State €8.4 million in public funding, which is €2.2m more than the initial expected outlay of €6.3m.