View allAll Photos Tagged beyondlimits
"Marianna" by Juame Plensa, part of the 2013 Sotherbys "Beyond Limits" exhibition at Chatsworth House in the Peak District.
Each year Chatsworth hosts a "Beyond Limits" exhibition for Sotherbys, a showcase of modern sculpture that Sotherbys is auctioning off - its always full of wonderful sculpture in beautiful surroundings.
This is my fave this year - I really like Juame Plensa's work, we live a very short drive from the Yorkshire Sculpture Park that had a major exhibition of his a couple of years ago and it was fantastic. What you can't quite tell from this shot is how distorted the head is - it only looks correct from the right angle - its actually really narrow and elongated, with the face sculpted mostly our of one size (i'll post some other angles).
Photo by Deidre Davidson
Creativity Takes Courage: Art In The Classroom | Julie Tamashiro | TEDxRedondoBeach
Taken with the Lomo LC-W camera in that I previously used week 189 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
www.flickr.com/photos/tony_kemplen/collections/72157623113584240
The LC-W (wide) has a 17mm lens, and can take half frame, square or full frame images depending on which of three film plane masks is installed.
This film was shot using the half-frame mask. Kodak Gold ISO200 film developed in the Tetenal C41 kit.
Photo by Deidre Davidson
Creativity Takes Courage: Art In The Classroom | Julie Tamashiro | TEDxRedondoBeach
A couple of photos from this years' Sotherbys' "Beyond Limits" sculpture exhibition/auction at Chatsworth House
Sculpture: La Montagne, premier état, 1936–37 by Aristide Maillol.
Photos of scultpures currently on display at Chatsworth House as part of the Sotherbys' Beyond Limits sculpture exhibition/auction.
We go every year - some great large-scale sculpture on display. It runs until late October - check the chatsworth website for details.
Photo by Deidre Davidson
Creativity Takes Courage: Art In The Classroom | Julie Tamashiro | TEDxRedondoBeach
Artworks around the Gardens of Chatsworth House as part of the Sothebys Beyondlimits selling exhibition.
Cast iron sculpture. Beyond Limits: The Landscape of British Sculpture 1950-2015 - Chatsworth House
© 2015 Tony Worrall
Chatsworth House
Sotheby's Beyond Limits Sculpture Exhibition in The Garden
One of the leading events in the artistic calendar.
Spiral of The Galaxy
by Marc Quinn
www.chatsworth.org/whats-on/events/beyond-limits-sculptur...
Chatsworth House
Sotheby's Beyond Limits Sculpture Exhibition in The Garden
One of the leading events in the artistic calendar.
Untitled
by Bosco Sodi
www.chatsworth.org/whats-on/events/beyond-limits-sculptur...
Beyond Limits sculpture exhibition in the garden of Chatsworth House
beyondlimits.sothebys.com/sculpture.html?num=19&play=1
© 2014 Tony Worrall
Taken with a Kodak No.2 Brownie camera in week 250 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
www.flickr.com/photos/tony_kemplen/collections/72157623113584240
The No.2 Brownie was introduced in 1903, and continued in production until 1931, the design evolved over the years, though it remained recognisably the same camera. This particular iteration was made between 1920 and 1924, making this camera at least 90 years old.
Rollei RPX 400 B&W film, developed in Ilfosol 3.
The Canal Pond at the gardens at Chatsworth.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock
View to Chatsworth House and the Emperors Fountain.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
Photo by Deidre Davidson
Leadership, Innovation and the "Impossible" House | Robert Fortunato | TEDxRedondoBeach
Close up look at the Emperors Fountain in the Canal Pond at Chatsworth Gardens.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
video clip
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
Around the Seahorse Fountain is Tao hua Yuan: A Lost Village Utopia by Xu Bing.
Raumplastik Grosse F. II by Norbert Kricke
Crispina Senior by Beverly Pepper
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock
Slant by Philip King (the red double W).
Cast iron sculpture. Beyond Limits: The Landscape of British Sculpture 1950-2015 - Chatsworth House
© 2015 Tony Worrall
The Canal Pond at the gardens at Chatsworth.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock
View to Chatsworth House and the Emperors Fountain.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
The house is Grade I listed.
A window view from Chatsworth House.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Private garden in front.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
The Seahorse Fountain (Grade II listed)
The Seahorse Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/59
The Seahorse Fountain
GV II
Fountain. c1690 by Cibber. Stone. Set in the middle of a
circular pond. A central sculpture surrounded by five jets of
water, within a square with sculptures of four seahorses at the
corners. The Gardens and Park are included on the Gardens
Register at Grade I.
Listing NGR: SK2602069968
Around the Seahorse Fountain is Tao hua Yuan: A Lost Village Utopia by Xu Bing.
Beyond Limits sculptures in view near the Canal Pond:
Maro by Christopher Le Brun
Slant by Philip King (the red double W).
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock.
Part of Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
The Canal Pond at the gardens at Chatsworth.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
To the left:
Maro by Christopher Le Brun
Slant by Philip King (the red double W).
View to Chatsworth House and the Emperors Fountain.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
Chatsworth House
Sotheby's Beyond Limits Sculpture Exhibition in The Garden
One of the leading events in the artistic calendar.
Spiral of The Galaxy
by Marc Quinn
www.chatsworth.org/whats-on/events/beyond-limits-sculptur...
A window view from Chatsworth House.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Private garden in front.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
The Seahorse Fountain (Grade II listed)
The Seahorse Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/59
The Seahorse Fountain
GV II
Fountain. c1690 by Cibber. Stone. Set in the middle of a
circular pond. A central sculpture surrounded by five jets of
water, within a square with sculptures of four seahorses at the
corners. The Gardens and Park are included on the Gardens
Register at Grade I.
Listing NGR: SK2602069968
Around the Seahorse Fountain is Tao hua Yuan: A Lost Village Utopia by Xu Bing.
Beyond Limits sculptures in view near the Canal Pond:
Maro by Christopher Le Brun
Slant by Philip King (the red double W).
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock.
Raumplastik Grosse F. II by Norbert Kricke
Part of Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
The Canal Pond at the gardens at Chatsworth.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Exhibition runs from 8th September to 26th October 2014.
View to Chatsworth House and the Emperors Fountain.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
The house is Grade I listed.
Julian Schnabel. American Sculpture, Beyond Limits. Chatsworth House Gardens, Bakewell, Derbyshire, UK.
Sculpture by Lynn Chadwick (bronze), part of the 2011 'Beyond Limits' exhibition at Chatsworth.
Processed using CameraBag.
This sculpture is part of the 'Beyond Limits' - Sotheby's at Chatsworth exhibition and was in the sculpture gallery. Life size and totally complete - even down to the cellulite on her hips - I thought it seriously creepy
A window view from Chatsworth House.
Sculptures for Beyond Limits.
Emperor Fountain and Canal Pond.
The emperor fountain can reach a height of 90 metres. Powered by pressure of the water dropping 122 metres, through a 40 centimetre iron pipe, from a man-made lake.
The 1st Duke of Devonshire's Canal Pond already held the highest fountain in the country (28 metres) when Paxton began to engineer the Emperor Fountain for the 6th Duke in 1843. Named in honour of Tsar Nicholas I (a friend of the 6th Duke, but he never visited Chatsworth).
The Emperor Fountain is Grade II listed.
The Emperor Fountain, Chatsworth
PARISH OF CHATSWORTH CHATSWORTH GARDENS
SK 2669
6/58
The Emperor Fountain
GV II
Fountain and pair of sculptures. 1843-4 by Paxton and Holmes,
for the Sixth Duke of Devonshire. Sandstone and ashlar. The
fountain is situated at the north end of the Canal Pond dug in
1703. The metal jet is surrounded by irregularly placed
boulders. To the north are two sandstone sculptures of
reclining figures. The fountain can throw a jet to a height of
290 feet, and was built to honour the projected visit to
Chatsworth of Tzar Nicholas of Russia. The Gardens and Park are
included on the Gardens Register at Grade I. Sources:
G F Chadwick , The Works of Joseph Paxton, Architectural Press
1961.
Listing NGR: SK2602269842
This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.
Source: English Heritage
Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.
Beyond Limits sculptures in view near the Canal Pond:
Slant by Philip King (the red double W).
Hoop-La by Alice Aycock.
To the front:
Raumplastik Grosse F. II by Norbert Kricke
Chatsworth House
Chatsworth is home to the 12th Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, and has been passed down through 16 generations of the Cavendish family.
Sotheby's Beyond Limits Sculpture Exhibition in The Garden
One of the leading events in the artistic calendar.
12) Chaos Meteoro
by Jedd Novatt
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedd_Novatt
www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/2016/beyond-limits-l16010.html
www.chatsworth.org/whats-on/events/beyond-limits-sculptur...
Taken with the Lomo LC-W camera in that I previously used week 189 of my 52 film cameras in 52 weeks project:
www.flickr.com/photos/tony_kemplen/collections/72157623113584240
The LC-W (wide) has a 17mm lens, and can take half frame, square or full frame images depending on which of three film plane masks is installed.
This film was shot using the half-frame mask. Kodak Gold ISO200 film developed in the Tetenal C41 kit.