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Bicycle Number 52 in the "100 Bicycles Project 2"
To learn more about this project see the 100bicycles group.
Shot at Gallery "Lenbachhaus" in Munich with the Sony A 7 Mark 2 and the Leitz / Leica SUMMILUX 1.4/75 at F=1.4.
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Nikon D200 (2005)
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San Juan, Puerto Rico
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Lightroom 3
The ordinary bicycle 1870-1880 was developed at a time when cycling was becoming popular, both as a leisure activity and as a sport. It was the first machine to be called a 'bicycle'.
York Castle Museum
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Zelden zo'n versierde fiets gezien. Gewoon bij een strandopgang van de Zandmotor.
All images are copyrighted by Pieter Musterd. If you want to use any of my photographs, contact me. It is not allowed to download them or use them on any website, blog etc. without my explicit permission.
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Covered with snow, a blue bicycle is leaning on a red shed. Regina Photo club field trip, NW of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. 13 November 2021
When the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was growing up, a Forever Bicycle was a luxury to him. One bike symbolised the freedom to move. The brand itself meant status, the best of the best.
Imagine what 10 Forever bicycles might have meant to a young Ai - or 1000. Then imagine more than 1500 of them piled nine metres high in a dizzying structure you can walk around and peer through, all those identical and mass-produced frames and wheels hanging static in the air instead of going forward.
"It creates this sort of perspectival rush," National Gallery of Victoria senior curator of international art Max Delany said of Ai's Forever Bicycles series of installations that have appeared in galleries, festivals and art fairs across the globe. "It's a work which sort of cascades through space and has this exuberant, intense, sensory effect... but it also reflects the relationship between the individual and the collective."
Included in the seasonal light trail at Fulham Palace, London. One of the less ostentatious displays on the trail around the grounds but finding one without a crowd in the way or not swarming with kids was proving problematical. Not cheap either so we'll probably be avoiding this sort of attraction in future years.