View allAll Photos Tagged clockwork
part of a new project ; insignificant.
All photos taken on iPhone 6
Macro x10
© Copyright SASnashall 2015. All Rights Reserved.
The last day of World Buskers Festival in Hagley Park Christchurch Sunday Jan 27, 2013.
For More Info: www.eventfinder.co.nz/tour/2012/world-buskers-festival
Up date on my leg...somthing must have shown up on the x-ray I had done as I have to go and have a procedure done on my Fibula on Wenesday.
Hagley Park is the largest urban open space (164.637 hectares) in Christchurch, New Zealand, and was created in 1855 by the Provincial Government. According to the government's decree at that time, Hagley Park is "reserved forever as a public park, and shall be open for the recreation and enjoyment of the public. Hagley Park is characterised by its trees and broad open spaces. Hagley Park was named after the country estate of Lord Lyttelton, who became chairman of the Canterbury Association in March 1850.
For More Info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagley_Park
Single layer stencil, freehand spitting and some minor hand finishing on paper.
Based on an image by Meggie Lall:
Prototipado de Experiencia
Aplicación de Clockwork
Entrega Estudio 5
Dirección de Arte: Natalia Ardila, Juliana Toro, Maria del Pilar Mejía
A Karakuri clockwork samurai archer (the archer boy) doll, on top, appearing to being operated someone in a red suit turning cogs below, but of course in fact really being powered by a mechanism that cannot be seen. This reminds me of me, in three parts.
The postcard from which this was scanned was given to me by an adult (i.e. older than most) female postgraduate student of psychology whom I had upset by asking about her relationship with her father. I suggested that she respected her father more than most of her peers and this relationship with her father was the inspiration for having chosen to give up whatever it was she was doing (she may have been a housewife) and do some research. There was something sort of daddy's girl about her. She started crying and said that yes, she had a very strong relationship with her father. And a few days later she gave me this postcard. I am not sure why. She did not explain.
"I ride tandem with the random" said Peter Gabriel but I am sure that he meant something else.
I have it in a framed above my computer.
After you wind the front dial thing all the way clockwise you start it running with the small lever just visible at top right. The rotation of the big red dot helps you see how close you are to the shutter tripping. The knurled barrels let you adjust how far the plunger extends from the tip at its maximum (if you set it perfectly, the plunger will snap back inside right after tripping the shutter).
I took this on a night time fishing trip to Breezey Point, the picture is actually taken inside Fort Tilden. There are disused military buildings there, the kind you see a lot of on the coast in England and France., except during the cold war these babies housed nuclear missiles.
At night these buildings take on a very spooky 'blair witch' feel. A splash of rothko inspired colour lifts the impending doom to a cheery 'clockwork orange' feel, Beethoven or Otto Skadelig anyone!
Fort Tilden is a former United States Army installation in the New York City borough of Queens. The fort is located on the Rockaway Peninsula, and is just west of Jacob Riis Park. Following a number of temporary military installations on or near the location dating as far back as the War of 1812, and ending with Naval Air Station Rockaway (the departure point of the first transatlantic flight), the fort was established about the time of American involvement in World War I in 1917. It is named after Samuel J. Tilden, one-term governor of New York State and Democratic Presidential candidate in 1876. The fort first served as a coastal artillery installation and ended its service as a Nike Hercules and later Nike Ajax missile site. Fort Tilden remained an Army installation until 1974 when it was decommissioned and turned over to the National Park Service, and made part of the Gateway National Recreation Area. A number of structures are included in an historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including the cement casemates for the largest cannon (16" diameter) ever employed on land up to that time. During the 80's it served as a USAR post, with the 187th Infantry Brigade's 5/5th Field Artillery, a towed-105mm howitzer battalion, stationed there until the 187th was deactivated in 1995.
Industrial-chic restaurant serving updated British classics, situated on Wolstenholme Square, Liverpool. The building being originally built as a merchants house in the 18th century.
Well time for me to put on my Si-Fi anorak
I'm a big fan of all Si-Fi but love our home spun Dr.Who above most. I didn't put these few pics up just because I'm a saddo nut case (ok so I maybe) Part of the reason was how pleased I was with the outcome of them, I'll tell you it was bloody hard trying to control the exposure, keep the focus all without a tripod (or mono pod) All these were taken hand held, so I'm quite chuffed. If your a Dr.Who fan you'll enjoy the exhibition.
The Clockwork Robots were created by a spacecrew from the 51st Century. When the ship was damaged, vital machinery was destroyed so they began to use the crew's body parts instead.
They managed to travel through time windows so they could meet Madame de Pompadoure to use her brain, only when she was at the right age though.
They had strange smiling faces and long black hair for their trips to France but were actually glass humanoid figures operated by space age clockwork technology.
They would break any clocks in the room to disguise their arrival and would slice open the parts of people where the organs could be found by their blades and saws in their hands.
Day 180 of the year with 180 mm focal length. Meyer-Optik Görlitz Tele Megor 1:5.5/180 V at f/5.5. This lens has had a rough life and although the glass is clean and clear it just cannot handle direct light. But is does look pretty in the lens cabinet.
"Some director's cut sequences of Stanley Kubrick's 'A Clockwork Orange' were filmed in the old shopping centre in February 1971".
This plaque was erected by The Aylesbury Society and is mounted on a wall of the Friar's Square shopping centre in Bourbon Street.
College Street, Burlington, Vermont USA • One of a series of four-feet tall, black & white wall murals along the College Street wall of the Roxy Movie Theater. This one is of the character "Alex", played by Malcolm McDowell, in the 1971 movie A Clockwork Orange.
☞ Part of a series of photos documenting my new home & neighborhood, in the heart of Vermont's largest town: Burlington 05401. • After almost a dozen years in rural Cornwall, 40 miles to the south, I have moved to one of the true outposts of optimism, on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain (the 6th Great Lake).
Artist: Paul Insect
Title: Clockwork Britain
Material: spray paint and screen print on canvas
Saatchi Gallery
London, England, UK
BACK TO THE FACTORY: Revisiting Stories and Works From The Warhol Factory
CLOCKWORK REDUCTION LIVE
A Conceptual Project By Seattle School
Sponsored by Easy Street Records and KEXP 90.3 FM
FEATURING:
Virginia Bogert - "Tootie Pie"
Sue Corcoran - "She's a Dog"
Daniel Gildark - "Cthulhu"
Kris Kristensen - "Inheritance"
Christian Palmer - "Forcefields"
Lynn Shelton - "We Go Way Back"
WITH:
Rob Millis - Climax Golden Twins
Jacob Stone - Punch Drunk Productions
Kris Moon - Fourthcity
AND:
Aaron Allshouse, JD Barton, Kyle Bliss, Danielle Gibeson, Dustin Kemp, Abby Klein, Caitlin Ngo, and more ...
Six years before Stanley Kubrick’s A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, Andy Warhol adapted the Anthony Burgess novel for his classic, black and white Factory film, VINYL. In homage to Warhol, Seattle School will transform the entire Northwest Film Forum building for a unique Factory-style recreation of the film. This grand, live happening restages the film in parts, with simultaneous live performance, filming, and screening in our two cinemas and lobby. Northwest filmmakers Lynn Shelton, Daniel Gildark, Virginia Bogart, Sue Corcoran, Christian Palmer and Kris Kristensen will direct models cum actors in cinema 1. Their footage will be projected live in cinema 2, where the audience intervenes in the creative process and composers (including Rob Millis of Climax Golden Twins) perform an improvised score. In the lobby, VJs (including Jacob Stone of Opticlash and Kris Moon from the Decibel Festival) will merge and edit the video and audio feeds from both cinemas in real time, creating a live finished film projected onto a translucent screen. The audience can move around freely between rooms throughout the evening, witnessing the different stages of the event’s unique filmmaking process. The event ends when the final new interpretation of VINYL is complete.
DEC 16, Sunday at 8pm
SPECIAL SCREENING