View allAll Photos Tagged dislocation

A detail of Emma Johnson's (emmaporium) work "Dislocation Series: British Isles". Please see the set description for more details.

The stories about waiting at the hospital and trying to get a copy of the x-ray are much better than the story about the injury itself.

 

It was definitely interesting to have the student health center doctor bring the interns around to see the relocated toe. Apparently it's a rare injury to see!

stills from the first embodied desert gesture

 

in the salt mines at bristol dry lake, near 29 palms

Fracture/Dislocation. Fell on outstretched arms onto ice at low speed whilst snowboarding. The initial injury didn't hurt due to all the adrenaline but the 20 minute walk down the mountain to the medical centre at Arc 1800, in deep snow, pretty much finished me off. The fracture isn't visible in this image. The next image is a post-relocation exam, after a nice dose of Midazolam, and shows the fracture to the glenoid more clearly. This was the first time I had dislocated my shoulder. It happened again a week later as I reached out to grap something. The second time was a lot more painful.

Shortly after I took this shot, I dislocated my right shoulder. Yup. Went off a jump and landed on my shoulder dislocating it. Had to immediately go to the Clinic and the good doctors popped it back in. Talk about pain! Well, I feel good now and I honestly believe I'll be back shooting, probably not snowboarding, sooner than later.

Photography is dangerous :)

See all the ""Dislocation"" media

 

Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial Share Alike 2.5 Music Video.I should get an award for still using the same Garageband 1 loops since it came out. The arm's alright.This video was originally shared on blip.tv by Francisco Daum with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license.

September 13th to October 19th, 2013

Opening reception September 13th @ 8 PM with artists’ talks that evening.

   

Jordan Schwab, originally from Prince George, BC, holds a BFA from Thompson Rivers University (2005), and received his MFA from the University of Saskatchewan (2009). His work has been exhibited in group and solo shows across the country, and through a previous career in commercial and industrial construction, his interests in constructed environments have invariably melded with real life experience . He currently lives and works in Saskatoon, SK as an instructor, program coordinator, gallery preparer, independent contractor and artist.

 

The exhibit built to spec portrays different understandings of scale. Scale is the perceived size relationship of one object to another, but it also can represent levels of accomplishment. The work questions how we relate to the greater world around us, but also attempts to represent what can be achieved when someone pushes themselves, or a group, to think big and work together.

   

Melanie Colosimo is an interdisciplinary artist based out of Halifax, NS. Her work employs drawings, miniatures & stop-motion video to negotiate the space around construction & creation and themes of nostalgia & dislocation. She received a BFA from Mount Allison University in Sackville, NB and an MFA from the University of Windsor, in Windsor, ON. Her work has been exhibited and screened in galleries and festivals across Canada such as the Art Gallery of Windsor, the Atlantic Film Festival, Struts Gallery and most recently Eastern Edge Gallery. Currently she is the Exhibitions Coordinator at the Anna Leonowens Gallery, NSCAD University.

 

Through a series of drawings and miniatures that reference scaffolding, Structure addresses the way in which we value or undervalue space, structures and processes. Colosimo will be using the concept of scaffolding to explore the intersections between construction and home.

 

Active Assignment Weekly: 11th - 18th Oct: b craw

To emulate the work of this photographer.

Assignment set by nophoto4jojo

  

I got inspiration from this set of B Craw's pictures.

www.flickr.com/photos/bcraw/sets/72157622526956722/with/4...

 

As many of you already know, I find my local bus station a ripe place for people and structural pictures.

When I am directly behind 'my' shelter, it often jars with me the way the shelter is not parallel to the pavement (sidewalk) around it. This is emphasised by the double yellow lines on the road. The assymmetry does make me grind my teeth!

exif

 

The commemorate exhibition of the British surrender to the Imperial Japanese Army in Singapore exhibit at the National Museum of Singapore.

According to the old kids’s tune, the thigh bone is linked to the hip bone. Nevertheless, genes and terrible occasions often conspire to make that connection rather rare. Hip dislocation happens when your thigh bone or thigh slips out of your hip bone socket or acetabulum.

Deal with a hip...

 

www.fitnessgo.club/hip-dislocation-symptoms/

James Cauty – The Aftermath Dislocation Principle Part V

 

Fonteijne, Vlissingen 2014

 

“The Aftermath Dislocation Principle Part V” van James Cauty ziet eruit als een verwoest, verlaten, vernietigd en verbrand landschap. In de overblijfselen zijn 5.000 politiemannen achtergebleven. Iedereen is opgepakt en weggevoerd, waarschijnlijk niet zonder slag of stoot. De politie heeft niemand meer om in de gaten te houden, op te pakken of te controleren. De ultieme politiestaat?

  

James Cauty's roguish and voluble approach has earned him a cult following for work that remains radical, responsive and darkly comical. He produces work that draws on and responds to contemporary culture, very often sampling it and sending/selling it back as recoded realities. In billboard and stamp projects Mickey Mouse was sent to Iraq in 'Operation Magic Kingdom' whilst Julie Andrews danced across vast rubbish heaps, crushed cars were sold to second hand car dealers as art and riots have been rendered as tiny models in jam jars.

 

His most recent work has been focussed on the making of 1:87 riotous scale models as small world re-enactments, often displayed in upturned jam jars as A Riot in A Jam Jar. His new exhibition The Aftermath Dislocation Principle continues this preoccupation with small world re-enactments as a vast 1:87 scale-model landscape (equivalent to 1 sq mile in miniature) which has been desolated, deserted, destroyed, burnt and is devoid of life apart from 5000 or so model police that attend this apocalyptic aftermath; a kind of bizarre twisted model village experience, where Cauty continues his fascination with subversion, consumerism and entertainment through creative exploration and dark humour.

Maz at the back before he mashed and rearranged his fingers

The availability of a simple, non-destructive technique to rapidly detect and identify defects in semiconductors would represent a real step forward for the development of new devices such as UV LEDs, high power green laser diodes, high power transistors and potentially, semiconductor-based ferromagnets. Such devices have applications as diverse as air and water purification, lighting, data processing, data storage and energy conservation and distribution. Recently we have developed a method which allows the unambiguous identification of the most common defects in semiconductors (e.g., GaN, ZnO and SiC), namely threading dislocations. This new method reduces the time required to obtain quantitative and statistically significant information on dislocations compared to presently available techniques. The presented image is a scanning electron microscope - electron channeling contrast image acquired from a GaN thin film showing individual dislocations and atomic steps. An artistic impression of the channeling electrons has been generated by combining displacement mapping, three dimensional rendering and two dimensional compositing techniques.

Image: © 2013 Naresh Kumar Gunasekar. Paul Edwards, Benjamin Hourahine and Carol Trager-Cowan

Whilst enjoying a relaxing Sunday morning I received a phone call to tell me that Kieran was being taken to hospital in an ambulance as he'd dislocated his shoulder playing football. When I arrived in A&E the lovely paramedic came and found me and said that she thinks he might need me. He was in absolute agony and a bad cannula meant the morphine they'd given wasn't working. He was the sedated with propofol and fentanyl whilst the doctors reduced his shoulder. He was so sleepy afterwards but managed so say 'this would be a great 365 picture'. The paramedics and doctors and nurses in A&E were brilliant, thank you for fixing my broken boy!!!

The space between the base of the 2nd metatarsal and the 1st metatarsal/cuneiform (at the white arrow) is seen in a lisfrancs injury.

this is driving me up the wall. might need surgury. the actual cast will go from my armpit to my fingers. six weeks min eitherway ...

This is the ulnar counterpart of the Monteggia - the Galeazzi fracture-dislocation: fracture of the distal radius, dislocation of the ulnar head from the wrist or distal radio-ulnar joint.

 

WHXR Registrar Talks 2 - MSK A 080211.016-001

So, do you think we will win? Nice weather! Glad the fog cleared!

DISLOCATION SERIES

 

Maps

 

Deconstructed to give a distorted picture, misleading information, heighten confusion, and give a false sense of security.

To All My Friends:

 

I'm sorry that I haven't been around at all for a while. First I hurt my pointer finger on my right hand and couldn't use it. Then last Wednesday I dislocated my big toe. Unless I stay pretty doped up on codeine the pain is almost unbearable. I have surgery next Wednesday to insert a pin and put the bones back into alignment.

1 2 ••• 5 6 8 10 11 ••• 79 80