View allAll Photos Tagged dynamo
Natalia Goncharova (June to September 2019)
Goncharova found acclaim early in her career. Aged just 32 she established herself as the leader of the Russian avant-garde with a major exhibition in Moscow in 1913. She then moved to France where she designed costumes and backdrops for Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes. She lived in Paris for the rest of her life, becoming a key figure in the city’s cutting-edge art scene.
Goncharova’s artistic output was immense, wide-ranging and at times controversial. She paraded the streets of Moscow displaying futurist body art and created monumental religious paintings. She took part in avant-garde cinema, experimented with book designs and designed for fashion houses in Moscow and Paris.
[Tate Modern]
Salsa La Raza steel frame converted with 650B wheels. Long reach Dia Compe centrepull brakes with a replacement bolt similar to the Nitto canti rack bolts to allow the light to be mounted on it.
Massive Electromagnets to Charge the Generator
These large coils (perhaps a foot in diameter and 2½ feet tall) created the magnetic field in which the armature (bottom, center) rotated. When starting the dynamo, one would need to attach a battery to the Field Coils to create the initial magnetic field. Once the dynamo was running, the commutator kept the coils charged.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA
Natalia Goncharova (June to September 2019)
Goncharova found acclaim early in her career. Aged just 32 she established herself as the leader of the Russian avant-garde with a major exhibition in Moscow in 1913. She then moved to France where she designed costumes and backdrops for Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes. She lived in Paris for the rest of her life, becoming a key figure in the city’s cutting-edge art scene.
Goncharova’s artistic output was immense, wide-ranging and at times controversial. She paraded the streets of Moscow displaying futurist body art and created monumental religious paintings. She took part in avant-garde cinema, experimented with book designs and designed for fashion houses in Moscow and Paris.
[Tate Modern]
Steven Frayne (born 17 December 1982), commonly known by his stage name "Dynamo", is an English magician,best known for his show Dynamo: Magician Impossible. Dynamo was born in Bradford, England.
Photo by : Walterlan Papetti
Natalia Goncharova (June to September 2019)
Goncharova found acclaim early in her career. Aged just 32 she established herself as the leader of the Russian avant-garde with a major exhibition in Moscow in 1913. She then moved to France where she designed costumes and backdrops for Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballet Russes. She lived in Paris for the rest of her life, becoming a key figure in the city’s cutting-edge art scene.
Goncharova’s artistic output was immense, wide-ranging and at times controversial. She paraded the streets of Moscow displaying futurist body art and created monumental religious paintings. She took part in avant-garde cinema, experimented with book designs and designed for fashion houses in Moscow and Paris.
[Tate Modern]
An exhibition at the Grand Palais in Paris. I am normally not a big fan of modern art but this exhibit was very interesting and even fascinating.
Stephen Antonakos: Hanging Neon, 1962.
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