View allAll Photos Tagged figurative
Those attempts to refute a particular type of local expansion known as the ALIVE model: has created distress.
ATC done for IllustratedATCs.com. Done in Oils on bristol board. I was requested to do a sexy, nude, winged man.
From yesterday evening at the cabin. This storm cell blew in during sunset. These prairie storms can be impressive, but this one left us with only a few drops of rain. We cleaned up the yard, and closed up the windows. Then I hung out on the dock to watch and take photos.
Storms and skies like this make me realize just how small we actually are.
Also part of my figurative language set. Both of them go with the same idiom in my mind. A term we use when feeling a little ill. I'll retitle the pictures in a couple of days with the idiom, but feel free to guess in the mean time.
“We are all hungry and thirsty for concrete images.
Abstract art will have been good for one thing:
to restore its exact virginity to figurative art.”
― Salvador Dalí
text. by Ellenvd thanks
detail of the fence in the courtyard at the Dalí Museum in Figueras, Spain
happy fence friday and have a great weekend everyone!
please enjoy this with music at
www.myartspace.com/viewer/gallery/?subscriberid=g06drtu1p...
thank you : )
Figuratively of course, and with apologies to Ernest Hemingway, but certainly symbolically for LTV Steel Mining Company. The date July 19, 2001 marked the final ore train run from Knox (Hoyt Lakes) to Taconite Harbor. The train consisted of taconite pellet chips and fines reclaimed from the pellet piles and was powered by five washed veteran F9s. Doug Buell (with hard hat) talks to crew members installing a large American flag to the front of 4211 - a smaller flag on earlier trips was deemed too small for such an occasion. Note the small yellow flags on the other F9s and illuminated class lights. Class is an appropriate description for this operation and the employees who made it special.
Figurative ostrakon depicting Ramesses III in the act of subduing an enemy - (1190-1076 B.C.E. - New Kingdom - 20th dynasty) - painted limestone 32.5 x 24.5 x 5 cm - Egyptian Museum, Turin