View allAll Photos Tagged html
Click here for Full-HD quality!
Best shot from 6-9-2013
Click here for more how close can you get
Dutch:
Het was wel even een kwestie van wennen om met de combi Bigma en D600 snel en zeker uit de hand te kunnen fotograferen. Gisteren stond alles mooi op stevig statief en dan komt dit beweeglijke vogeltje opeens steeds dichterbij. Dus snel losgemaakt en wat steun gezocht om hem te kunnen volgen. Dit is een stevige crop, want de boerenzwaluw staat er helemaal op met stuk van omgeving. Kleuren komen nu ook dicht bij de D200 kleuren, die ik nog steeds het mooiste vind als SOOC.
D600+Bigma
tag:
Boerenzwaluw,"Hirundo rustica",Breebaartpolder,Groningen,"Provincie Groningen","Sigma 50-500mm f4.5-6.3 APO DG OS HSM",Bigma,Nikon,"Nikon D600",D600,
DSC_0827P6NCCC,
Boerenzwaluw,"Hirundo rustica",Breebaartpolder,Groningen,"Provincie Groningen","Sigma 50-500mm f4.5-6.3 APO DG OS HSM",Bigma,Nikon,"Nikon D7000,
Rauchschwalbe,"Hirondelle rustique","Boereswel",Rondine,Andorinha-das-chaminés,Landsvale,"Деревенская ласточка", Suitsupääsuke, " Jaskółka dymówka", นกนางแอ่นบ้าน, Ladusvala, " Vlastovka obecná", " Füsti fecske", Σταυλοχελίδονο , " Вясковая ластаўка " , " Dallëndyshe bishtgërshërë ", " Ластівка сільська " , ツバメ , " Šelmeninė kregždė " , የአውሮፓ ወንጭፊት , " Oreneta vulgar " , Låvesvale , " Селска лястовица ", haarapääsky , " Kır kırlangıcı " , " Europese swael " , Landsvala , " Kmečka lastovka " , " سنونو المخازن سنونو " , " Golondrina Común ", " 家燕 "
Деревянные окна для дачи sotdel.ru/dereviannye-okna.html Деревянные #окна #sotdel из сосны самое выгодное решение для загородных домов. Евроокна из сосны экологичны и безопасны, древесина сосны очень прочная, дополнительные пропитки и современные способы обработки позволяют увеличивать устойчивость древесины к механическим и иным повреждениям. www.facebook.com/110372909302943/photos/a.298950240445208...
Первое тюнинг-ателье по загородным домам - отделка фасадов, кровельные работы. Монтаж сайдинга под ключ. Гарантия 5 лет на монтаж сайдинга
Строительные блоки WOODBE из древесины www.sotdel.ru/stroitelnye-bloki-woodbe.html
Панели ДВП (Древесно Волокнистая Плита) www.sotdel.ru/paneli-dvp-drevesno-voloknistaya-plita/
ПАНЕЛИ KMEW fasadnye-panely.sotdel.ru/
Фартук для кухни (Кухонный фартук) www.sotdel.ru/fartuk-dlya-kuhni.html
Москва ул. Верхние Поля, 48а
пн–пт 09:00–18:00; сб 09:00–15:00
+7 (495) 258-62-08
all clothes and shoes made by me, from left:
22/8; ivory Tshirt, skirt, cardigan, coat, scarf, gloves, tights, socks, boots
23/8; green Tshirt, skirt, cardigan, scarf, hand warmers, tights, socks, boots
24/8; striped Tshirt, skirt, navy cardigan, scarf, hand warmers, navy tights, socks, boots
www.francisnaumann.com/EXHIBITIONS/VV/index.html
“THE VISIBLE VAGINA”
FRANCIS M. NAUMANN FINE ART
and DAVID NOLAN GALLERY
January 28 – March 20, 2010
Wednesday, January 27, 2010, 6-8 pm at Francis M. Naumann Fine Art
Thursday, January 28, 2010, 6-8 pm at David Nolan Gallery
THE VISIBLE VAGINA is an exhibition jointly organized by Francis M. Naumann and David Nolan. It is scheduled to open at Francis M. Naumann Fine Art (24 West 57th Street) and at David Nolan Gallery (527 West 29th Street) on January 28, 2010. Both shows will run concurrently, ending on March 20, 2010.
As the title of the exhibition suggests, the show is designed to make visible a portion of the female anatomy that is generally considered taboo―too private and intimate for public display. If shown at all, this part of a woman’s body is usually presented in an abject fashion, generally within the context of pornography, intended, in almost all cases, for the exclusive pleasure of men. The goal of this exhibition is to remove these prurient connotations, implicit even in works of art, ever since the pudendum was prudishly covered by a fig leaf. This gesture of false modesty, it should be noted, was devised and enforced entirely by men (not only in the case of classical sculpture, but also in the Bible, in which, immediately after their disobedience in the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve cover their genitalia with fig leaves). Indeed, until recently, virtually all depictions of the frontal nude female figure were made by men, but as this exhibition will demonstrate, that has changed dramatically in recent years.
The catalogue for THE VISIBLE VAGINA will trace this motif in art history from prehistoric to modern times. It includes an introduction by the exhibition organizers, as well as a highly informative and provocative essay by Anna C. Chave, Professor of Contemporary Art and Theory at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Inspiration for both the show and its catalogue came from Eve Ensler’s The Vagina Monologues, a stage play that premiered off-Broadway in 1996, and was followed by various productions throughout the world (it appeared as a book in 1998). Ensler gave voice to countless women worldwide, honoring the complexity and mystery of their sexuality, basically encouraging them to consider their vaginas as powerful and expressive components of their physical selves, something not to be ashamed of, but to be proudly protected as an assertive and positive manifestation of their being. The idea for this show came from realizing that there was no better group to give vision to this goal than artists, many of whom had already incorporated imagery of the vagina in their works. Because of Ensler’s pioneering work in this field, the catalogue is dedicated to her, and proceeds from its sale shall be donated to V-Day, the organization she founded to end violence against women and girls throughout the world.
The following is a list of the artists whose work will be included in the exhibition (as well as a number whose work is only reproduced in the catalogue): Magdalena Abakanowicz, Ghada Amer, Beth B, Judie Bamber, Tracey Baran, Nancy Becker, Hans Bellmer, Mike Bidlo, Louise Bourgeois, Robert Brinker, Judy Chicago, Carol Cole, Maureen Connor, Gustave Courbet, Tee Corinne, John Currin, Sarah Davis, James Dee, Jay Defeo, Jim Dine, Leo Dohman, Marcel Duchamp, Carroll Dunham, Tracy Emin, India Evans, John Evans, Valie Export, Robert Forman, Neil Gall, Kathleen Gilje, Guerrilla Girls, Nancy Grossman, Barbara Hammer, Jane Hammond, Mona Hatoum, Stanley William Hayter, Sandra Vásquez de la Horra, David Humphrey, Paul Joostens, Pamela Joseph, Mel Kendrick, Elisabeth Kley, Jeff Koons, Mark Kostabi, Shigeko Kubota, Zoe Leonard, Sherrie Levine, Lee Lozano, Henri Maccheroni, Chema Madoz, Réné Magritte, Gerard Malanga, Man Ray, Robert Mapplethorpe, Marcel Mariën, André Masson, Sophie Matisse, Ana Mendieta, Allyson Mitchell, Cathy de Monchaux, Vik Muniz, Wangechi Mutu, Gladys Nilsson, Yoko Ono, Pablo Picasso, Chloe Piene, Richard Prince, Daniel Ranalli, Oona Ratcliffe, Niki de Saint-Phalle, Katia Santibanez, Peter Saul, Naomi Savage, Egon Schiele, Carolee Schneemann, Mira Schor, Michelle Segre, Tom Shannon, Cindy Sherman, James Siena, Laurie Simmons, Kiki Smith, Julie Speed, Nancy Spero, Betty Tompkins, Kiyoshi Tsuchiya, John Tweddle, Tabitha Vevers, Douglas Vogel, Robert Watts, Hannah Wilke, Terry Winters, Beatrice Wood.
PANEL DISCUSSION: David Nolan Gallery will host a panel discussion on the exhibition with the featured artists on Saturday, January 30 from 2-4 pm at 527 West 29th Street.
FRANCIS M. NAUMANN FINE ART
24 West 57th Street, Suite 305
New York, NY, 10019
Telephone: 212.582.3201
LHOOQ@FRANCISNAUMANN.COM
Biennalist
Biennalist is an Art Format commenting on active biennials and managed cultural events through artworks.Biennalist takes the thematics of the biennales and similar events like festivals and conferences seriously, questioning the established structures of the staged art events in order to contribute to the debate, which they wish to generate.
About artist Thierry Geoffroy/Colonel:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thierry_Geoffroy
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Room_(art)
www.emergencyrooms.org/formats.html
Biennalist :
Biennalist is an Art Format commenting on active biennials and managed cultural events through artworks.Biennalist takes the thematics of the biennales and similar events like festivals and conferences seriously, questioning the established structures of the staged art events in order to contribute to the debate, which they wish to generate.
-------------------------------------------
links about Biennalist :
Thierry Geoffroy/Colonel:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thierry_Geoffroy
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_Room_(art)
www.emergencyrooms.org/formats.html
—--Biennale from wikipedia —--
The Venice International Film Festival is part of the Venice Biennale. The famous Golden Lion is awarded to the best film screening at the competition.
Biennale (Italian: [bi.enˈnaːle]), Italian for "biennial" or "every other year", is any event that happens every two years. It is most commonly used within the art world to describe large-scale international contemporary art exhibitions. As such the term was popularised by Venice Biennale, which was first held in 1895. Since the 1990s, the terms "biennale" and "biennial" have been interchangeably used in a more generic way - to signify a large-scale international survey show of contemporary art that recurs at regular intervals but not necessarily biannual (such as triennials, Documenta, Skulptur Projekte Münster).[1] The phrase has also been used for other artistic events, such as the "Biennale de Paris", "Kochi-Muziris Biennale", Berlinale (for the Berlin International Film Festival) and Viennale (for Vienna's international film festival).
Characteristics[edit]
According to author Federica Martini, what is at stake in contemporary biennales is the diplomatic/international relations potential as well as urban regeneration plans. Besides being mainly focused on the present (the “here and now” where the cultural event takes place and their effect of "spectacularisation of the everyday"), because of their site-specificity cultural events may refer back to,[who?] produce or frame the history of the site and communities' collective memory.[2]
The Great Exhibition in The Crystal Palace in Hyde Park, London, in 1851, the first attempt to condense the representation of the world within a unitary exhibition space.
A strong and influent symbol of biennales and of large-scale international exhibitions in general is the Crystal Palace, the gigantic and futuristic London architecture that hosted the Great Exhibition in 1851. According to philosopher Peter Sloterdijk,[3][page needed] the Crystal Palace is the first attempt to condense the representation of the world in a unitary exhibition space, where the main exhibit is society itself in an a-historical, spectacular condition. The Crystal Palace main motives were the affirmation of British economic and national leadership and the creation of moments of spectacle. In this respect, 19th century World fairs provided a visual crystallization of colonial culture and were, at the same time, forerunners of contemporary theme parks.
The Venice Biennale as an archetype[edit]
The structure of the Venice Biennale in 2005 with an international exhibition and the national pavilions.
The Venice Biennale, a periodical large-scale cultural event founded in 1895, served as an archetype of the biennales. Meant to become a World Fair focused on contemporary art, the Venice Biennale used as a pretext the wedding anniversary of the Italian king and followed up to several national exhibitions organised after Italy unification in 1861. The Biennale immediately put forth issues of city marketing, cultural tourism and urban regeneration, as it was meant to reposition Venice on the international cultural map after the crisis due to the end of the Grand Tour model and the weakening of the Venetian school of painting. Furthermore, the Gardens where the Biennale takes place were an abandoned city area that needed to be re-functionalised. In cultural terms, the Biennale was meant to provide on a biennial basis a platform for discussing contemporary art practices that were not represented in fine arts museums at the time. The early Biennale model already included some key points that are still constitutive of large-scale international art exhibitions today: a mix of city marketing, internationalism, gentrification issues and destination culture, and the spectacular, large scale of the event.
Biennials after the 1990s[edit]
The situation of biennials has changed in the contemporary context: while at its origin in 1895 Venice was a unique cultural event, but since the 1990s hundreds of biennials have been organized across the globe. Given the ephemeral and irregular nature of some biennials, there is little consensus on the exact number of biennials in existence at any given time.[citation needed] Furthermore, while Venice was a unique agent in the presentation of contemporary art, since the 1960s several museums devoted to contemporary art are exhibiting the contemporary scene on a regular basis. Another point of difference concerns 19th century internationalism in the arts, that was brought into question by post-colonial debates and criticism of the contemporary art “ethnic marketing”, and also challenged the Venetian and World Fair’s national representation system. As a consequence of this, Eurocentric tendency to implode the whole word in an exhibition space, which characterises both the Crystal Palace and the Venice Biennale, is affected by the expansion of the artistic geographical map to scenes traditionally considered as marginal. The birth of the Havana Biennial in 1984 is widely considered an important counterpoint to the Venetian model for its prioritization of artists working in the Global South and curatorial rejection of the national pavilion model.
International biennales[edit]
In the term's most commonly used context of major recurrent art exhibitions:
Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art, South Australia
Asian Art Biennale, in Taichung, Taiwan (National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts)
Athens Biennale, in Athens, Greece
Bienal de Arte Paiz, in Guatemala City, Guatemala[4]
Arts in Marrakech (AiM) International Biennale (Arts in Marrakech Festival)
Bamako Encounters, a biennale of photography in Mali
Bat-Yam International Biennale of Landscape Urbanism
Beijing Biennale
Berlin Biennale (contemporary art biennale, to be distinguished from Berlinale, which is a film festival)
Bergen Assembly (triennial for contemporary art in Bergen, Norway)www.bergenassembly.no
Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture, in Shenzhen and Hong Kong, China
Bienal de Arte de Ponce in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Biënnale van België, Biennial of Belgium, Belgium
BiennaleOnline Online biennial exhibition of contemporary art from the most promising emerging artists.
Biennial of Hawaii Artists
Biennale de la Biche, the smallest biennale in the world held at deserted island near Guadeloupe, French overseas region[5][6]
Biwako Biennale [ja], in Shiga, Japan
La Biennale de Montreal
Biennale of Luanda : Pan-African Forum for the Culture of Peace,[7] Angola
Boom Festival, international music and culture festival in Idanha-a-Nova, Portugal
Bucharest Biennale in Bucharest, Romania
Bushwick Biennial, in Bushwick, Brooklyn, New York
Canakkale Biennial, in Canakkale, Turkey
Cerveira International Art Biennial, Vila Nova de Cerveira, Portugal [8]
Changwon Sculpture Biennale in Changwon, South Korea
Dakar Biennale, also called Dak'Art, biennale in Dakar, Senegal
Documenta, contemporary art exhibition held every five years in Kassel, Germany
Estuaire (biennale), biennale in Nantes and Saint-Nazaire, France
EVA International, biennial in Limerick, Republic of Ireland
Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art, in Gothenburg, Sweden[9]
Greater Taipei Contemporary Art Biennial, in Taipei, Taiwan
Gwangju Biennale, Asia's first and most prestigious contemporary art biennale
Havana biennial, in Havana, Cuba
Helsinki Biennial, in Helsinki, Finland
Herzliya Biennial For Contemporary Art, in Herzliya, Israel
Incheon Women Artists' Biennale, in Incheon, South Korea
Iowa Biennial, in Iowa, USA
Istanbul Biennial, in Istanbul, Turkey
International Roaming Biennial of Tehran, in Tehran and Istanbul
Jakarta Biennale, in Jakarta, Indonesia
Jerusalem Biennale, in Jerusalem, Israel
Jogja Biennale, in Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Karachi Biennale, in Karachi, Pakistan
Keelung Harbor Biennale, in Keelung, Taiwan
Kochi-Muziris Biennale, largest art exhibition in India, in Kochi, Kerala, India
Kortrijk Design Biennale Interieur, in Kortrijk, Belgium
Kobe Biennale, in Japan
Kuandu Biennale, in Taipei, Taiwan
Lagos Biennial, in Lagos, Nigeria[10]
Light Art Biennale Austria, in Austria
Liverpool Biennial, in Liverpool, UK
Lofoten International Art Festival [no] (LIAF), on the Lofoten archipelago, Norway[11]
Manifesta, European Biennale of contemporary art in different European cities
Mediations Biennale, in Poznań, Poland
Melbourne International Biennial 1999
Mediterranean Biennale in Sakhnin 2013
MOMENTA Biennale de l'image [fr] (formerly known as Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal), in Montreal, Canada
MOMENTUM [no], in Moss, Norway[12]
Moscow Biennale, in Moscow, Russia
Munich Biennale, new opera and music-theatre in even-numbered years
Mykonos Biennale
Nakanojo Biennale[13]
NGV Triennial, contemporary art exhibition held every three years at the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
October Salon – Belgrade Biennale [sr], organised by the Cultural Center of Belgrade [sr], in Belgrade, Serbia[14]
OSTEN Biennial of Drawing Skopje, North Macedonia[15]
Biennale de Paris
Riga International Biennial of Contemporary Art (RIBOCA), in Riga, Latvia[16]
São Paulo Art Biennial, in São Paulo, Brazil
SCAPE Public Art Christchurch Biennial in Christchurch, New Zealand[17]
Prospect New Orleans
Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism
Sequences, in Reykjavík, Iceland[18]
Shanghai Biennale
Sharjah Biennale, in Sharjah, UAE
Singapore Biennale, held in various locations across the city-state island of Singapore
Screen City Biennial, in Stavanger, Norway
Biennale of Sydney
Taipei Biennale, in Taipei, Taiwan
Taiwan Arts Biennale, in Taichung, Taiwan (National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts)
Taiwan Film Biennale, in Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, U.S.A.
Thessaloniki Biennale of Contemporary Art [el], in Thessaloniki, Greece[19]
Dream city, produced by ART Rue Association in Tunisia
Vancouver Biennale
Visayas Islands Visual Arts Exhibition and Conference (VIVA ExCon) in the Philippines [20]
Venice Biennale, in Venice, Italy, which includes:
Venice Biennale of Contemporary Art
Venice Biennale of Architecture
Venice Film Festival
Vladivostok biennale of Visual Arts, in Vladivostok, Russia
Whitney Biennial, hosted by the Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, NY, USA
Web Biennial, produced with teams from Athens, Berlin and Istanbul.
West Africa Architecture Biennale,[21] Virtual in Lagos, Nigeria.
WRO Biennale, in Wrocław, Poland[22]
Music Biennale Zagreb
[SHIFT:ibpcpa] The International Biennale of Performance, Collaborative and Participatory Arts, Nomadic, International, Scotland, UK.
—---Venice Biennale from wikipedia —
The Venice Biennale (/ˌbiːɛˈnɑːleɪ, -li/; Italian: La Biennale di Venezia) is an international cultural exhibition hosted annually in Venice, Italy by the Biennale Foundation.[2][3][4] The biennale has been organised every year since 1895, which makes it the oldest of its kind. The main exhibition held in Castello, in the halls of the Arsenale and Biennale Gardens, alternates between art and architecture (hence the name biennale; biennial).[5][6][7] The other events hosted by the Foundation—spanning theatre, music, and dance—are held annually in various parts of Venice, whereas the Venice Film Festival takes place at the Lido.[8]
Organization[edit]
Art Biennale
Art Biennale
International Art Exhibition
1895
Even-numbered years (since 2022)
Venice Biennale of Architecture
International Architecture Exhibition
1980
Odd-numbered years (since 2021)
Biennale Musica
International Festival of Contemporary Music
1930
Annually (Sep/Oct)
Biennale Teatro
International Theatre Festival
1934
Annually (Jul/Aug)
Venice Film Festival
Venice International Film Festival
1932
Annually (Aug/Sep)
Venice Dance Biennale
International Festival of Contemporary Dance
1999
Annually (June; biennially 2010–16)
International Kids' Carnival
2009
Annually (during Carnevale)
History
1895–1947
On April 19, 1893, the Venetian City Council passed a resolution to set up an biennial exhibition of Italian Art ("Esposizione biennale artistica nazionale") to celebrate the silver anniversary of King Umberto I and Margherita of Savoy.[11]
A year later, the council decreed "to adopt a 'by invitation' system; to reserve a section of the Exhibition for foreign artists too; to admit works by uninvited Italian artists, as selected by a jury."[12]
The first Biennale, "I Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte della Città di Venezia (1st International Art Exhibition of the City of Venice)" (although originally scheduled for April 22, 1894) was opened on April 30, 1895, by the Italian King and Queen, Umberto I and Margherita di Savoia. The first exhibition was seen by 224,000 visitors.
The event became increasingly international in the first decades of the 20th century: from 1907 on, several countries installed national pavilions at the exhibition, with the first being from Belgium. In 1910 the first internationally well-known artists were displayed: a room dedicated to Gustav Klimt, a one-man show for Renoir, a retrospective of Courbet. A work by Picasso "Family of Saltimbanques" was removed from the Spanish salon in the central Palazzo because it was feared that its novelty might shock the public. By 1914 seven pavilions had been established: Belgium (1907), Hungary (1909), Germany (1909), Great Britain (1909), France (1912), and Russia (1914).
During World War I, the 1916 and 1918 events were cancelled.[13] In 1920 the post of mayor of Venice and president of the Biennale was split. The new secretary general, Vittorio Pica brought about the first presence of avant-garde art, notably Impressionists and Post-Impressionists.
1922 saw an exhibition of sculpture by African artists. Between the two World Wars, many important modern artists had their work exhibited there. In 1928 the Istituto Storico d'Arte Contemporanea (Historical Institute of Contemporary Art) opened, which was the first nucleus of archival collections of the Biennale. In 1930 its name was changed into Historical Archive of Contemporary Art.
In 1930, the Biennale was transformed into an Ente Autonomo (Autonomous Board) by Royal Decree with law no. 33 of 13-1-1930. Subsequently, the control of the Biennale passed from the Venice city council to the national Fascist government under Benito Mussolini. This brought on a restructuring, an associated financial boost, as well as a new president, Count Giuseppe Volpi di Misurata. Three entirely new events were established, including the Biennale Musica in 1930, also referred to as International Festival of Contemporary Music; the Venice Film Festival in 1932, which they claim as the first film festival in history,[14] also referred to as Venice International Film Festival; and the Biennale Theatro in 1934, also referred to as International Theatre Festival.
In 1933 the Biennale organized an exhibition of Italian art abroad. From 1938, Grand Prizes were awarded in the art exhibition section.
During World War II, the activities of the Biennale were interrupted: 1942 saw the last edition of the events. The Film Festival restarted in 1946, the Music and Theatre festivals were resumed in 1947, and the Art Exhibition in 1948.[15]
1948–1973[edit]
The Art Biennale was resumed in 1948 with a major exhibition of a recapitulatory nature. The Secretary General, art historian Rodolfo Pallucchini, started with the Impressionists and many protagonists of contemporary art including Chagall, Klee, Braque, Delvaux, Ensor, and Magritte, as well as a retrospective of Picasso's work. Peggy Guggenheim was invited to exhibit her collection, later to be permanently housed at Ca' Venier dei Leoni.
1949 saw the beginning of renewed attention to avant-garde movements in European—and later worldwide—movements in contemporary art. Abstract expressionism was introduced in the 1950s, and the Biennale is credited with importing Pop Art into the canon of art history by awarding the top prize to Robert Rauschenberg in 1964.[16] From 1948 to 1972, Italian architect Carlo Scarpa did a series of remarkable interventions in the Biennale's exhibition spaces.
In 1954 the island San Giorgio Maggiore provided the venue for the first Japanese Noh theatre shows in Europe. 1956 saw the selection of films following an artistic selection and no longer based upon the designation of the participating country. The 1957 Golden Lion went to Satyajit Ray's Aparajito which introduced Indian cinema to the West.
1962 included Arte Informale at the Art Exhibition with Jean Fautrier, Hans Hartung, Emilio Vedova, and Pietro Consagra. The 1964 Art Exhibition introduced continental Europe to Pop Art (The Independent Group had been founded in Britain in 1952). The American Robert Rauschenberg was the first American artist to win the Gran Premio, and the youngest to date.
The student protests of 1968 also marked a crisis for the Biennale. Student protests hindered the opening of the Biennale. A resulting period of institutional changes opened and ending with a new Statute in 1973. In 1969, following the protests, the Grand Prizes were abandoned. These resumed in 1980 for the Mostra del Cinema and in 1986 for the Art Exhibition.[17]
In 1972, for the first time, a theme was adopted by the Biennale, called "Opera o comportamento" ("Work or Behaviour").
Starting from 1973 the Music Festival was no longer held annually. During the year in which the Mostra del Cinema was not held, there was a series of "Giornate del cinema italiano" (Days of Italian Cinema) promoted by sectorial bodies in campo Santa Margherita, in Venice.[18]
1974–1998[edit]
1974 saw the start of the four-year presidency of Carlo Ripa di Meana. The International Art Exhibition was not held (until it was resumed in 1976). Theatre and cinema events were held in October 1974 and 1975 under the title Libertà per il Cile (Freedom for Chile)—a major cultural protest against the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
On 15 November 1977, the so-called Dissident Biennale (in reference to the dissident movement in the USSR) opened. Because of the ensuing controversies within the Italian left wing parties, president Ripa di Meana resigned at the end of the year.[19]
In 1979 the new presidency of Giuseppe Galasso (1979-1982) began. The principle was laid down whereby each of the artistic sectors was to have a permanent director to organise its activity.
In 1980, the Architecture section of the Biennale was set up. The director, Paolo Portoghesi, opened the Corderie dell'Arsenale to the public for the first time. At the Mostra del Cinema, the awards were brought back into being (between 1969 and 1979, the editions were non-competitive). In 1980, Achille Bonito Oliva and Harald Szeemann introduced "Aperto", a section of the exhibition designed to explore emerging art. Italian art historian Giovanni Carandente directed the 1988 and 1990 editions. A three-year gap was left afterwards to make sure that the 1995 edition would coincide with the 100th anniversary of the Biennale.[13]
The 1993 edition was directed by Achille Bonito Oliva. In 1995, Jean Clair was appointed to be the Biennale's first non-Italian director of visual arts[20] while Germano Celant served as director in 1997.
For the Centenary in 1995, the Biennale promoted events in every sector of its activity: the 34th Festival del Teatro, the 46th art exhibition, the 46th Festival di Musica, the 52nd Mostra del Cinema.[21]
1999–present[edit]
In 1999 and 2001, Harald Szeemann directed two editions in a row (48th & 49th) bringing in a larger representation of artists from Asia and Eastern Europe and more young artists than usual and expanded the show into several newly restored spaces of the Arsenale.
In 1999 a new sector was created for live shows: DMT (Dance Music Theatre).
The 50th edition, 2003, directed by Francesco Bonami, had a record number of seven co-curators involved, including Hans Ulrich Obrist, Catherine David, Igor Zabel, Hou Hanru and Massimiliano Gioni.
The 51st edition of the Biennale opened in June 2005, curated, for the first time by two women, Maria de Corral and Rosa Martinez. De Corral organized "The Experience of Art" which included 41 artists, from past masters to younger figures. Rosa Martinez took over the Arsenale with "Always a Little Further." Drawing on "the myth of the romantic traveler" her exhibition involved 49 artists, ranging from the elegant to the profane.
In 2007, Robert Storr became the first director from the United States to curate the Biennale (the 52nd), with a show entitled Think with the Senses – Feel with the Mind. Art in the Present Tense.
Swedish curator Daniel Birnbaum was artistic director of the 2009 edition entitled "Fare Mondi // Making Worlds".
The 2011 edition was curated by Swiss curator Bice Curiger entitled "ILLUMInazioni – ILLUMInations".
The Biennale in 2013 was curated by the Italian Massimiliano Gioni. His title and theme, Il Palazzo Enciclopedico / The Encyclopedic Palace, was adopted from an architectural model by the self-taught Italian-American artist Marino Auriti. Auriti's work, The Encyclopedic Palace of the World was lent by the American Folk Art Museum and exhibited in the first room of the Arsenale for the duration of the biennale. For Gioni, Auriti's work, "meant to house all worldly knowledge, bringing together the greatest discoveries of the human race, from the wheel to the satellite," provided an analogous figure for the "biennale model itself...based on the impossible desire to concentrate the infinite worlds of contemporary art in a single place: a task that now seems as dizzyingly absurd as Auriti's dream."[22]
Curator Okwui Enwezor was responsible for the 2015 edition.[23] He was the first African-born curator of the biennial. As a catalyst for imagining different ways of imagining multiple desires and futures Enwezor commissioned special projects and programs throughout the Biennale in the Giardini. This included a Creative Time Summit, e-flux journal's SUPERCOMMUNITY, Gulf Labor Coalition, The Invisible Borders Trans-African Project and Abounaddara.[24][25]
The 2017 Biennale, titled Viva Arte Viva, was directed by French curator Christine Macel who called it an "exhibition inspired by humanism".[26] German artist Franz Erhard Walter won the Golden Lion for best artist, while Carolee Schneemann was awarded a posthumous Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement.[27]
The 2019 Biennale, titled May You Live In Interesting Times, was directed by American-born curator Ralph Rugoff.[28]
The 2022 edition was curated by Italian curator Cecilia Alemani entitled "The Milk of Dreams" after a book by British-born Mexican surrealist painter Leonora Carrington.[29]
The Biennale has an attendance today of over 500,000 visitors.[30][31][32]
Role in the art market[edit]
When the Venice Biennale was founded in 1895, one of its main goals was to establish a new market for contemporary art. Between 1942 and 1968 a sales office assisted artists in finding clients and selling their work,[33] a service for which it charged 10% commission. Sales remained an intrinsic part of the biennale until 1968, when a sales ban was enacted. An important practical reason why the focus on non-commodities has failed to decouple Venice from the market is that the biennale itself lacks the funds to produce, ship and install these large-scale works. Therefore, the financial involvement of dealers is widely regarded as indispensable;[16] as they regularly front the funding for production of ambitious projects.[34] Furthermore, every other year the Venice Biennale coincides with nearby Art Basel, the world's prime commercial fair for modern and contemporary art. Numerous galleries with artists on show in Venice usually bring work by the same artists to Basel.[35]
Central Pavilion and Arsenale[edit]
The formal Biennale is based at a park, the Giardini. The Giardini includes a large exhibition hall that houses a themed exhibition curated by the Biennale's director.
Initiated in 1980, the Aperto began as a fringe event for younger artists and artists of a national origin not represented by the permanent national pavilions. This is usually staged in the Arsenale and has become part of the formal biennale programme. In 1995 there was no Aperto so a number of participating countries hired venues to show exhibitions of emerging artists. From 1999, both the international exhibition and the Aperto were held as one exhibition, held both at the Central Pavilion and the Arsenale. Also in 1999, a $1 million renovation transformed the Arsenale area into a cluster of renovated shipyards, sheds and warehouses, more than doubling the Arsenale's exhibition space of previous years.[36]
A special edition of the 54th Biennale was held at Padiglione Italia of Torino Esposizioni – Sala Nervi (December 2011 – February 2012) for the 150th Anniversary of Italian Unification. The event was directed by Vittorio Sgarbi
All information is provided in good faith but, on occasions errors may occur. Should this be the case, if new information can be verified please supply it to the author and corrections will then be made. This memorial has been compiled with additional information by kind permission of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, and from Ancestry.co.uk
This memorial is in the Knutsford War Memorial Cottage Hospital, Knutsford.
KNUTSFORD AND DISTRICT
PRO PATRIA 1939 - 1945 AND SINCE
ASHBY Herbert. Lieutenant. On the family memorial is inscribed the following, died in India from Malaria on the 13th April 1945 aged 23. Wills and Admin, Ancestry have the following. Herbert ASHBY of 17, Manchester Road, Knutsford died 28th April 1944 on war service. He effects went to his widowed mother Edith Jane Ashby.
CWGC have, Sergeant Herbert Ashby 10538067, Royal Army Ordnance Corps died 28th April 1944 aged 23. He was the son of Henry and Edith of Knutsford, Cheshire. He is commemorated on a family memorial in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and is at rest in Chittagong War Cemetery, India
BALLANTYNE. (Memorial has BALLANTINE) Robert. Sergeant 580780, 149 Squadron Royal Air Force died 2nd January 1940 aged 20 English Channel. Son of Reginald and Jessie May Ballantyne nee Nash formerly Fisher of Knutsford Cheshire. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey.
Credit. www.epibreren.com/ww2/raf/149_squadron.html
He was part of a crew in a Wellington I on a reconnaissance mission which took off from Mildenhall when it was shot down by a Me 110 in position 54°27' N 05°47' E. The Wellington was seen to be on fire as it hit the sea. The crew of six all perished. The average aged of the crew were in their 20s
BELLAERS (Memorial has BELLARS) Eric. Rifleman 4128370 1st London Irish Rifles, Royal Ulster Rifles died 19th September 1944 aged 25. Son of Reginald Walker Bellaers and Ada Bellaers, nee Cooper of New Mills, Derbyshire. His mother was born and died at Knutsford Cheshire.
At rest in Coriano Ridge War Cemetery, Italy.
BROOKES Sydney. Lance Corporal 3391580, 1/6th East Surrey Regiment was killed in action in Italy on the 1st March 1944 aged 31. He was the youngest son of William Henry and Mary Jane of Knutsford and was the husband of Margaret of Knutsford. He is commemorated on a family memorial in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and is at rest in Minturno War Cemetery, Italy.
BROOKS William Arthur. Lieutenant 269374 Lancashire Fusiliers attached to 4th Royal Welch Fusiliers died 1st March 1945 aged 31. Son of William Henry and Lily Brooks husband of Eva Violet Brooks nee Murray, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Reichswald Forest War Cemetery, Germany.
BROWNRIGG John Wilson. Lance Sergeant 983417, 338 Coastal Battery, Royal Artillery died 19th March 1941 aged 24. He was the son of William and Sarah Agnes and he was the husband of Rene of Knutsford, Cheshire He is at rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
BUCKLEY A (Unable to find the correct record listed with the CWGC )
BUCKLEY Horace. Private 10549737, Royal Army Ordnance Corps died 22nd May 1942 aged 20. Son of Horace and Jessie Evelyn, nee Jones of Knutsford. Duty called. He answered. At rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
BUCKLEY, Kenneth. Private 14735752, Worcestershire Regiment died in a Military Hospital on the 11th November 1946 aged 20. Son of John and Annie of Knutsford. At rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
BUCKLEY Samuel Lee. Private 4128645, 1st Durham Light Infantry died 25th November 1944. Native of Cheshire. At rest in Cesena War Cemetery, Italy
BURKE William Maurice. (Cadet Officer) Leading Airman FAA/FX705451 753 Squadron Fleet Air Arm, Royal Navy on H.M.S. Condor died as the result of an Condor air crash on the 31st July 1945 aged 19. There were two others that also perished at the same time. Son of William M and Alice M Burke of Knutsford. Commemorated on the Lee-on-Solent Memorial, Hampshire.
CAVENEY Thomas James. (Memorial has J) Sergeant 1130075 15th Squadron Royal Air Force VR died 3rd March 1943 aged 20. Son of Thomas and Martha Amy Caveney, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey.
CHORLTON B (No B is listed with the CWGC) however it may be this person) James William. Able Seaman C/JX154506 Royal Navy on H.M.S. Galatea died at sea 15th December 1941 aged 20. The ship was sunk by U-Boat U-557 not to far from Alexandria, Egypt. Son of Fred and Edith Chorlton nee Groom, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent.
There may have been a B Chorlton from Knutsford area who was in the forces but died a civilian from the effects of war service. Having no christian name he remains a mystery.
Listed with the CWGC is only one J Coggins. The following information may be him.
COGGINS John. M.B.E. D.F.M. Pilot Officer 44458, 235 Squadron, Royal Air Force died 16th December 1940 aged 27. Son of John Austin Coggins and Florence C Coggins nee Cook husband of Ivy Gladys Coggins, nee Durrant of Nacton, Suffolk. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey
His widow died on the 17th August 2010 aged 93.
London Gazette 14 April 1039.
Air Ministry,14th April, 1939. ROYAL AIR FORCE.
The KING has been graciously pleased to approve of the undermentioned rewards for gallant and distinguished services rendered in Palestine. Bar to the Distinguished Flying Medal. Sergeant 563631 John COGGINS, D.F.M.
London Gazette supplement dated 21 January 1941.
CENTRAL CHANCERY OF THE ORDERS
OF KNIGHTHOOD.
St. James's Palace, S.W.I.
2ist January, 1941.
The KING has been graciously pleased to give orders for the following appointments to the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.
To be Additional Members of the Military Division of the said Most Excellent Order
Flying Officer John Hamilton LAUGHLIN (39995) Pilot Officer John COGGINS (44458). In September, 1940, an aircraft carrying a full load of bombs, crashed among other aircraft and burst into flames. Flying Officer Laughlin, Pilot Officer Coggins and another officer immediately ran to these aircraft,
started the engines and taxied them away. During this time two bombs on the burning plane had exploded. The action showed complete disregard for personal safety in the face of the greatest danger and owing to the officers' promptness three aircraft were taken to safety without damage and a fourth with only minor damage
www.bbm.org.uk/airmen/Coggins.htm
CONNOR Albert. Private 4128398, 2nd Manchester Regiment died 12th May 1944 aged 24. Son of Thomas and Margaret Connor, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Kohima War Cemetery, India.
CURBISHLEY Albert Henry. Able Seaman C/JX 168702, Royal Navy on H.M.S. Dainty. Died 12th March 1941 aged 22. Son of John W.Curbishley and Louisa Curbishley, nee Bucklow, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Cairo War Memorial Cemetery, Egypt.
CAULFIELD Joseph Peter. Private 3594824, 9th King's Own Royal Lancaster Regiment died 27th August 1940 aged 34. He was the son of Daniel and Sarah Jane and he was the husband of Emmie of Knutsford. In 1911 he was living with his parents at 12, Old Market Place, Knutsford. His father was killed in action in 1915 in France. He is at rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
DANIEL Harry. Sergeant 3011016 Wireless Operator, Air Gunner, Royal Air Force (VR), died 24th November 1944 aged 19. He was the son of John and Mrs Daniel of Knutsford. He is at rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
DOBSON Frank Arthur. Guardsman 2723804, 3rd Irish Guards died 28th September 1944 in Operation Market Garden Holland aged 19. Native of Cheshire. He may have been the son of John and Ann nee Manley. At rest in Oosterbeek War Cemetery, Arnhem, Netherland.
ELLIS Robin James Newman. Lieutenant 245307 Kings Royal Rifle Corps attached to 8/2nd London Rifle Brigade died 10th September 1944 aged 21. Son of John Newman Ellis, and Rosamond Corisande Ellis, of Lower Peover, Cheshire. At rest in Leopoldsburg War Cemetery, Limburg, Belgium.
radleyarchives.co.uk/people/7887-robin-james-newman-ellis
EDWARDS John. Gunner, Royal Navy H.M.Trawler Ouse died 20th February 1941 aged 29.(Credit www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?150593 ) HMS Ouse (T 80) was mined off Tobruk, Lybia on the 20th February 1941.( Lt W V Fitzmaurice, RNVR) The commanding officer survived the sinking however 12 were killed and only 9 survived. Son of John and Florence Edwards, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial, Devon
FOY E Unable to find the correct record for him listed with the CWGC.
HAMMAN George Albert. Pilot Officer 130437, 172 Squadron Royal Air Force VR died 8th February 1942 aged 28. Son of James William and Mary Ann Hamman nee Jones, of Knutsford, Cheshire, brother of John Oswald who also fell. Husband of Elsie nee Reedy of Cheadle Heath, Cheshire. They had one child, Christine E born 1941.
His father served in the army in the Great War as Private 16578, Cheshire Regiment. He joined up at Knutsford on the 11th September 1914 aged 32 and 7 months occupation Labourer. He was medically discharged suffering from Bronchitis and Asthma on the 27th July 1915 to his home and family at 4 Coronation Square, Knutsford. He was married on the 11th May 1903, which was crossed out and initialled. (correct date 9th May 1904, as on a family tree on ancestry). He married Mary Ann Jones at Baynels Parish Church, North Wales. They hade the following children. James Edward born 1 June 1904 at Knutsford, Amy Alexandria 29th December 1906, born at Knutsford, John Oswald 21st May 1908 born at Knutsford, twins, William and Ernest born 18th December 1910 born at Knutsford and George Albert born 30th October 1914 at Bucklow, Cheshire
HAMMAN John Oswald. Sergeant 4128730, 2nd Cheshire Regiment died 23rd July 1943 aged 36. Son of James William and Mary Ann Hamman nee Jones, of Knutsford, Cheshire, brother of George Albert who also fell. Husband of Gladys Margaret Hamman, nee Dewhurst, of Shaw Heath, Knutsford Cheshire. They had three children, John S born 1935, Colin D born 1937 and Coral R born 1942. At rest in Catania War Cemetery, Sicily, Italy
His father served in the army in the Great War as Private 16578, Cheshire Regiment. He joined up at Knutsford on the 11th September 1914 aged 32 and 7 months occupation Labourer. He was medically discharged suffering from Bronchitis and Asthma on the 27th July 1915 to his home and family at 4 Coronation Square, Knutsford. He was married on the 11th May 1903, which was crossed out and initialled. (correct date 9th May 1904, as on a family tree on ancestry). He married Mary Ann Jones at Baynels Parish Church, North Wales. They hade the following children. James Edward born 1 June 1904 at Knutsford, Amy Alexandria 29th December 1906, born at Knutsford, John Oswald 21st May 1908 born at Knutsford, twins, William and Ernest born 18th December 1910 born at Knutsford and George Albert born 30th October 1914 at Bucklow, Cheshire
HATTON Harry Garft Sergeant 541499 Royal Air Force died 20th September 1944 aged 29. Son of Charles and Elsie Hatton nee Garft husband of Muriel Hatton nee Murney, of Moston, Manchester. ( Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk). He lived at 46 Blue Bell Avenue Manchester and died on war service. His widow Muriel received his effects. At rest in Jakarta War Cemetery, Indonesia.
His father had served with the 5th Cheshire Regiment joining up on the 1st September 1908 aged 17 and 6 months at Hale as private 1017. He was living at 20 Bath Street, Altrincham, Greater Manchester and was by occupation a labourer. He served 4 years on a home posting and was discharged on the termination of his engagement with the colours on the 31st August 1912.
On the 30th October 1941 he father died at Knutsford, Cheshire. He was living with his wife at 24 Heathfield Square, Knutsford.
HESKETH Louis Milsom. Flying Officer 147672, 77 Squadron Royal Air Force died 6th December 1944 aged 40. Son of Thomas Baron Hesketh and Louisa Hesketh, of Knutsford, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at 5 St Johns Road Knutsford and died on war service. His effects went to Thomas Baron Hesketh, cotton manufacturer. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey.
HIGGINSON Joseph. Private 4205968, 6th Cheshire Regiment died 28th February 1944 aged 20. Son of Thomas and Ethel Higginson, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Beach Head War Cemetery, Anzio, Italy
HILL John Arthur. Captain 201853, 65 (The Norfolk Yeomanry) Anti-Tank Regt Royal Artillery died 13th October 1944 aged 32. Son of Arthur and Elizabeth Eleanor Hill husband of Joan Hill, of Hale, Cheshire. His brother, Christopher Grimwade Hill, also died on Service (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at 21 Palatine Road, Withington, Manchester died on war service. His effects went to his wife, Joan. At rest in Jonkerbos War Cemetery, Gelderland, Netherlands.
IKIN Lewis Alfred. Sergeant 4128420 2/7th Middlesex Regiment. Born 2nd June 1908 died 3rd March 1944 aged 36. Son of Alfred and Jessie Ann Ikin, of Knutsford, Cheshire husband of Harriet Adelaide Ikin, nee Toombs of Knutsford. At rest in Naple War Cemetery, Italy
Permission to use photo pfirm2 ancestry (pete)
JARVIS Joseph Peter. Able Seaman D/JX151615 Royal Navy on HMS Glorious died 6th June 1940 aged 19. Son of Henry Theodore and Fanny Jarvis, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial, Devon
JACKSON Thomas William. Private 7624263 Base Ordnance Depot Royal Army Ordnance Coy died 19th June 1940 aged 28. Son of John and Margaret of Knutsford, Cheshire.
JONES Arthur. (Military Medal) Company Sergeant Major 4116416 Cheshire Regiment died 16th April 1942 aged 48. and he was the husband of Annie of Knutsford. At rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
LAMB Charles. (M.M.) Private 324287 1st Parachute Regiment. Army Air Corps, died 1st January 1946 aged 30. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry) He lived at 16, Sandleigh Avenue, Knutsford and died at the Military Hospital, Liverpool Road, Chester. His effects went to William Lamb, engine driver. He was the son of Frederick and Ada and he was the husband of Margaret Ann of Knutsford. He is at rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
LEA Roland William. Sergeant, Flight Engineer 577749, 57th Squadron Royal Air Force died 2nd April 1943 aged 20. He was part of a crew in a Lancaster which was shot down after attacking the St Nazaire U-Boat pens on 2 April 1943. It crashed near the village of St Pere en Retz. All the crew sadly perished.
Born in the registration district of Buckover near Knutsford to Edgar and Kathleen Mabel Lea nee Buckworth, (birth name Kate Mabel) of Romford, Essex. At rest in Pont-Du-Cens Communal Cemetery, Nantes, Loire-Atlantique France.
www.pprune.org/where-they-now/511988-lancaster-w4257-57-s...
LEACH George. Trooper 3864317, 1st Northamptonshire Yeomanry, Royal Armoured Corps died 23rd October 1944 aged 33. Son of Patrick and Elizabeth Leach husband of Florrie Leach. At rest in Nederweert War Cemetery, Limburg, Netherlands.
PENNINGTON-LEGH John Alan DFC, Wing Commander 37687, 11 Squadron Royal Air Force died 13th October 1944 aged 29. Son of Tom and Marsie Pennington-Legh husband of Mary Edwina Pennington-Legh, of Fontwell, Sussex. Commemorated on the Singapore Memorial,
OLLIER Thomas. Gunner 14350967, 142 Field Regiment, Royal Artillery. Royal Devon Yeomanry died 22nd July 1944 aged 21. Son of Thomas Ernest and Charlotte Ollier, of Knutsford, Cheshire. It appears from record seen that his mother is not called Charlotte but Sarah Hannah. At rest in Florence War Cemetery, Italy.
PATTERSON John Robert. Leading Steward C/LX 21537 Royal Navy on HMS Wakeful died at sea 29th May 1940. In 1923 there was a John R Patterson born in the registration district of Northwich, Cheshire. He is commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent. Listed with the CWGC are four J R Patterson The others were born. One in Essex, another in Northumberland and last in Yorkshire.
SIMCOCK John Ernest. Leading Aircraftman 629022, Royal Air Force Died on active service 7th October 1945 aged 24. He was the son of Ernest and Beatrice of Knutsford. He is commemorated on a family memorial at Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and is at rest in Rennes Eastern Communal Cemetery, Ille-et-Vilaine, France
SIMON Michael Horsfall Henry. Captain 187216 133 Field Regiment Royal Artillery died 20th April 1945 aged 33. He was born in 1912 in the registration district of Bucklow, Cheshire to At rest in Becklingen War Cemetery, Niedersachsen, Germany
SNOW David Jack. Boy 1st Class P/JX163207, Royal Navy on HMS Hood died 24th May 1941 aged 17. Son of Henry Thomas Snow and Lilian Snow nee Cooper, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Porstmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire.
TICKLE Albert. Private 14583537, 4th Kings Own Scottish Borderers died 18th June 1945 aged 19. Son of Arthur and Edith Tickle, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Mook War Cemetery, Limburg , Netherlands.
TROWELL Noreen. Private W/141311 Auxiliary Territorial Service died 12th March 1944 aged 21. Native of Bury. At rest in Shrewsbury General Cemetery, Shropshire.
WALKER William Edward (Bill). Private 14203151 6th Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment, killed in action, at central front, Italy on the 25th October 1944 aged 21. He is interred at Santerno Valley Cemetery.
Only those who have loved and lost, know the price of war's bitter cost. May the noble sacrifice of their young lives not be in vain. He was the son of James and Annie. He is commemorated on his parents memorial in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
WALSH James. Private 4128036, 7th Cheshire Regiment died 12th May 1940 aged 25. Son of James and Esther Ann Walsh j husband of Vera Walsh, of Altrincham, Cheshire. At rest in (O-L-V) Onze-Lieve-Vrouw ,Lombeek Churchyard, Vlaams-Brabant, Belgium.
WARBURTON, Geoffrey. Gunner 957288, The Hertfordshire Yeomanry, 135th Regiment, Royal Artillery. Died on active service on the1st March 1942 aged 23. He was the son of William and Florence and husband of Charlotte of Annan, Dumfriesshire. He is commemorated on a family memorial in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and is at rest Kranji War Cemetery, Singapore
WARBURTON James. Private 11263127, 37 Coy, Pioneer Corps died 16th September 1943 aged 43. Son of Francis and Mary Jane Warburton nee Bathers, of Knutsford, Cheshire husband of Florence Warburton, nee Lee of Knutsford. In 1911 aged 10 he was living with his parents and siblings at 125 Mobberley Road, Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Bone War Cemetery, Annaba, Algeria.
WILLIAMS John Alfred Edward. Private 419863, 4th Welch Regiment died 19th September 1943 aged 26. Son of Florence Williams husband of Mary J, nee Gittins. Williams, of Hulme, Manchester. At rest in Bergen-Op-Zoom War Cemetery, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands.
SINCE 1945 (1975)
HADDEN David Andrew. Guardsman 24164809 Grenadier Guards died of natural causes in England on the 19th September 1975 aged 21. At rest in Holy Cross Churchyard, Mobberley Road, Knutsford, Cheshire.
LOWER PEOVER 1939-1945
BUCKLEY Joseph. Gunner 981599, 76th Medium Regiment Royal Artillery Shropshire Yeomanry died 9th July 1944. Son of Richard and Annie Buckley, of Lower Peover, Cheshire. At rest in Foiana Della Chiana War Cemetery, Italy.
HOWARTH James Hubert (Bert). Private 4128252, 7th Cheshire Regiment, killed in Italy 11th October 1943 aged 26. He was the son of James Herbert and Edith of Knutsford and was the husband of Violet also of Knutsford. He is commemorated on a family memorial in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and he is at rest in Sangro River War Cemetery, Italy.
MOBBERLEY 1939-1945
BAILEY James William. Leading Aircraftman 1825458 Royal Air Force VR died 26th July 1946 aged 21. Son of James William and Gladys Bailey, of Mobberley, Cheshire. At rest in Delhi War Cemetery, India.
GROVES Alfred William. DFM Pilot Officer, Observer 1090063, 105 Squadron Royal Air Force VR died 15th August 1942 aged 28 . Son of Samuel and Frances Groves, of Mobberley, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He live at 10 Bucklow Avenue, Mobberley and his effects were left to Samuel Groves, Paper coater. At rest in Gent City Cemetery, Oost-Vlaanderen Belgium
HOLDEN Raymond De Lannoy Flying Officer 103784, Royal Air Force VR died 13th August 1943 aged 34. Son of Percy Holden and of Arabella Holden (nee Leather); husband of Monica A. Holden, of Mobberley, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at Hillcrest Warford Lane Bobberley and died on war service. He effects went to Charles Edwin Moreton, bank official. Commemorated on the Alamein Mamorial, Egypt.
LONGRIDGE Christopher Leigh-Mallory. Leading Airman FAA/FX. 80564, Fleet Air Arm, Royal Navy on HMS Daedalus died 17th January 1941 aged 20. Son of Harry Morgan Longridge and Ann Victoria Longridge, of Mobberley, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at Rathlin Church Lane Mobberley died on war service. His effects went to Harry Morgan Longridge, engineer. Commemorated on the Lee-On- Solent Memorial, Hampshire.
ROBERTS Joseph Edward. Sergeant 2211675, 166 Squadron Royal Air Force died 23rd September 1944 aged 23. Son of Joseph and Alice Mary Roberts, of Ashley, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey
SOUTHERN Ernest George. Petty Officer C/J94090, Royal Navy on HMS Barham died 25th November 1941 aged 39. Son of Charles Henry and Sarah Southern husband of Gladys Mary Southern nee Goodhew, of Putney, London. Commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent.
I could find no connection to Mobberley or the County of Cheshire.
There is a Mobberley war memorial which indicates that his first name was Ernest. On the CWGC there is only one Ernest Southern for WW2.
TAYLOR Frank Ordinary Seaman P/JX 258659 Royal Navy on HMS Neptune died 19th December 1941 aged 27. Son of John Henry and Mary Taylor, of Mobberley, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at Small Lane, Mobberley and died on war service. His effects went to his mother Mary Taylor. Commemorated on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire.
TOMLINSON D (Ronald) Major 97345 Ronald Tomlinson Lancashire Fusiliers died 10th July 1941 aged 37. (Wills and Admin Ancestry.co.uk) Ronald Tomlinson of West Bank, Richmond Road, Bowden, Cheshire died 10 July 1941 on war service. His effects went to Christine Lydia Tomlinson, widow and Frederick William Tomlinson. Commemorated on the Ismailia War Memorial Cemetery, Egypt.
WARBURTON William (Unable to find the correct record for this person listed with the CWGC)
YEARSLEY Thomas Ronald. Private 14573502, 1st Gordon Highlanders died 18th November 1944 aged 20. Son of William Gibson Yearsley and Ada Yearsley, of Mobberley, Cheshire. At rest in Venray War Cemetery, Limburg Netherlands.
ROSTHERNE 1939-1945 Names are also on the War Memorial in St Marys's Church Rostherne.
DUNKERLEY William Donald. Lieutenant Commander. Royal Navy on H.M.Submarine Thames died 3rd August 1940 aged 32. Son of William and Amy Constance Dunkerley; husband of Jena Dunkerley, of Mere, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire.
HENSHALL Arnold Nebo. Driver T/224939 258 General Transport Coy, Royal Army Service Corps died 16th March 1943 aged 30. Native of Bucklow, Cheshire. Husband of Margaret A Henshall nee Hill, of Sale, Cheshire. At rest in Tripoli War Cemetery, Libya.
KELLY Derek Godfrey. Flight Sergeant 553913 Royal Air Force died 30th October 1942 aged 20. Son of William and Isobel Kelly, of Highliegh, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Alamein Memorial, Egypt.
LOMAS John William. Able Seaman D/JX311216 Royal Navy on HMS President II. Born 31 August 1907 died 10th October 1942 aged 35. Son of James and Gertrude Lomas, of Broomedge, Lymm, Cheshire. In 1911 he was living with his parents aged 3 at Holmes Chapel, Cheshire. His father had served with the Cheshire Regiment in the great war. Commemorated on the Plymouth Naval Memorial, Devon
Some notes from what remains of his father James Lomas, army record.
He joined up at Chester on the 18th December 1914 aged 34 years occupation labourer and was posted to the Cheshire Regiment as private 18790. He lived with his wife and family at 7 Market Street, Northwich, Cheshire. On the 10th December 1915 he was medically discharged unfit for further war service after 4 days service. He was married on the 10th January 1906 at St Barnabas Church Crewe Cheshire he married Miss Gertrude Williams. (FreeBDM shows Millward which is correct) They had the following children all born at Congleton, Cheshire. Gerty born 31st May 1906, John William born 31st August 1907, James Ernest born 10th May 1909, Harry born 3rd July 1911 and Marjorie born 2nd December 1912.
PEERS Ernest Abel. Lance Corporal 4458525, 11th Durham Light Infantry died 27th June 1944 aged 25. Son of Arthur and Dorothy Peers, of Hoylake, Cheshire. At rest in Fonteney-Le-Pesnel War Cemetery, Tessel, France.
PICKERING Robert Anthony Pickering Telegraphist C/JX271296 Royal Navy of HMS Nile died at sea 9th December 1944 aged 23. Son of Henry William and Gladys Annette Pickering, of Worthing, Sussex. Commemorated on the Rostherne War Memorial in St Mary's Church and also on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent
REYNOLDS George William (This memorial has J W and St Mary's War Memorial, Rosthern has G W Reynolds.) Stoker 1st Class P/SR222 Royal Navy on HMS Barnham died at sea 25th November 1941. She ship was torpedoed U-Boat U-331 and a fire ensued. As the ship started to take on water it listed to port and it was at this point that ships magazines exploded. It sank within four minutes . Commemorated on the Portsmouth Naval Memorial, Hampshire.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=YdrISbwy_zI
SHAW Walter. Corporal 3197031, 2nd Seaforth Highlanders died 10th February 1945 aged 35. Son of James Edward and Annie Shaw, of High Legh, Cheshire. In 1911 he was living with his parents aged 3 at High Legh near Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Mook War Cemetery, Limburg, Netherlands.
GADDUM George Alfred (Memorial has YODDAM G A) Major 130982 15th (Scottish) Regt. Reconnaissance Corps, Royal Armoured Corps died 24th October 1944 aged 34. Son of Henry Edwin and Phyllis Mary Gaddum, of Bowdon, Cheshire. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at The Prior, Bowden, Cheshire and died on war service. His effects went Phyllis Joan Gaddum, spinster. At rest in Woensel General Cemetery, Eindoven,
Noord-Brabant, Netherlands.
TABLEY 1939-1945
BECKE John. Lieutenant 245318 Kings Royal Rifle Corps, 12th Queen's Westminster Battalion died 26th June 1944 aged 22. Son of Maj. Sir Jack Becke, C.B.E., and of Lady Becke (nee Jones), of Over Tabley, Cheshire. His brother Michael also fell. At rest in St. Manvieu War Cemetery, Cheux, France.
BECKE Michael. Lieutenant 296736 Kings Royal Rifle Corps attached to the 8th (2nd Bn. The London Rifle Brigade) Bn. Rifle Brigade died 30th November 1944 aged 21 Son of Maj. Sir Jack Becke, Kt., C.B.E., and Lady Becke (nee Jones), of Over Tabley, Cheshire. Scholar of Oriel College, Oxford; 2nd Class Honours in History. His brother John also fell. At rest in Venray War Cemetery, Limburg, Netherlands.
CRAVEN Arthur Fred. Private 3193707, 5th Kings Own Scottish Borderers died 18th June 1940 aged 20. Born in 1919 in the registration district of Northwich, Cheshire. His mother's maiden name was Craven At rest in Cherbourg Old Communal Cemetery, Manche, France.
WALTON, Sydney Stringer. Private 3656971, 8th Parachute Regiment killed in action on the 6th June, D.Day, 1944 aged 26. He was the son of Cyril and Hettie of Knutsford and was the grandson of Emma Walton also of Knutsford. He is commemorated on a memorial on a family plot at Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire and is at rest Herouvillett Cemetery, France.
WHITEHEAD George J. Gunner 935591 6th Medium Regiment, Royal Artillery died 3rd December 1945 aged 27. Son of Fred and Martha Whitehead, of Wolstanton, Staffordshire husband of Dorothy Whitehead nee Ravensdale of Wolstanton. At rest in Rochefort-Sur-Mer Naval Cemetery, Charente-Maritime, France.
Fallen, but not listed on the WW 2 War Memorial. They have a connection with Knutsford and other villages inscribed on this memorial and townlands close to them.
Cook Herbert McHUGH, Merchant Navy on S.S. Fabian, London. Died 28th August 1942 aged 21. Son of Herbert and Florence McHugh; husband of Edith Mary McHugh, of Allostock, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial, London.
Flying Officer, Wireless Operator 178511 George Mason EDEN, Royal Air Force VR died 20th June 1945 aged 26. Son of George Henry and Edith Eden, of Marthall. At rest in All Saints Churchyard, Marthall, Cheshire.
Private 3536726 Joe HOUGH 7th Manchester Regiment died 8th April 1945 aged 22. Son of Charles and B. Hough, of High Legh, Cheshire. At rest in Reichswald Forest War Cemetery, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany.
Engine Room Artificer 4th Class C/MX77165 John Giles PARTINGTON, Royal Navy on HMS Sultan died 16th February 1942 aged 24. Son of Giles and Lucy J. Partington, of High Legh, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent.
Driver T/3661442 George SMALLWOOD, Royal Army Service Corps died 7th June 1944. Husband of Ruth Smallwood, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Minturno War Cemetery, Italy.
Sapper 4116794 George Edgar ROYLE, Royal Engineers died 24th December 1940 aged 40. Husband of Agnes Royle, of Knutsford. At rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
Corporal 4128461 George Hector WORRALL, 5th Cheshire Regiment died 31st January 1943 aged 31. Son of Mr. and Mrs. William Worrall, of Knutsford, Cheshire husband of Ethel Maud Worrall, of Knutsford. At rest in Kirkee War Cemetery, India.
Leading Aircraftman 632488 Robert BOND Royal Air Force died 4th May 1942 aged 21. Son of William and Martha Bond, of Knutsford, Cheshire, England. At rest in Fawkner Memorial Park Cemetery, Victoria, Australia.
Trooper 7912735 George Reginald WAKEFIELD, 4th Royal Tank Regiment, Royal Armoured Corps died 4th December 1941 aged 21. Son of Reginald and Sarah Ann Wakefield, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Knightsbridge War Cemetery, Acroma, Libya.
Flying Officer, Air Bomber 151636 John Kidston Law PATERSON Royal Air Force VR died 10th November 1943 aged 21. Son of Robert and Elizabeth Anne Kidston Paterson, of Knutsford. At rest in Knutsford Cemetery, Cheshire.
Sergeant Wireless Operator, Air Gunner 1116213 Daniel SUTHERLAND, 36th Squadron Royal Air Force VR died 24th February 1943 aged 24. Son of Daniel and Emily Sutherland. of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in St. Michele Communal Cemetery, Cagliari, Italy.
Private 14550660 Joseph BETHELL, 1st Loyal Regiment, North Lancashire died 28th August 1944 aged 19. Son of Joseph and Lily Bethell, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Florence War Cemetery, Italy.
Civilian, Clement SIEVE died whilst on Steam Ship Gloucester Castle of the Coast of Angola on the 16th July 1942 aged 2 years Son of Leonard Sieve, of Hallside, Knutsford, Cheshire, and of Joan Sieve.
Joan SIEVE aged 21. Wife of Leonard and mother of Clement Sieve, of Hallside, Knutsford, Cheshire.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMHS_Gloucester_Castle
On 15 July 1942, off the coast of Angola, she was intercepted by the German auxiliary cruiser Michel. Michel's commander KzS Helmuth von Ruckteschell chose to attack after dark without warning; The first shells from Michel destroyed the bridge and radio room and consequently no S.O.S. was transmitted. The ship sank with 93 killed, including the Master, Herbert H. Rose, six woman passengers and two children. The remaining 61 survivors were picked up by the Michel and interned at Yokohama, Japan. After repatriation the survivors reported the conditions under which they were forced to work and live.
Civilian Edith WRENCH aged 58, Margaret WRENCH died aged 64 of Grotto Side Farm, Over Peover, Knutsford. Died at Grotto Side Farm, Over Peover on the 23rd December 1940 . At rest in Bucklow Cemetery, Cheshire.
Civillian (Home Guard) Sidney Colin WRENCH, Home Guard; of Grotto Side Farm, Over Peover, Knutsford. Son of Mr. W. H. Wrench. Died at Grotto Side Farm. At rest in Bucklow Cemetery, Cheshire.
Able Seaman P/J111110 Royal Navy on HMS Dolphin died 11th January 1941 aged 33. Son of Daniel James Ferbrache, and of Mary Elizabeth Ferbrache, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Haslar Royal Naval Cemetery, Hampshire.
Pilot Officer William Rupert ELLIS, 944 Balloon Squadron, Royal Air Force VR died 20th January 1942 aged 38. Son of Charles William and Louise Theodora Ellis, husband of Joan Ellis, of Knutsford. At rest in Dunham Massey Church Burial Ground Cheshire.
Private 982288 Leonard HAYSELDEN, 1st Parachute Regiment Army Air Corps died 30th March 1943 aged 27. Son of Percy and Lily Hayselden; husband of Maud Hayselden, of Knutsford, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Medjez-El-Bab Memorial, Tunisia.
Lance Corporal 1492907 Owen TRAYNOR, 6th Royal West Kent Regiment died 18th April 1945 aged 25. Son of John J. and Mary Ellen Traynor, of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Argenta Gap War Cemetery, Italy.
Captain 176556 Peter HIGGINS Royal Engineers attached to 77th Field Coy, Indian Engineers died 8th February 1944 aged 27. Son of Sidney and Margaret Mabel Higgins, of Knutsford, Cheshire. M.A. (Cantab). He may well have been a POW. (Wills and Admin, Ancestry.co.uk) He lived at Somerford Leycester Road Knutsford, Cheshire and died on war service. His effects went to Sidney Higgins, and Sidney Greville Higgins, brick manufacturers. At rest in Taukkyan War Cemetery, Burma
Signalman 2593240 Victor Alan SEED, 5th Divisional Signals Royal Corps of Signals died 10th July 1943 aged 27. Mentioned in Despatches. Son of Albert Ernest and Annie Seed; husband of Eileen Betty Seed (nee Winkworth), of Knutsford, Cheshire. At rest in Syracuse War Cemetery, Sicily, Italy.
Civilian, Peter SANDERS of 43 Moss Lane. Son of Peter Sanders, of Mere Heath Lane, Mere, Knutsford; husband of Gladys Sanders. Died at 43 Moss Lane on the 23rd December 1940 aged 32. At rest in Altrincham Cemetery, Cheshire.
Captain 65428 Howel Joseph MOORE-GWYN, Welsh Guards died 20th September 1947 aged 32. Son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Moore-Gwyn; husband of the Hon. Anne Rachel Pearl Moore-Gwyn (nee Douglas-Scott-Montagu), of Knutsford, Cheshire. B.A. (Oxon). At rest in St Matthew Churchyard, Dyffryn, Glamorganshire, South Wales.
Sergeant 856024 Arthur TOMKINSON 5014 Airfield Construction Squadron, Royal Air Force (Auxiliary Air Force) died 21st May 1944 aged 42. Son of Edith Tomkinson, of Over Peover husband of Ethel Tomkinson, of Snelson. At rest in St Lawrence Churchyard, Over Peover, Cheshire.
Chief Steward John HALE, Merchant Navy on M.V. Lassell Liverpool died 13th May 1941 aged 51. Son of John Hale, and of M. Hale, of Over Peover, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Tower Hill Memorial, London.
Sergeant 2209405 John MANNION, 576 Squadron, Royal Air Force VR died 25th June 1944 aged 19. Son of John Henry Mannion, and of Lily Mannion, of Over Peover, Cheshire. Commemorated on the Runnymede Memorial, Surrey.
Download and preview here inFocus - Powerful Professional WordPress Theme
by Webtreats
A state permitting clear perception and understanding; the area that may be seen distinctly or resolved into a clear image. Get inFocus!
inFocus is a Powerful Professional Premium WordPress theme. It comes with an impressive fully customizable jQuery homepage slider with 3 different staging effects.
Whether you’re a WordPress pro or just a beginner, this theme has you covered. With a huge custom back end area you have complete control over the look and style of your theme. Add images to your homepage slider, add as many sidebar widgets as you like, pull in your latest tweet from Twitter and much much more, all without having to touch a single line of code!
Download and preview here inFocus - Powerful Professional WordPress Theme
Last week i've made a lookbook for a local store - Mesto ("a place" in Russian) you can take a look here. Photo: Maxim Emelyanov.
VENICE BIENNALE / VENEZIA BIENNIAL 2013 : BIENNALIST
www.emergencyrooms.org/biennalist.html
Biennalist is an Art Format by Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel debating with artistic tools on Biennales and other cultural managed events . Often those events promote them selves with thematics and press releases faking their aim . Biennalist take the thematics of the Biennales very seriously , and test their pertinance . Artists have questioned for decade the canvas , the pigment , the museum ... since 1989 we question the Biennales .Often Biennalist converge with Emergency Room providing a burning content that cannot wait ( today before it is too late )
please contact before using the images : Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel 1@colonel.dk
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2013 Thierry Geoffroy / Colonel is represented at the Malives pavilion at the Venice Biennale and then went further and received hospitality at the Zimbabwe pavilion with the Emergency Room Mobile
www.emergencyrooms.org/biennalist.html
Meanwhile Thierry Geoffroy is in Copenhagen the work about todays emergencies continue at the gallery Marianne Friis on the
ULTRACONTEMPOARY WARM UP Wall established for this occasion since 6sept 2013
thierrygeoffroy.blogspot.dk/2013/09/colonel-s-warm-up-wal...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
lists of artists participating at the Venice Biennale :
Hilma af Klint, Victor Alimpiev, Ellen Altfest, Paweł Althamer, Levi Fisher Ames, Yuri Ancarani, Carl Andre, Uri Aran, Yüksel Arslan, Ed Atkins, Marino Auriti, Enrico Baj, Mirosław Bałka, Phyllida Barlow, Morton Bartlett, Gianfranco Baruchello, Hans Bellmer, Neïl Beloufa, Graphic Works of Southeast Asia and Melanesia, Hugo A. Bernatzik Collection, Ștefan Bertalan, Rossella Biscotti, Arthur Bispo do Rosário, John Bock, Frédéric Bruly Bouabré, Geta Brătescu, KP Brehmer, James Lee Byars, Roger Caillois, Varda Caivano, Vlassis Caniaris, James Castle, Alice Channer, George Condo, Aleister Crowley & Frieda Harris, Robert Crumb, Roberto Cuoghi, Enrico David, Tacita Dean, John De Andrea, Thierry De Cordier, Jos De Gruyter e Harald Thys, Walter De Maria, Simon Denny, Trisha Donnelly, Jimmie Durham, Harun Farocki, Peter Fischli & David Weiss, Linda Fregni Nagler, Peter Fritz, Aurélien Froment, Phyllis Galembo, Norbert Ghisoland, Yervant Gianikian & Angela Ricci Lucchi, Domenico Gnoli, Robert Gober, Tamar Guimarães and Kasper Akhøj, Guo Fengyi, João Maria Gusmão & Pedro Paiva, Wade Guyton, Haitian Vodou Flags, Duane Hanson, Sharon Hayes, Camille Henrot, Daniel Hesidence, Roger Hiorns, Channa Horwitz, Jessica Jackson Hutchins, René Iché, Hans Josephsoh, Kan Xuan, Bouchra Khalili, Ragnar Kjartansson, Eva Kotátková, Evgenij Kozlov, Emma Kunz, Maria Lassnig, Mark Leckey, Augustin Lesage, Lin Xue, Herbert List, José Antonio Suárez Londoño, Sarah Lucas, Helen Marten, Paul McCarthy, Steve McQueen, Prabhavathi Meppayil, Marisa Merz, Pierre Molinier, Matthew Monahan, Laurent Montaron, Melvin Moti, Matt Mullican, Ron Nagle, Bruce Nauman, Albert Oehlen, Shinro Ohtake, J.D. ‘Okhai Ojeikere, Henrik Olesen, John Outterbridg, Paño Drawings, Marco Paolini, Diego Perrone, Walter Pichler, Otto Piene, Eliot Porter, Imran Qureshi, Carol Rama, Charles Ray, James Richards, Achilles G. Rizzoli, Pamela Rosenkranz, Dieter Roth, Viviane Sassen, Shinichi Sawada, Hans Schärer, Karl Schenker, Michael Schmidt, Jean-Frédéric Schnyder, Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern, Tino Sehgal, Richard Serra, Shaker Gift Drawings, Jim Shaw, Cindy Sherman, Laurie Simmons e Allan McCollum, Drossos P. Skyllas, Harry Smith, Xul Solar, Christiana Soulou, Eduard Spelterini, Rudolf Steiner, Hito Steyerl, Papa Ibra Tall, Dorothea Tanning, Anonymous Tantric Paintings, Ryan Trecartin, Rosemarie Trockel, Andra Ursuta, Patrick Van Caeckenbergh, Stan VanDerBeek, Erik van Lieshout, Danh Vo, Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, Günter Weseler, Jack Whitten, Cathy Wilkes, Christopher Williams, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, Kohei YoshiyUKi, Sergey Zarva, Anna Zemánková, Jakub Julian Ziółkowski ,Artur Żmijewski.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
other pavilions at Venice Biennale
Andorra Artists: Javier Balmaseda, Samantha Bosque, Fiona Morrison
Commissioner: Henry Périer Deputy Commissioners: Francesc Rodríguez, Ermengol Puig, Ruth Casabella
Curators: Josep M. Ubach, Paolo De GrandisAngola Artist: Edson Chagas Commissioner: Ministry of Culture
Curators: Beyond Entropy (Paula Nascimento, Stefano Rabolli Pansera), Jorge Gumbe, Feliciano dos Santos
Argentina Artist: Nicola Costantino Commissioner: Magdalena Faillace Curator: Fernando Farina
Armenia Artist: Ararat SarkissianCurator: Arman Grogoryan /AustraliaArtist: Simryn Gill Commissioner: Simon Mordant Deputy Commissioner: Penelope Seidler Curator: Catherine de Zegher /AustriaArtist: Mathias Poledna ,Curator: Jasper Sharp /AzerbaijanArtists: Rashad Alakbarov, Sanan Aleskerov, Chingiz Babayev, Butunay Hagverdiyev, Fakhriyya Mammadova, Farid Rasulov /Commissioner: Heydar Aliyev FoundationCurator: Hervé Mikaeloff
Bahamas Artist: Tavares Strachan Commissioner: Nalini Bethel, Ministry of Tourism Curators: Jean Crutchfield, Robert HobbsDeputy Curator: Stamatina Gregory/BangladeshChhakka Artists’ Group: Mokhlesur Rahman, Mahbub Zamal, A. K. M. Zahidul Mustafa, Ashok Karmaker, Lala Rukh Selim, Uttam Kumar Karmaker. Dhali Al Mamoon, Yasmin Jahan Nupur, Gavin Rain, Gianfranco Meggiato, Charupit School/Commissioner/Curator: Francesco Elisei. , Curator: Fabio Anselmi./BahrainArtists: Mariam Haji, Waheeda Malullah, Camille Zakharia /Commissioner: Mai bint Mohammed Al Khalifa, Minister of Culture /Curator: Melissa Enders-Bhatiaa/BelgiumArtist: Berlinde De Bruyckere
Commissioner: Joke Schauvliege, Flemish Minister for Environment, Nature and Culture .Curator: J. M. Coetzee ,Deputy Curator: Philippe Van Cauteren /Bosnia and Herzegovina
Artist: Mladen Miljanovic .Commissioners: Sarita Vujković, Irfan Hošić
Brazil Artists: Hélio Fervenza, Odires Mlászho, Lygia Clark, Max Bill, Bruno Munari
Commissioner: Luis Terepins, Fundação Bienal de São Paulo,Curator: Luis Pérez-Oramas ,Deputy Curator: André Severo
CanadaArtist: Shary Boyle /Commissioner: National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada ,Curator: Josée Drouin-Brisebois/Central AsiaArtists: Vyacheslav Akhunov, Sergey Chutkov, Saodat Ismailova, Kamilla Kurmanbekova, Ikuru Kuwajima, Anton Rodin, Aza Shade, Erlan Tuyakov
Commissioner: HIVOS (Humanist Institute for Development Cooperation)
Deputy Commissioner: Dean Vanessa Ohlraun (Oslo National Academy of the Arts/The Academy of Fine Art)
Curators: Ayatgali Tuleubek, Tiago Bom
Scientific Committee: Susanne M. Winterling
ChileArtist: Alfredo JaarCommissioner: CNCA, National Council of Culture and the Arts Curator: Madeleine Grynsztejn
ChinaArtists: He Yunchang, Hu Yaolin, Miao Xiaochun, Shu Yong, Tong Hongsheng, Wang Qingsong, Zhang Xiaotao
Commissioner: China Arts and Entertainment Group (CAEG) ,Curator: Wang Chunchen
Costa Rica Artists: Priscilla Monge, Esteban Piedra, Rafael Ottón Solís, Cinthya Soto
Commissioner: Francesco EliseiCurator: Francisco Córdoba, Museo de Arte y Diseño Contemporáneo (Fiorella Resenterra)
Croatia Artist: Kata Mijatovic ,Commissioner/Curator: Branko Franceschi.
CubaArtists: Liudmila and Nelson, Maria Magdalena Campos & Neil Leonard, Sandra Ramos, Glenda León, Lázaro Saavedra, Tonel, Hermann Nitsch, Gilberto Zorio, Wang Du, H.H.Lim, Pedro Costa, Rui Chafes, Francesca Leone ,Commissioner: Miria ViciniCurators: Jorge Fernández Torres, Giacomo Zaza
CyprusArtists: Lia Haraki, Maria Hassabi, Phanos Kyriacou, Constantinos Taliotis, Natalie Yiaxi, Morten Norbye Halvorsen, Jason Dodge, Gabriel Lester, Dexter Sinister /Louli Michaelidou
Deputy Commissioners: Angela Skordi, Marika Ioannou/Curator: Raimundas Malašauskas
Czech Republic & Slovak RepublicArtists: Petra Feriancova, Zbynek Baladran ,Commissioner: Monika Palcova, Curator: Marek Pokorny /DenmarkArtist: Jesper Just in collaboration with Project ProjectsEgypt
Artists: Mohamed Banawy, Khaled Zaki
EstoniaArtist: Dénes Farkas ,Commissioner: Maria Arusoo ,Curator: Adam Budak
FinlandArtist: Antti Laitinen , Commissioner: Raija Koli , Curators: Marko Karo, Mika Elo, Harri Laakso
FranceArtist: Anri Sala ,Curator: Christine Macel
GeorgiaArtists: Bouillon Group,Thea Djordjadze, Nikoloz Lutidze, Gela Patashuri with Ei Arakawa and Sergei Tcherepnin, Gio Sumbadze/Commissioner: Marine Mizandari, First Deputy Minister of Culture Curator: Joanna Warsza
GermanyArtists: Ai Weiwei, Romuald Karmakar, Santu Mofokeng, Dayanita Singh Commissioner/Curator: Susanne Gaensheimer /Great BritainArtist: Jeremy Deller ,Commissioner: Andrea Rose , Curator: Emma Gifford-Mead
Holy SeeArtists: Lawrence Carroll, Josef Koudelka, Studio Azzurro ,Curator: Antonio Paolucci
Hungary , Artist: Zsolt Asztalos , Curator: Gabriella Uhl
Iceland , Artist: Katrín Sigurðardóttir ,Commissioner: Dorotheé Kirch
Curators: Mary Ceruti , Ilaria Bonacossa/IndonesiaArtists: Albert Yonathan Setyawan, Eko Nugroho, Entang Wiharso, Rahayu Supanggah, Sri Astari, Titarubi
Deputy Commissioner: Achille Bonito Oliva , Assistant Commissioner: Mirah M. Sjarif
Curators: Carla Bianpoen, Rifky Effendy
IraqArtists: Abdul Raheem Yassir, Akeel Khreef, Ali Samiaa, Bassim Al-Shaker, Cheeman Ismaeel, Furat al Jamil, Hareth Alhomaam, Jamal Penjweny, Kadhim Nwir, WAMI (Yaseen Wami, Hashim Taeeh)
Commissioner: Tamara Chalabi (Ruya Foundation for Contemporary Culture)Curator: Jonathan Watkins.
IrelandArtist: Richard MosseCommissioner, Curator: Anna O’Sullivan
Israel , Artist: Gilad Ratman , Commissioners: Arad Turgeman, Michael GovCurator: Sergio Edelstein
ItalyArtists: Francesco Arena, Massimo Bartolini, Gianfranco Baruchello, Elisabetta Benassi, Flavio Favelli, Luigi Ghirri, Piero Golia, Francesca Grilli, Marcello Maloberti, Fabio Mauri, Giulio Paolini, Marco Tirelli, Luca Vitone, Sislej Xhafa ,Commissioner: Maddalena Ragni
Curator: Bartolomeo Pietromarchi /Ivory Coast Artists: Frédéric Bruly Bouabré, Tamsir Dia, Jems Koko Bi, Franck Fanny
Commissioner: Paolo De Grandis , Curator: Yacouba Konaté
Japan ,Artist: Koki Tanaka ,Curator: Mika Kuraya
KenyaArtists: Kivuthi Mbuno, Armando Tanzini, Chrispus Wangombe Wachira, Fan Bo, Luo Ling & Liu Ke, Lu Peng, Li Wei, He Weiming, Chen Wenling, Feng Zhengjie, César MeneghettiCommissioner: Paola Poponi ,Curators: Sandro Orlandi, Paola Poponi /Korea (Republic of)Artist: Kimsooja
KosovoArtist: Petrit Halilaj ,Commissioner: Erzen Shkololli ,Curator: Kathrin Rhomberg
KuwaitArtists: Sami Mohammad, Tarek Al-Ghoussein
Commissioner: Mohammed Al-Asoussi ,Curator: Ala Younis /Latin AmericaIstituto Italo-Latino Americano
Artists:Marcos Agudelo, Miguel Alvear & Patricio Andrade, Susana Arwas, François Bucher, Fredi Casco, Colectivo Quintapata (Pascal Meccariello, Raquel Paiewonsky, Jorge Pineda, Belkis Ramírez), Humberto Díaz, Sonia Falcone, León & Cociña, Lucía Madriz, Jhafis Quintero, Martín Sastre, Guillermo Srodek-Hart, Juliana Stein, Simón Vega, Luca Vitone, David Zink Yi. /Harun Farocki & Antje Ehmann. In collaboration with: Cristián Silva-Avária, Anna Azevedo, Paola Barreto, Fred Benevides, Anna Bentes, Hermano Callou, Renata Catharino, Patrick Sonni Cavalier, Lucas Ferraço Nassif, Luiz Garcia, André Herique, Bruna Mastrogiovanni, Cezar Migliorin, Felipe Ribeiro, Roberto Robalinho, Bruno Vianna, Beny Wagner, Christian Jankowski ,Commissioner: Sylvia Irrazábal ,Curator: Alfons Hug
Deputy Curator: Paz Guevara /Latvia Artists: Kaspars Podnieks, Krišs Salmanis ,Commissioners: Zane Culkstena, Zane Onckule ,Curators: Anne Barlow, Courtenay Finn, Alise Tifentale
LithuaniaArtist: Gintaras Didžiapetris, Elena Narbutaite, Liudvikas Buklys, Kazys Varnelis, Vytaute Žilinskaite, Morten Norbye Halvorsen, Jason Dodge, Gabriel Lester, Dexter SinisterCommissioners: Jonas Žokaitis, Aurime Aleksandraviciute Curator: Raimundas Malašauskas /LuxembourgArtist: Catherine LorentCommissioner: Clément Minighetti Curator: Anna Loporcaro /MexicoArtist: Ariel Guzik ,Commissioner: Gastón Ramírez Feltrín ,Curator: Itala Schmelz
Montenegro ,Artist: Irena Lagator Pejovic .Commissioner/Curator: Nataša Nikcevic
The Netherlands ,Artist: Mark Manders
Commissioner: Mondriaan Fund ,Curator: Lorenzo Benedetti
New Zealand Artist: Bill Culbert ,Commissioner: Jenny Harper ,Deputy Commissioner: Heather Galbraith ,Curator: Justin Paton /Finland: ,Artist: Terike Haapoja ,Commissioner: Raija Koli ,Curators: Marko Karo, Mika Elo, Harri Laakso
Norway:Artists: Edvard Munch, Lene Berg
Curators: Marta Kuzma, Pablo Lafuente, Angela Vettese
Paraguay Artists: Pedro Barrail, Felix Toranzos, Diana Rossi, Daniel Milessi ,Commissioner: Elisa Victoria Aquino Laterza
Deputy Commissioner: Nori Vaccari Starck , Curator: Osvaldo González Real
Poland Artist: Konrad Smolenski Commissioner: Hanna Wróblewska Curators: Agnieszka Pindera, Daniel Muzyczuk
Portugal Artist: Joana Vasconcelos Curator: Miguel Amado
RomaniaArtists: Maria Alexandra Pirici, Manuel Pelmus Commissioner: Monica Morariu Deputy Commissioner: Alexandru Damia Curator: Raluca VoineaArtists: Anca Mihulet, Apparatus 22 (Dragos Olea, Maria Farcas,Erika Olea), Irina Botea, Nicu Ilfoveanu, Karolina Bregula, Adi Matei, Olivia Mihaltianu, Sebastian MoldovanCommissioner: Monica Morariu ,Deputy Commissioner: Alexandru Damian ,Curator: Anca Mihulet
Russia Artist: Vadim Zakharov ,Commissioner: Stella Kasaeva ,Curator: Udo Kittelmann
Serbia Artists: Vladimir Peric, Miloš Tomic .Commissioner: Maja Ciric
SloveniaArtist: Jasmina CibicCommissioner: Blaž Peršin ,Curator: Tevž Logar
South Africa Commissioner: Saul Molobi ,Curator: Brenton Maart
Spain Artist: Lara Almarcegui , Commissioner/Curator: Octavio Zaya
Switzerland Artist: Valentin Carron Commissioners: Pro Helvetia - Sandi Paucic and Marianne Burki
Curator: Giovanni CarmineVenue: Pavilion at Giardini
Syrian Arab RepublicArtists: Giorgio De Chirico, Miro George, Makhowl Moffak, Al Samman Nabil, Echtai Shaffik, Giulio Durini, Dario Arcidiacono, Massimiliano Alioto, Felipe Cardena, Roberto Paolini, Concetto Pozzati, Sergio Lombardo, Camilla Ancilotto, Lucio Micheletti, Lidia Bachis, Cracking Art Group, Hannu Palosuo
Commissioner: Christian Maretti Curator: Duccio Trombadori
Taiwan Artists: Bernd Behr, Chia-Wei Hsu, Kateřina Šedá + BATEŽO MIKILU Curator: Esther Lu
Thailand Artists: Wasinburee Supanichvoraparch, Arin Rungjang
Curators: Penwadee Nophaket Manont, Worathep Akkabootara
Turkey Artist: Ali Kazma Commissioner: Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts Curator: Emre Baykal
Ukraine Artists: Ridnyi Mykola, Zinkovskyi Hamlet, Kadyrova Zhanna Commissioner: Victor Sydorenko
Curators: Soloviov Oleksandr, Burlaka Victoria
United Arab Emirates Artist: Mohammed Kazem /Commissioner: Dr. Lamees Hamdan Curator: Reem Fadda
Uruguay Artist: Wifredo Díaz Valdéz
Commissioner: Ricardo Pascale Curators: Carlos Capelán, Verónica Cordeiro
USA Artist: Sarah Sze Commissioners/Curators: Carey Lovelace, Holly Block
Venezuela Colectivo de Artistas Urbanos Venezolanos , Commissioner: Edgar Ernesto González Curator: Juan Calzadilla
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Encyclopedic Palace is curated by Massimiliano Gioni
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other Biennales (Biennials ) : Venice Biennial , Documenta Havana Biennial,Istanbul Biennial ( Istanbuli),Biennale de Lyon ,Dak'Art Berlin Biennial,Mercosul Visual Arts Biennial ,Bienal do Mercosul Porto Alegre.,Berlin Biennial ,Echigo-Tsumari Triennial .Yokohama Triennial Aichi Triennale,manifesta ,Copenhagen Biennale,Aichi Triennale
Yokohama Triennial,Echigo-Tsumari Triennial.Sharjah Biennial ,Biennale of Sydney, Liverpool , São Paulo Biennial ; Athens Biennale , Bienal do Mercosul ,Göteborg International Biennial for Contemporary Art
Reference: Photo 24/(122)
From the Girdwood Collection held by the British Library.
This image is part of the Europeana Collections 1914-1918
Date: 25 Jul 1915
See also:
- View this at the British Library's site
Text courtesy of Ultimatecarpage.com:
www.ultimatecarpage.com/car/2422/Alfa-Romeo-8C-2900B-Cort...
First introduced in the 8C 2300, the Vittorio Jano designed eight cylinder engine scored at least one victory in every major race and championship. In its initial 1931 configuration, the engine displaced 2336 cc, it grew gradually to 2905 cc, primarily by increasing the stroke. The engine was created by mounting two alloy blocks of four cylinders on a single crankcase. On top of the two blocks an alloy head was installed, housing two camshafts. Aspiration was forced, through two Roots-Type Superchargers.
Although the engine increased in size throughout its career, its layout and auxiliaries remained very much similar to Jano's 1931 design. One of the best known racing cars powered by the 8 cylinder engine was the Tipo B or P3 of 1932, which is to date considered as one of the finest Grand Prix racers ever constructed. Run by Enzo Ferrari's Scuderia Ferrari, the Alfa Romeos were almost unbeatable.
From its 1931 introduction, the 8C 2300 took four straight victories in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, driven by talented drivers like Tazio Nuvolari and Luigi Chinetti. Tazio Nuvolari's brilliance was even more visible when driving the P3, the first single seater racer ever. The P3 was unbeaten in 1933, but eventually succumbed to defeat by the greater budgets being spent by Mercedes-Benz and Auto Union.
With the rise of the German Grand Prix teams, Alfa Romeo focused more of its attention on sportscar and road racing. Designed specifically for Italy's most legendary road race, the Mille Miglia, was the 8C 2900. Much like the contemporary Grand Prix racers, the 8C 2900 featured all-round independent suspension, with wishbones at the front and swing-axles at the rear. Installed in the chassis was a 220 bhp version of the 2.9 litre eight cylinder engine.
A total of six of these road racers, later known as 8C 2900A, were constructed. Three of these were entered in the 1936 running of the Mille Miglia. The new cars were immediately successful and occupied the first three places at the finish with the Brivio and Ongaro driven 8C on top. A year later a second victory was scored. With the winning cars as a base, a road going customer version was constructed. Dubbed 8C 2900B, the road car featured a de-tuned engine, but other than that is very similar to the racer.
Two versions were available, the 2800 mm short wheelbase (Corto) and 3000 mm long wheelbase (Lungo) versions. Most of these were sent to Touring to be fitted with Berlinetta, Spyder and Roadster bodies. With its competition chassis and high top speed it was faster and quicker than anything its competition had to offer. Due to its high price, only a very few of these supercars were constructed (10 Lungo and 20 Corto chassis).
Being very similar to the competition 8C 2900A, it came as no surprise the 8C 2900B was used as a racer as well. To suit this purpose Alfa Romeo constructed a further 13 8C 2900B chassis fitted with the 220 bhp engine. Many of these were fitted with roadster bodies and were competed in road races like the Mille Miglia. After the two 8C 2900A victories in 1936 and 1937, another two victories were scored by the 8C 2900B in 1938 and 1947. No other Alfa Romeo has scored as many 'MM' victories as the 8C 2900.
This Lego miniland-scale Alfa Romeo 8C 2900B Touring Spider has been created for Flickr LUGNuts 76th build Challenge, - "Viva Italia", - celebrating all things automotive and Italian.
Fountain Paint Pot trail, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
Map (link):
[ www.google.co.in/imgres?imgurl=https://4.bp.blogspot.com/... and Spasm Geysers, Fountain Paint Pot trail, Yellowstone National Park images&ved=0ahUKEwjkgubQv8XeAhUC3Y8KHaFRCQ8QMwhNKBowGg&iact=mrc&uact=8 ]
This part of Lower Geyser Basin seen from a half-mile trail has all four of the hydrothermal features found in the park:
Clepsydra Geyser is a geyser in the Lower Geyser Basin of Yellowstone National Park. Clepsydra plays nearly continuously to heights of 45 feet. The name Clepsydra is derived from the Greek word for water clock. Prior to the 1959 Hebgen Lake earthquake, it erupted regularly every three minutes.
Yellowstone National Park has several hydrothermal areas, so what makes the Fountain Paint Pot Area worth visiting? For starters, this part of Lower Geyser Basin has all four of the hydrothermal features found in the park (mudpots, geysers, hot springs, and fumaroles) and you can see them all from a compact half-mile long boardwalk loop. While none of the many Fountain Paint Pot Area geysers are as famous as Old Faithful, they erupt so frequently that you are almost guaranteed a great show on your short hike. Since the walkway passes all four of Yellowstone’s hydrothermal formations, the hike comes with a guaranteed lesson in hydrothermal volcanism.
Hiking the loop in a clockwise direction, you will first pass through a forest of lodgepole pine snags that were drowned and left lifeless by the surrounding hot springs. As you approach the northwest end of the loop, you will spot a lively collection of geysers. Clepsydra Geyser, Fountain Geyser, Jelly Geyser, Jet Geyser, Morning Geyser, Spasm Geyser, and Twig Geyser erupt with various levels of regularity.
As you progress around the walkway toward the northeast corner, you will pass Red Spouter, which behaves like a fumarole, a hot spring, and a mudpot throughout the year. It is like a hot spring in the winter, a muddy reddish pool in the spring and a steaming fumarole in the drier summer and fall. Wrapping down the east side of the boardwalk, you will pass Leather Pool and a slope of fumaroles. These gaps in the surface whistle and hiss as gasses and steam escape from the ground. Just below the fumaroles, where a little more water is present, the trail circles Fountain Paint Pot. These mudpots bubble and pop as globs of mud springs from the surface like miniature trapeze artists.
Continuing downhill, the hydrothermal features become even wetter as you arrive at Silex Spring. Look down into the small blue pool rimmed with white silica. Water spills over the sides of the spring creating an orange-colored surface covered in rippling runoff. These colors are created by thermophiles, heat-loving microorganisms that live in Yellowstone’s hot springs.
( www.hikespeak.com/trails/fountain-paint-pot-trail-yellows... )
Geothermal features of Yellowstone NP- A brief note:
There are four geothermal features found in the park – Hot springs, Geysers, Fumaroles , and Mud volcanoes/pots.
What is a Hot spring?
Hot spring, also called thermal spring, spring with water at temperatures substantially higher than the air temperature of the surrounding region. Most hot springs discharge groundwater that is heated by shallow intrusions of magma (molten rock) in volcanic areas.
Some thermal springs, however, are not related to volcanic activity. In general, the temperature of rocks within the earth increases with depth. The rate of temperature increase with depth is known as the geothermal gradient. In such cases, the water is heated by convective circulation: groundwater percolating downward reaches depths of a kilometre or more where the temperature of rocks is high because of the normal temperature gradient of the Earth’s crust—about 30 °C / kilometer in the first 10 km. The water from hot springs in non-volcanic areas is heated in this manner.
But in active volcanic zones such as Yellowstone National Park, water may be heated by coming into contact with magma (molten rock). The high temperature gradient near magma may cause water to be heated enough that it boils or becomes superheated. If the water becomes so hot that it builds steam pressure and erupts in a jet above the surface of the Earth, it is called a geyser.
[ Warm springs are sometimes the result of hot and cold springs mixing. They may occur within a volcanic area or outside of one. One example of a non-volcanic warm spring is Warm Springs, Georgia (frequented for its therapeutic effects by paraplegic U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who built the Little White House there) ].
List of hot springs:
[ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hot_springs ]
The science of colors of a hot spring:
[ ttps://www.britannica.com/science/hot-spring]
Many of the colours in hot springs are caused by thermophilic (heat-loving) microorganisms, which include certain types of bacteria, such as cyanobacteria, and species of archaea and algae. Many thermophilic organisms grow in huge colonies called mats that form the colourful scums and slimes on the sides of hot springs. The microorganisms that grow in hot springs derive their energy from various chemicals and metals; potential energy sources include molecular hydrogen, dissolved sulfides, methane, iron, ammonia, and arsenic. In addition to geochemistry, the temperature and pH of hot springs play a central role in determining which organisms inhabit them.
Examples of thermophilic microorganisms found in hot springs include bacteria in the genera Sulfolobus, which can grow at temperatures of up to 90 °C (194 °F), Hydrogenobacter, which grow optimally at temperatures of 85 °C (185 °F), and Thermocrinis, which grow optimally at temperatures of 80 °C (176 °F). Thermophilic algae in hot springs are most abundant at temperatures of 55 °C (131 °F) or below.
What is a Geyser?
A geyser is formed when water collecting below the surface is heated by a magma source. When the water boils, it rises to the surface. If the water has an unobstructed path, it will pool on the surface in the form of a steaming hot springs. If the passage of the water is imposed upon, the pressure will increase. When the pressure becomes too great, the water converts into to steam. Steam takes up 1,500 times the volume of water, and at this point, the pressure becomes so intense that the steam and surrounding water droplets shoot out of the ground in geyser form, erupting until the pressure has abated and the process starts all over again.
What is a fumarole?
It’s a vent in the Earth’s surface from which steam and volcanic gases are emitted. The major source of the water vapour emitted by fumaroles is groundwater heated by bodies of magma lying relatively close to the surface. Carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and hydrogen sulfide are usually emitted directly from the magma. Fumaroles are often present on active volcanoes during periods of relative quiet between eruptions.
Fumaroles are closely related to hot springs and geysers. In areas where the water table rises near the surface, fumaroles can become hot springs. A fumarole rich in sulfur gases is called a solfatara; a fumarole rich in carbon dioxide is called a mofette. If the hot water of a spring only reaches the surface in the form of steam, it is called a fumarole. [ www.britannica.com/science/fumarole ]
What is a mud volcano/ mud pot/ paint pot?
Usually mud volcanoes are created by hot-spring activity where large amounts of gas and small amounts of water react chemically with the surrounding rocks and form a boiling mud.
Geo-chemistry of mud volcano: Hydrogen sulfide gas rising from magma chamber, as in Yellowstone’s, causes the rotten-egg smell. Microorganisms, or thermophiles, use this gas as a source of energy, and then help turn the gas into sulfuric acid. The acid then breaks down the rocks and soil into mud. Many of the colors seen are vast communities of thermophiles, but some of the yellow is pure sulfur. When iron mixes with sulfur to form iron sulfide, gray and black swirls sometimes appear in the mud (From description of the display board in the park).
If the water of a hot spring is mixed with mud and clay, it is called a mud pot. Variations are the porridge pot (a basin of boiling mud that erodes chunks of the surrounding rock) and the paint pot (a basin of boiling mud that is tinted yellow, green, or blue by minerals from the surrounding rocks).
There are other mud volcanoes, entirely of a nonigneous origin, occur only in oil-field regions that are relatively young and have soft, unconsolidated formations.
Sources: [ www.britannica.com/science/mud-volcano ], and display boards of the YNP.
A quick overview of YNP
Yellowstone National Park is an American national park located in Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. Approximately 96 percent of the land area of Yellowstone National Park is located within the state of Wyoming. The Park spans an area of 8,983 km2 comprising lakes, canyons, rivers and mountain ranges. The park is known for its wildlife and its many geothermal features. It has many types of ecosystems, but the subalpine forest is the most abundant. It is part of the South Central Rockies forests eco-region.
It was established by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant on March 1, 1872. Yellowstone was the first national park in the U.S. and is also widely held to be the first national park in the world. Native Americans have lived in the Yellowstone region for at least 11,000 years. Aside from visits by mountain -men during the early to mid-19th century, organized exploration did not begin until the late 1860s.
The park contains the headwaters of the Yellowstone River, from which it takes its historical name. Although it is commonly believed that the river was named for the yellow rocks seen in the ‘Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone’, the Native American name source is unclear.
Yellowstone Lake is one of the largest high-elevation lakes in North America and is centered over the Yellowstone Caldera, the largest supervolcano on the continent. The caldera is considered as an active volcano. It has erupted with tremendous force several times in the last two million year. The Yellowstone Caldera is the largest volcanic system in North America. It has been termed a "supervolcano" because the caldera was formed by exceptionally large explosive eruptions. The magma chamber that lies under Yellowstone is estimated to be a single connected chamber, about 60 km long, 29 km wide, and 5 to 12 km deep. Yellowstone Lake is up to 400 feet deep and has 180 km of shoreline.The lake is at an elevation of 7,733 feet above sea levels. Half of the world's geysers and hydrothermal features are there in Yellowstone, fueled by this ongoing volcanism. Lava and rocks from volcanic eruptions cover most of the land area of Yellowstone. The park is the centerpiece of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, the largest remaining nearly-intact ecosystem in the Earth's northern temperate zone. In 1978, Yellowstone was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
In May 2001, the U.S. Geological Survey, Yellowstone National Park, and the University of Utah created the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory (YVO), a partnership for long-term monitoring of the geological processes of the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field, for disseminating information concerning the potential hazards of this geologically active region.
Hundreds of species of mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles have been documented, including several that are either endangered or threatened. The vast forests and grasslands also include unique species of plants. Yellowstone Park is the largest and most famous mega fauna location in the contiguous United States. Grizzly bears, wolves, and free-ranging herds of bison and elk live in this park. The Yellowstone Park bison herd is the oldest and largest public bison herd in the United States.
Forest fires occur in the park each year. In the largest forest fires of 1988, nearly one third of the park was burnt.
Yellowstone has numerous recreational opportunities, including hiking, camping, boating, fishing and sightseeing. Paved roads provide close access to the major geothermal areas as well as some of the lakes and waterfalls. During the winter, visitors often access the park by way of guided tours that use either snow coaches or snowmobiles.
Fire in Yellowstone NP:
Causes of wildfire in Yellowstone NP
Wildfire has had a role in the dynamics of Yellowstone’s ecosystems for thousands of years. Although many fires were caused by human activities, most ignitions were natural. The term "natural ignition" usually refers to a lightning strike. Afternoon thunderstorms occur frequently in the northern Rocky Mountains but release little precipitation, a condition known as ‘dry lightning’. In a typical season there are thousands of lightning strikes in Yellowstone. Lightning strikes are powerful enough to rip strips of bark off of a tree in a shower of sparks and blow the pieces up to 100 feet away. However, most lightning strikes do not result in a wildfire because fuels are not in a combustible state.
The great fire incidence of 1988
The Yellowstone fires of 1988 collectively formed the largest wildfire in the recorded history of Yellowstone National Park in the United States. Starting as many smaller individual fires, the flames quickly spread out of control due to drought conditions and increasing winds, combining into one large conflagration which burned for several months. The fires almost destroyed two major visitor destinations and, on September 8, 1988, the entire park closed to all non-emergency personnel for the first time in its history. Only the arrival of cool and moist weather in the late autumn brought the fires to an end. A total of 793,880 acres, or 36 percent of the park was affected by the wildfires.
Fire incidence, 2016
As of September 21, 2016, 22 fires (human and lightning-caused) have burned more than 62,000 acres in Yellowstone National Park, making it the highest number of acres burned since the historic 1988 fire.
Heritage and Research Center
The Heritage and Research Center is located at Gardiner, Montana, near the north entrance to the park. The center is home to the Yellowstone National Park's museum collection, archives, research library, historian, archeology lab, and herbarium. The Yellowstone National Park Archives maintain collections of historical records of Yellowstone and the National Park Service. The collection includes the administrative records of Yellowstone, as well as resource management records, records from major projects, and donated manuscripts and personal papers. The archives are affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration.
Bharatanatyam dancer of Sri Devi Nrithyalaya - Chennai (Madras), South India .
Bharatanatyam is one of the classical
Indian dances, other performing arts being kuchipudi, kathakali, mohiniattam, chhau, manipuri.
In this Classical dance form of Bharathanatyam, the music and costumes play and important role. In these photos you can see different traditional Indian dance costumes.
Devadasis , temple dancers, were performing nritta and abhinaya in the temples. They learnt at classical classes the history of
mudras, songs, and performed their arangetram dances. You can buy dvds videos of Bharatnatyam. One of famous Bharata natyam
dancers is actress Shobana.
blogué là avec même une vidéo de l'ambiance ! www.bigoudene46.net/2015/05/amsterdam-d-oudemanhuispoort-...
27 June 2014
Imago Anatopism
LEA10
Second Life
lindenarts.blogspot.com/2014/05/transitt-imago-anatopism....
Mimesis Monday
(Heidi Dahlsveen)
historieforteller.wordpress.com/tag/imago-anatopism/
Alpha Auer
(Elif Ayiter)
www.flickr.com/photos/alpha_auer/sets/72157644047392579
zikiquesti.blogspot.com/2014/05/transitt-imago-anatopism....
From the notecards:
“”
About Imago Anatopism:
The project tells the tale of Volund, a nordic, elf, a symbol following Joseph Campbell's "Hero with a Thousand Faces." Volund undergoes many persona changes during his travels in which he encounters several others that shape and transform him.
Stage 1: At the start of the tale Volund, a Norsk elf who is probably born on the edge of the world between Midgaard – the home of humans, and Utgaard – the home home of giants, is still a young boy who is taken by his father to a mountian where a tribe of dwarfs are to teach him the craft of blacksmithing.
At this early stage all Volund gets are the basics: Skin, shape, eyes and a pair of shoes.
Stage 2: This is the stage in which Volund is refuses the call to the adventure. He is still a timid boy who does not hear, or misinterprets the call or may even misuse the call since he is not yet mature enough to make his own decisions and only follows the decisions of others. All this leads to the murder of his father which makes Volund realise life's dangers and the magnitude of his task.
Symbolizing this blindness, at stage 2 Volund only gets a mask as an attachment.
Stage 3: Setting out on his adventure, Volund goes back to the mountain in order to learn further secrets of forging and the creation of magic tools from the dwarf. Such supernatural aids are both good and bad and once Volund puts on his magic belt and helmet he realizes that it is the dwarfs that killed his father. This makes them his enemy and he has a narrow escape as he leaves the mountain.
Thus, at stage 3 Volund gets a magic belt and helmet as two new attachments.
Stage 4: The idea of the entering another world is often symbolized by the belly of the whale. Volund is no different in this regard, and he throws himself into the ocean to float away to the unknown.
Thus, at stage 4 Volund gets a harpoon as a new attachment.
Stage 5: It is at this stage that Volund starts discovering his strength and power. He now has the ability to forge magic objects, such as life-like statues and wonderful weapons. It is at this stage that Volund meets a valkyrie (in this instance, a symbol for the concept of "goddess"), whom he first sees as a swan who is taking off her feathers in order to bathe in lake. Volund hides her feathers and makes her his first wife. However she leaves him at the end of 7 years when she finally finds her feathers and flees away.
"She is the mother, sister, mistress, bride," Campbell writes of the goddess. But she is also the death of of everything that dies. Campbell continues: "Woman, in the picture language of mythology, represents the totality of what can be known. The hero is the one who comes to know."
At stage 5 Volund gets a big present that he gives to the goddess as an offering as a new attachment.
Stage 6: Volund gets 9 rings from the valkyrie, which is a symbol of union. However these ring are also things that he can measure his own forging up against.
Stage 7: Volund is now supposed to start his journey back home, with newly gained wisdom. However, he faces yet another obstacle through the king who tries to hinder Volund from leaving by crippling him.
Thus, unsurprisingly, at this stage Volund gets a cane. There are several versions of this with different poses.
Stage 8: Volund gets his revenge upon the king by raping his daughter.
To quote Campbell again: "And always, after the first thrills of getting under way, the adventure develops into a journey of darkness, horror, disgust and phantasmagoric fears."
And so, at this stage Volund gets a caged bird with which he can seduce the king's daughter.
Stage 9: Volund has now made the king's daughter pregnant. However, in order to ensure that his own son inherits the throne, Volund also takes the precaution of killing the king's two sons.
Thus, at this stage the new attachment that Volund gets is a sword.
Stage 10: We are now nearing the end of the story and Volund sits bird-like on a roof, and tells the king what has happend and what the future will be.
Stage 11: While Volund started his journey in the ocean his return home is through the sky. He forges himself a huge pair of wings with which he flies back home.
Stage 12: We have come to the end of the tale and Volund has finally returned home as a wiser, older man who now deserves to put on the shiled and mantle of the hero.
Campbell writes: ”The hero is the champion of things becoming, not of things become, because he is.” And later ”Having died to his personal ego, he arose again established in the Self”.
pt.kingdomsalvation.org/videos/mistakes-are-most-easily-m...
Clipe filme gospel (II) "Que erros são mais facilmente cometidos em se acolher ao Senhor?"
Muitas pessoas de fé em círculos religiosos acreditam no que os pastores e presbíteros dizem "Todas as palavras e obras de Deus estão na Bíblia. Seria impossível que qualquer palavra de Deus aparecesse fora da Bíblia". Existe base bíblica para essa afirmação? O Senhor Jesus proferiu essas palavras? Em Apocalipse é profetizado muitas vezes: "Quem tem ouvidos, ouça o que o Espírito diz às igrejas". As palavras do Senhor dizem isso claramente: quando o Senhor retornar nos últimos dias, Ele falará novamente. Em termos de acolher a vinda do Senhor, se não nos apartarmos da Bíblia e buscarmos o que diz o Espírito Santo às igrejas, poderemos dar as boas-vindas ao Senhor?
Fonte da imagem:de "Igreja de Deus Todo-Poderoso"
Aviso Legal e Termos de Uso: pt.kingdomsalvation.org/disclaimer.html
Une messe sur une plage, l'autel est une simple table, le prêtre en aube, son servant et toute l'assistance sont à genoux.
Selon ce site:
omaha-vierville.com/WebOmahaVierville1944/8431-CimetiereP...
le 25 juin, date connue d'une messe au cimetière provisoire de Vierville.
Voir ici un montage pour la localisation :
www.flickr.com/photos/mlq/5432739509/
L'aumônier est le Chaplain (1st Lt) Paul J. Mc. Govern
Selon ce site, Cote : 13 Num 380
recherche.archives.manche.fr/?id=recherche_documents_figures
Analyse : Chaplain (1st Lt) Paul J. Mc. Govern, former pastor of St Mary's catholic church, Danvers, Mass., conducts mass near one of the first American cemetery to be constructed on a beachhead in France. Omaha beach. 25/06/44
le même servant que la p012196:
www.flickr.com/photos/mlq/5412974839/
On voit en arrière plan à gauche un caboteur numéroté 568 P08 et à droite un LST certainement l'US49, voir ici:
www.flickr.com/photos/mlq/5415741163/
La focale de l'appareil photo écrase l'arrière plan, voir ici des informations sur le LST-49:
www.flickr.com/photos/mlq/8118500551/in/photostream
Des Dukws, une Jeep roulent sur la chaussée qui longe la côte, surélevée de 2/3 m par rapport au terre-plein du cimetière qui est en contrebas (zone facilement inondable, soit par la mer en cas de forte tempête de Nord à Nord-est liée à des fortes marées, soit par des eaux de ruissellement.)
La route surélevée est bien visible sur cette vue :
www.footnote.com/image/#38860958
A l'extrême droite un GMC avec ridelles. Au premier plan une zone délimitée par des piquets et un fil de fer barbelé.
PhotosNormandie n'a pu décoder la numérotation du caboteur.
Pour aller plus loin:
www.navsource.org/archives/10/16/160049.htm
photos de cette messe:
Lola Rose & Bella Bijoux performing at Burlesque and Belly Laughs as part of the Fall Capital Fringe Festival, located at The Shop at Fort Fringe.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NOTE: This image is fully copyrighted. Permission is granted only to Burlesque and Belly Laughs as well as the performer(s) in the photo to use these photos provided that:
- (1) Users provide attribution in the form of "Image (c) Andrew Bossi, Flickr"
- (2) For online usage, users provide a link either directly to the photo or to following: "http://flic.kr/s/aHsjCTQMGC"
Members of Burlesque and Belly Laughs & performer(s) in the photo may permit others to use the photo provided the two conditions are met. Users wishing to use the photo in violation of these terms shall contact me to discuss exemptions.
Michael Jackson said in a 2002 will filed Wednesday that he wanted his mother, Katherine, to care for his three children in the event of his death — and that he wanted Diana Ross to raise them if his mother could not.
The will, filed in a Los Angeles court, leaves his estate to the Michael Jackson Family Trust, the details of which were not made public. But TVGuide.com has learned it includes Jackson's children, members of his family, and charities. It does not include his father, Joseph Jackson, with whom Jackson had a strained and tumultuous relationship.
The will excludes Deborah Rowe, who bore Jackson's two older children. Her attorney, Marta Almli, said Rowe had no comment.
The will's executors, attorney John Branca and Jackson family friend and music executive John McClain, said in court documents they were "not certain of the value of the estate" but estimated it at more than $500 million.
"The most important element of Michael's will is his unwavering desire that his mother, Katherine, become the legal guardian for his three children," Branca and McClain said in a statement. "As we work to carry out Michael's instructions to safeguard both the future of his children as well as the remarkable legacy he left us as an artist we ask that all matters involving his estate be handled with the dignity and the respect that Michael and his family deserve."
Branca brokered some of Michael Jackson's most lucrative deals, including his 1985 purchase of the Beatles publishing catalogue for $47.5 million. Jackson's company, ATV, merged with Sony in 1995 to create a massive publishing catalogue that now includes songs by Elvis Presley, Bob Dylan, and Eminem. Michael Jackson's stake has been estimated at about $1 billion.
Branca represented Jackson from 1980 to 2006, and the singer rehired him just weeks before his death.
SALKANTAY TREK TO MACHU PICCHU
7 DAYS - 6 NIGHTS
SALKANTAY TREK TO MACHU PICCHU
7 DAYS - 6 NIGHTS
The amazing Salkantay trek to Machupicchu is one of the famous treks in Cusco and the best alternative route to get to Machupicchu. It is takes you through different types of landscapes from the typical Andean landscape up to the snowcapped mountains and down to the tropical forests and finally gets you into the jungle, Salkantay trek named among the 25 best Treks in the World, by National Geographic Adventure Travel Magazine
If you are thinking to do a hiking trip to Machupicchu and you want to be off of the beaten path and be in touch with the nature; Salkantay trek is the best option. Hiking 75 kilometers = 46 miles and reaching the famous Apacheta (mountain offerings) pass 4621masl = 15160ft which is the highest point of the Salkantay trek: enjoying the amazing view during the hike from Mollepata town to Soraypampa base camp at knee of the Umantay mountain. Then to go up to the highest point to enjoy the view of outstanding snow-capped Salkantay mount. This was one of the most important Apus in the Inca period! Then you are going dawn to Chaullay through the beautiful scenery and then go to Santa Teresa to jump into the natural and medicinal hot spring. And finally we reach to Aguas Calientes town for overnight in the hotel and the last day of your adventure you will get up too early to be the firsts ones up in Machupicchu and enjoy the sunrise.
OVERVIEW
Highlight: Hiking alongside the magnificent Apu Salkantay and then arriving at the ruins of Machu Picchu.
Location: The Salkantay trek begins 3 hours drive west of Cusco, Peru. We pass the village of Mollepata and begin hiking at Sayllapata.
Duration: 7 days/ 6 nights
Level: Moderate to Challenging
Adventure Rating: Given the new restrictions on the Inca trail, Salkantay is the second most popular hike in the region and some of the campsites are less remote than on other trails.
Modality: Trekking, Archaeological and Cultural
Ideal for: Adventure Seekers, Couples , Friends, Nature Lovers, Intrepid People
Altitude: 2,800 masl to 4,650 masl
Inka Trail alternative: Yes, the Salkantay trek is an excellent option.
Departure Dates: Daily departures
All private service departure dates are adapted to your request
Trekkers Wanted: If you wish to join a group tour, please see Next Departures 2014.You can also form your own tour to be advertised on this page. Maximum group size 10.
ITINERARY - SALKANTAY TREK TO MACHU PICCHU 7 DAYS - 6 NIGHTS
DAY 1: : Transfer Airport - Cusco Hotel, City Tour(Afternoon)
See and hear about the 6 archaeological sites of Cusco - the Cathedral, Koricancha (Temple of the Sun), Sacsayhuaman, Q'enqo, Pucapucara and Tambomachay.
DAY 2: Sacred Valley Tour (Full Day)
Visit the Sacred Valley of the Incas on this full-day monumental tour.
Sacred Valley Itinerary:
Visit Pisac Market & Ruins
Ollantaytambo
Chinchero
Chinchero Market
DAY 3: Cusco - Mollepata - Marcocasa - Soraypampa.
We will pick you up from your hotel in Cusco from 5: 00 am to 5:30 am to go by bus to Mollepata. Begin a spectacular scenic drive through the Anta plains with beautiful and panoramic views of the majestic Salkantay and other mountains covered with snow, and the Valley of Apurimac River. After two and a half hours drive we stop in Mollepata to have breakfast for last minute supplies, leg-stretching or to use the bathrooms, before continuing to Marcocasa. There we will meet with our support staff. They will load the equipment on horses and mules. Around 9:30 a.m. we will star our trek toward Soraypampa (3900 meters above sea level) if we keep a regular pace we will take 4 hours approximately to reach to Soraypampa the first camp site where will have lunch after lunch in the afternoon we have an option to go up to Umantay lake (4200masl) which takes 3 hours hike back and forth from the camp to see the glacier lake of Umantay. But if we keep slow pace; we will have lunch at halfway between Soraypampa and Marco Casa maybe after 3 hours of hiking. And after that we hike two a half hours more to Soraypampa. Anyway our camp is going be at Soraypampa. Sleeping tents will be ready and we will have a warm delicious dinner in the evening.
Meals: Lunch, Dinner.
Overnight: Soraypampa in the tents.
Maximum Altitude: 3850 masl.
Minimum Altitude: 2850 masl.
Hiking distance: 14 km approx.
DAY 4: Soraypampa - Salkantay Pass - Huayramachay – Chaullay
Today early in the morning we will wake you up with the coca tea. Around 6:00 we will have a nutritious breakfast around 7:00 am we will start the hardest day of the whole Salkantay trek; we will be walking up to the highest point of the trek. After 6 kilometers uphill through the magnificent scenery of Rocky Mountains and enjoying the view of Salkantay mount. We reach the top of the trek. We will appreciate spectacular views of the mountains and the imposing snowy peaks of the Salkantay (6264 meters above sea level) which is known as the second highest mountain of the Cusco region. After 2 hours downhill around 1:00 p.m. we will have our delicious Peruvian lunch, in the area called Huayracmachay. Then we continue our hike to Chaullay approximately 3 hours of downhill we will get to our camp in Chaullay = 2900 masl Where we will have the sleeping tents ready. Around 7: 00 pm we will have dinner to recover energy from the trek.
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.
Overnight: Chaullay in the tents.
Maximum Altitude: 4650 masl.
Minimum Altitude: 2920 masl.
hiking distance: 20km to Chaullay.
DAY 5: Chaullay - Collpapampa - La Playa - Santa Teresa (Cola de Mono Campsite)
Around 7:30 am; we will start our trek to La Playa through the Santa Teresa valley. We will hike 6 hours approximately during the hike will see: water fall, orchids, coffee, banana, avocado plantations and we will taste the famous passion fruit or granadilla and also we will see a village call Colpapampa also call the “forest cloudy brow” where waterfalls, thermal hot springs, fruit-bearing trees, varied flora, and birds can be observed. If we are lucky, we will be able to see the famous bird called “the Cock of the Rocks”. After lunch at La playa, we will catch a local transportation to Santa Teresa. Where will have an overnight at “cola de mono” campsite. We are the only trekking company allow camping there. In the afternoon we may go to Santa Teresa´s hot spring to enjoy it. Then back at the campsite for happy hours and dinner.
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.
Overnight: Santa Teresa “cola de mono campsite” in the tents.
Maximum Altitude: 2920 masl.
Minimum Altitude: 1600 masl.
Hiking distance: 15km approx.
DAY 6: Santa Teresa (Cola de Mono Campsite) - Hidroeléctrica - Aguas Calientes
After of our delicious breakfast we are going to walk approximately 7 hours. Around 8:30 a.m. we start our trek to Colpani village we will have the opportunity to see coca farms, mandarin, orange and yucca. And a lovely view of the Santa Teresa Valley. We follow along the riverside of Vilcanota River until arrive to the Oroya (cable bridge) then we keep going to Hidroelectrica where will have our lunch. After lunch we going to walk along the train track but on the base of Machupicchu and Waynapicchu Mountain from the way we will see Machupicchu. After two a half hours hike we will be at Aguas Calientes town: base town of Machupicchu for overnight in the hotel and dinner at the local restaurant.
Meals: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner.
Overnight: in Aguas Calientes at the hotel which included in the package.
Maximum Altitude: 2350 masl.
Minimum Altitude: 2000 masl.
Hiking distance: 18 km approx.
DAY 7: Aguas Calientes - Machu Picchu - Ollantaytambo – Cusco
Today early in the morning after breakfast at the hotel you will be able to choose between. Walk up to Machupicchu. Or take bus up to Machupicchu. Any way we will be the first ones into Machupicchu to enjoy the sunrise and you will have two a half hours guided tour. Then you will have the free time to explore Machupicchu by yourselves or if you desire, ascent toward the Huaynapicchu Mountain. Or climb to Machupicchu montaña. After Machupicchu you are going back to Aguas Calientes to take a train to Ollantaytambo and from there by bus back to Cusco. The bus drops you off at your hotel in Cusco.
Meals: Breakfast.
WHAT IS INCLUDED?
Hoteles in Cusco
Day 1: City Tour Half Day
Day 2: Sacred Valley Tour Full Day
Pre-departure briefing at the office in Cusco
Collection from your hotel in the morning and transfer in private transportation to Marcocasa (starting point of the trek).
Personal tents: 2 people in each 4-people-capacity tent, to allow for higher comfort and a safe keeping of backpacks. Our tents are 3-season, highly maintained to ensure an excellent performance in field. Kailas, Pro Aconcagua and Rei 4 Outfitter tents are employed when double accommodation is requested.
One sleeping pad per person.
1 Blanket. Or Liner.
One pillow per person.
Dining tent with tables and chairs
Kitchen tent
English speaking professional and official tourist guide (2 guides for groups of over 10 people)
1 night accommodation in Aguas Calientes
Chef and cooking equipment
Pack animals (to carry tents, food and cooking equipment) – days 1 to 4
Pack animals to carry personal gear up to a maximum of 7kg per person (including sleeping pad and sleeping bag) – days 1 to 4
1 emergency horse every 8 persons – days 1 to 3
Accommodation for all our staff
Meals (4B, 4L, 4D + daily morning snack + daily tea service except last day). Vegetarian or special menus are available at no extra cost
One textile snack bag per person, to avoid the usage of plastic bags that contaminate our environment
Boiled filtered water every day since the first lunch. For your water bottles.
Bio-degradable personal hand soaps
Bio-degradable dishwashing detergents used by our kitchen staff
Others: hot water every morning and evening for washing purposes / boiled water to fill in your water bottle every morning and night, and at lunch time if requested with enough time ahead
First-aid kit including emergency oxygen bottle
Machupicchu entrance fee
One way bus ticket from Aguas Calientes to Machupicchu on day 4
Expedition Train from Aguas Calientes to Cusco. Upgrade to Vistadome or Hiram Bingham service, availability upon request.
Transfer from train station to the hotel in Cusco
24-h guest service: please ask for the emergency number available during your time of visit.
WHAT IS NOT INCLUDED?
Entrance fees - You need to purchase the Boleto de Turistico at the first site you enter (Soles 130 per person; valid for 10 days and allows you entrance into 16 various sites around Cusco and the Sacred Valley).
Entrance to visit the Cathedral of Cusco. S/25 Soles
Entrance to Visit Coricancha. S/ 10 Soles
Meals in Cusco
Day 3: breakfast on day one.
Lunch on the last day after the guided tour at Machu Picchu
Walking Sticks
Sleeping bag: you may rent it from us. Our sleeping bags are -20ºC-comfort (0ºF), mummy form and include a sleeping liner. They are cleaned after every use and have a maximum usage of 30 trips.
OPTIONAL AND RENTALS
Extra night in Aguas Calientes $50 (or email us for alternate options). We will just need to arrange your train back to Cusco for the following day.
Please tell us before final booking process.
Personal horse and horsemen for riding or carrying extra personal belongings while on the trek.
Extra cost is $80 for the trek.
Therma-rest inflatable sleeping pad rent: US$ 5.00 per day
Entrance to the Hot Springs in Santa Teresa.
/ Germany / Baden-Wurttemberg / Tubinga / Castle
inside
www.uni-tuebingen.de/museum-schloss/aktuell.html#schlossf...
define:
castle, Schloß , Burg , Château
a large building formerly occupied by a ruler
and fortified against attack
-
Erstmals wird die Burg, das castrum twingia, 1078 erwähnt. Kaiser Heinrich IV. belagerte damals auf seinem Rückweg von Canossa vergeblich die Festung, die Graf Hugo von Tübingen hielt, ein Verbündeter des Gegenkönigs Herzog Rudolf.
Sie dürfte die Fläche des heutigen Schlosshofes eingenommen haben. Hier residierten die im 12. Jahrhundert zu Pfalzgrafen ernannten Grafen von Tübingen, bis sie aus Geldmangel Burg und Stadt 1301 an das Kloster Bebenhausen verpfänden und schließlich 1342 an die Grafen von Württemberg verkaufen mussten. Wenige Jahre nach dem Tod des Universitätsgründers Graf Eberhard im Bart 1496 begann sein Nachfolger Herzog Ulrich mit ersten Umbauten. Die eigentliche Umgestaltung zu einem Renaissanceschloß erfolgte jedoch erst in den Jahren 1534-1550 nach Ulrichs Rückkehr aus 15 Jahre währendem Exil. Entscheidende Ergänzung erfuhr die Anlage schließlich unter Herzog Friedrich I. in den Jahren 1604-1607 durch den Bau des unteren Schlosstores und der östlichen Bastionen. Schon 1188 ist die Johanneskapelle auf dem Burgberg erwähnt. Sie ist somit die älteste urkundlich bekannte Kirche Tübingens. Beim Neubau des Schlosses wurde sie in den Südflügel integriert. Seit 1815 untersteht sie der württembergischen Landeskirche. Noch heute üben hier die angehenden Tübinger evangelischen Theologen das Predigen. Besonders beeindruckend ist das holzgetäfelte Tonnengewölbe aus der Mitte des 17. Jahrhunderts. Die Wandmalereien, die Gobelins vortäuschen, wurden im späten 19. Jahrhundert aufgebracht. Die Gemälde sind Werke des frühen 18. Jahrhunderts.
Die Kapelle ist nicht für die Öffentlichkeit zugänglich.
Sie kann jedoch über die evangelische Landeskirche Stuttgart zu Hochzeiten etc. in Anspruch genommen werden.
Bilder vom Innern der Kapelle folgen.
_____________
attack this castle of Tübingen, but he failed
here:
1. Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor
The beginning of the conflict known as the Investiture Controversy can be assigned to Christmas night of 1075: Gregory was kidnapped and imprisoned by Cencio I Frangipane, a Roman noble, while officiating at Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. Later freed by Roman people, Gregory accused Henry of having been behind the attempt.
In 1075 Gregory excommunicated some members of the Imperial Court, and threatened to do the same with Henry himself.
He stood in the snow outside the gates of the castle of Canossa for three days, from 25 January to 27 January 1077, begging the pope to rescind the sentence (popularly portrayed as without shoes, taking no food or shelter, and wearing a hairshirt - see Walk of Canossa). The Pope lifted the excommunication, imposing a vow to comply with certain conditions, which Henry soon violated.
On his return to Swabia he tried to attack this castle of Tübingen, but he failed here too.
1076 Investiturstreit – der Streit um die Einsetzung der Bischöfe in nicht nur ihre kirchlichen Ämter, sondern auch in die damit verbundenen Ämter der Reichsverwaltung –
Heinrich IV - seine Auseinandersetzung mit Papst Gregor VII. und sein Gang nach Canossa gelten als Höhepunkt des Investiturstreits. - wollte es nach dem Gang nach Canossa einnehmen, vergeblich.
Gregor VII. befürchtete das Anrücken eines kaiserlichen Heeres Heinrich des IV und wollte einer Begegnung mit Heinrich ausweichen, zog sich deshalb auf die gut befestigte Burg Canossa der Markgräfin Mathilde von Tuszien zurück.
--
1076 La pénitence de Canossa
Grégoire VII déclare Henri IV déchu et l'excommunie ; s'étant rebellé contre la souveraineté de l'Église, il ne peut plus être roi. Celui qui refuse ainsi l'obéissance au représentant de Dieu et fréquente d'autres excommuniés est de fait déchu de sa souveraineté. En conséquence, tous ses sujets sont déliés de l'allégeance qu'ils lui ont prêtée.
-
En échange de son pardon, il obtient le droit de venir en Germanie et l'assurance que le différend entre les princes et le roi serait soumis à son arbitrage
Sur son retour à Swabia il a essayé d'attaquer ce château de Tübingen, mais il a échoué ici aussi.
--
dust and fog
Nebel am hereinbrechenden Abend
Measured EV0.41
-
Focus Mode Manual Focus (3), infinity, unendlich
-
distance: ~ 2500 meters
-
Focal Length
70.6 mm x 5.6 =~ 395 mm analog 35 mm
ISO Speed 400
vom Bergfriedhof aus aufgenommen
2010 Senior portrait sportrait at the beach in Surfside, Texas
Taken with:
Lastolite Hot Shoe EZYBOX Softbox Kit - 24x24" (60x60cm)
Nikon SB-900 Flash/Speedlight (Off Camera)
Edited with:
Hina Rabbani Khar www.thesaturdaypost.com/rv_37_hinakhar.html (Urdu: حنا ربانی کھر ) (born 1977) is a Pakistani member of parliament, affiliated with the PPP. She served as the State Minister for Economic Affairs and Statistics (without any real world experience or academic qualification) as National Assembly member of PML-Q in (2003-2007) & as an MNA and adviser to Prime Minister for PPP (2008 - Present). Q was heavily defeated in 2008 Elections due to economic mismanagement and shortage of food, water and energy. Q refused the ticket for re-election in 08 to Hina Khar. PPP resuced Hina Khar by offering her the ticket in 08. She is PPPs federal minister these days.
Hina Rabbani Khar is rich and famous privileged daughter of feudal politician Ghulam Noor Rabbani Khar who was ineligible for elections because he did not have a university degree www.verveonline.com/26/people/tehmina/tehmina.shtml) and niece of infamous playboy ( www.jazbah.org/bookmfl.php chief minister of Punjab Ghulam Mustafa Khar, who abandoned Bhutto and was exiled from Pakistan for a decade in 77 in a deal with General Zia, to avoid jail time. The Khar political lure comes from the family's land holdings: their sprawling estate includes fisheries, mango orchards and sugarcane fields manned by thousands of poor workers of Punjab. www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/18/pakistan
Khar received a B.Sc. from Lahore University of Management Sciences in 1999 and went on to earn a M.Sc. in hospitality trade and tourism from the University of Massachusetts in 2001. In 2008, she was named to the World Economic Forum's list of young global leaders.In 2008, Hina was elected as a member of National Assembly with a ticket from PPP from the constituency of Muzaffargarh, Punjab. She is adviser to Prime Minister of Pakistan on Economic and Financial affairs.
She owns an upscale ritzy restaurant Polo Lounge with expensive european menu www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_18-1-2004_pg... in Lahore. She Says: This is a place for people with discerning taste who can appreciate good quality food and (upscale) environment.Her dream is to become Prime Minister of Pakistan one day and possibly join PML(n) in next government. She regards Musharraf and Zardari as visionary leaders. www.pakistanileaders.com.pk/profilesdetail.php?id=257
And talking of failures, it was most interesting to see Hina Rabbani Khar vent her ire at the miserable performance of the previous Shaukat Aziz government. It is amazing how some of our politicians change their views and loyalties effortlessly in tune with changing times. It was not that long ago that the same Hina Rabbani Khar could be heard praising Shaukat Aziz and his economic genius to no end. Of course at the time, she was sitting on the PML-Q occupied treasury benches. Being a wily Khar after all, she smelled the change in the air and joined the PPP a few weeks prior to the general elections and she is, once again, looking pretty and sitting pretty as always on the treasury benches. On a second thought maybe her politics is constant: that of occupying a treasury bench. Period!
/print1.asp?id=118520
She says she loves diamonds, pearls, rubies, designer purses, expensive shades and fast expensive cars. She admits she knows nothing about real economics or finance but loves to give interviews about Pakistan Economy and pretend to be expert. or sit with global financial leaders and sign documents, she says my job is to charm western leadership by looking good. When asked what she likes about her job, after a long pause she replied, frequent free first class trips outside Pakistan, staying in luxury hotels, shopping and receiving expensive gifts.
Our feudal and their kins have always saluted the power and the rule, and their this flexibility has made them the masters of our wretched destinies.
With grateful acknowledgement to the Roll of Honour (RoH) web-site that served as the starting point for my research.
www.roll-of-honour.com/Norfolk/Martham.html
Allen, Frederick………………………………………………(RoH)
Driver 60648. "B" Battery, 57th Brigade Royal Field Artillery. Died on 31st March 1919. Aged 33. Son of John Frederick and Jane Allen, of Martham, Norfolk; husband of Beatrice Allen, of 142, Colney Hatch Lane, Muswell Hill, London. Buried: Mikra British Cemetery, Kalamaria, Greece. Ref. 1329.
CWGC: www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=340311
Picture Norfolk – no match
1901 Census. There is a 15 year old Frederick E, born Martham, Norfolk, whose relationship to the head of the household, John S Waddell, (aged 30 Grocer, Draper and Clothier Shop Keeper from Stirling, Scotland) is recorded as a Servant. However his occupation is given as Assistant Grocer and Draper. The household concerned is Bon Marche, Snape Road, Leiston, Suffolk – which sounds like the family and shop assistants were living on the premises. John Waddell has four children, the youngest of which is only one, all of whom were born Martham. He has three other live-in shop assistants, with one of them born Martham – sounds very much like he moved wholesale from a shop in Martham within the last 12 months.
As Frederick wasn’t living with his family, I went back to the 1891 census, when the 5 year old Frederick was living at White Street, Martham. This was the household of his parents, John, (aged 31 and a Prudential Assurance Agent from Southwark, Surrey) and Sarah, (aged 30 and from Upton, Norfolk). Their other children are:-
Jane…………..aged 7………….born Martham
Walter………..aged 4………….born Martham
Alice…………aged u/1………..born Martham
Additional info (November 2015) - see comments below
Bracey, William Daniel………………………………………….(RoH)
Private 19913. 7th Battalion Norfolk Regiment. Died of wounds on 8th May 1917. Aged 19. Born Martham. Enlisted Gt. Yarmouth. Son of Albert Ernest and Henrietta Bracey, of Morse House, Martham, Norfolk. Buried: Faubourg D'Amiens Cemetery, Arras, Pas de Calais, France. Ref. V. D. 26.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=283548
Picture Norfolk – no match
1911 Census. There is a William Bracey born Martham circa 1898 who was recorded in the Flegg District that covers the village. He doesn’t appear to be on the 1901 census. Absent also is Albert and Henrietta. Henrietta is on the 1911 census in the Flegg district but there is still no Albert.
The Commonwealth section of the FAUBOURG D'AMIENS CEMETERY was begun in March 1916, behind the French military cemetery established earlier. It continued to be used by field ambulances and fighting units until November 1918. The cemetery was enlarged after the Armistice when graves were brought in from the battlefields and from two smaller cemeteries in the vicinity.
www.cwgc.org/search/cemetery_details.aspx?cemetery=28800&...
The Battalion had sustained a number of casualties in an attack on the 29th/30th April and Private Bracey could have been one of those. They returned to the same sector of the front between the 4th to 8th May, with casualties every day - the Battle of Arras was winding down into a stalemate.
Extract from the Battalion War Diary for this last period.
4th May 1917 Monchy Wood.
News was received this morning that the attack made by the 36th + 37th Infantry Brigades had been unsuccessful. A slight advance had been made by the 36th Infantry Bde. At 9 pm tonight the 35th Infantry Bde relieved the 37th Infantry Bde with the 7:Norolk regt in the front line, 9:Essex Regt in support. 7:Suffolk Regt + 5:R.Berks Regt in reserve. The 7:Norfolk Regt relieved the Queens + Royal W. Kents in RIFLE TRENCH+MONCHY TRENCH with Battn HQ in MONCHY WOOD. Relief was complete by twelve midnight.
(Side note - On the way up to the front line, the Bn came under heavy shelling. 2nd Lieut C F W Nash was wounded, O.R’s 1 killed, 6 wounded).
5th May 1917 Monchy Wood 11pm
There has been no work done on the trenches since the 7:Norfolk Regt was relieved on April 30th and it is still dangerous to go to the front line from Bn HQ in daylight. Tonight large working parties of the Essex Regt, Pioneers and R.Es beside our own parties are working on new trenches and on the C.T to the Front Line. 2nd Lieut. H English was wounded by rifle fire while out supervising the digging of a new trench.
6th May 1917 Monchy Wood. 11pm.
The enemy shelled MONCHY TRENCH (Support Line) and the vicinity of Bn HQ during the day, knocking out a Vickers Gun crew and causing two casualties to ourselves - 1 killed + 1 wounded. Working is in progress tonight as last night and all trenches should be complete by daylight tomorrow.
7th May 1917 Monchy Wood. 11pm.
The enemy bombarded our Support Line and Bn HQ intensely + at short intervals throughout last night + this morning. Retaliation was obtained from our Field Guns + Heavies.
2nd Lieut K R POTTER, commanding “A” Coy, was wounded by shrapnel in the face during the afternoon.
At about 10 pm the 5’ Royal Berkshire Regt.began to relieve the 7’Norfolk Regt in the front line. Our relief companies moved off independently to the BROWN LINE.
8th May 1917 Brown Line 11pm.
About 1 am this morning, the enemy shelled the BROWN LINE. Major H L GIELGUD was wounded in the shoulder and later 3 men were killed and 12 others severely wounded. The remainder of the day has passed uneventfully. The batteries in rear of BROWN LINE were shelled at intervals but we have sustained no further casualties. We found a working party of 250 other ranks for work under OC 7’ Suffolk Regt at 9pm tonight.
Additional info (November 2015) - see comments below
Brown, Arthur………………………………………………………(RoH)
RoH - No further information available at present.
Picture Norfolk – no match
Arthur’s recorded in the Flegg District on the 1911 census
Arthur born Winterton circa 1903
Reginald Arthur born Caister on Sea circa 1902
Update November 2015 - now identified - see comments below
Brunson (Arthur) Frederick………………………………………..(RoH)
Second Hand 519 SA. H.M.S. City of London Royal Naval Reserve. Died on 12th March 1919. Aged 26. Son of Mr. and Mrs. James Brunson, of Repps Rd., Martham, Great Yarmouth. Buried: Martham (St. Mary) Churchyard Extension. Ref. F. 42
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=2802653
(Arthur Frederick)
Norlink – no match
The 8 year old Arthur F. born Martham, was recorded on the 1901 census at Somerton Road, Martham. This is the household of his parents, James W, (aged 33 and a Labourer on Farm&Garden) and Ellen (aged 32 and from Salhouse). Their other children are:-
Dora……………………..aged 10
Elsie M…………………..aged 4
James……………………aged 6
Sydney…………………..aged 2
The normally reliable Naval Net site has no record of this individual, so it is likely that he had already been demobilised at this time. The Spanish Flu was rampant during this period- (see the later entry for Redvers Turner on Panel 3)
The death of an Arthur F Brunson, aged 26, was recorded in the Flegg District of Norfolk, (which covers Martham) in the January to March 1919 quarter.
Additional info (November 2015) - see comments below
Brunson, John Dyball………………………………………………………(RoH)
Able Seaman 199115. H.M.S. Coquette Royal Navy. Died on 7th March 1916. Born circa 1883 at Martham. Listed as a Crew Member, Ordinary Seaman, in the 1901 census, aged 18, born Martham. Son of Calara Brunson (widow in 1891 census), brother of Ethel, Charles and Ann. Commemorated: Chatham Naval Memorial, Kent. Column 16.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=3050685
Norlink – no match
Coquette, old destroyer
MINED AND SUNK IN COMPANY IN NORTH SEA
www.naval-history.net/xDKCas1916-03Mar.htm
Additional info (November 2015) - see comments below
Dyball, Leslie Uric………………………………………………………..(RoH)
Private 28318. 1st Battalion Wiltshire Regiment. Formerly T4/084429 Royal Army Service Corps. Killed in action in France & Flanders on 23rd October 1918. Aged 26. Born and lived Martham. Enlisted Norwich. Father of Phyllis Dyball. Buried: Ovillers New Communal Cemetery, Solesmes, Nord, France. Ref. A. 7/26.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=336212 (L.U.)
Norlink – no match
The 9 year old Leslie U, born Martham, was recorded on the 1901 census at Hemsby Road, Norwich. This was the household of his grandparents, Thomas, (aged 69 and a Farmer from West Somerton) and Maria, (aged 65 and from Martham). Also in the household is another grand-son, Frank C. (aged 17 and a Railway Porter from Catfield). Thomas and Maria also have a married daughter living with them, Naomi L, Harriss (aged 22 and born Martham) along with her husband, Walter, (aged 25 and a Carpenter and Wheelwright from Filby) and their children :- Dorothy M. (aged 1) and Walter A, (aged 3), both born Martham.
23rd October 1918
02.00. Battn in conjunction with 7th Battn Leicestershire Regt on the left and 64th Inf Bde on the right attacked red dotted line W of OVILLERS and red line W of VENDIGIES-AU-BOIS. Battn succeeded in taking all its objectives and held them until 6th Battn The Leicestershire Regt and 62nd Inf Bde went through to capture further objectives. Casualties: Killed Officers. 2nd Lieuts H R Palmer & H B Cooper. Ors 23. Wounded Officers Lieut W J E Ross, 2nd Lieuts E G Blackmore and H Aston. Ors 120. Missing Officers Nil. ORS 7. 16.00 Battn took over defence of RED LINE. Battn HQ established at E.23c.8.2. (Map sheet 57b.NE)
Dyball, Lewis Ernest………………………………………………………(RoH)
Corporal 15937. 9th Battalion Norfolk Regiment, attd. Trench Mortar Battery. Killed in action in France & Flanders on 1st December 1916 (CD gives 1st December 1917) Born Martham. Enlisted Norwich. Buried: Woburn Abbey Cemetery, Cuinchy, Pas de Calais, France. Ref. I. E. 20.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=594279(shown as L E)
The Great War Roll of Honour records the death of Private 15937 Lewis Dyball of the Norfolk Regiment in 1916.
Norlink – no match
On the 1901 census, the 5 year old “Louis E” is recorded at Hemsby Road, Martham. This is the household of his parents, Edgar E, (aged 26 and a Farmers Son from Martham) and Elizabeth R, (aged 27 and from Chesham, Surrey). Their other children are:-
Edgar J G………………aged u/1………born Martham
Edith S M………………aged 2………..born Martham
Marjorie N……………..aged 4………..born Martham
On the 1911 one, a Lewis E, born circa 1896 Martham, is recorded in the Flegg District that covers the village.
Futter, Robert Benjamin…………………………………………………..(RoH)
Private 15510. 9th Battalion Norfolk Regiment. Killed in action in France & Flanders on 15th September 1916. Born Martham. Enlisted Great Yarmouth. Commemorated: Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France. Pier and Face 1 C and 1 D.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=750499
Norlink – no match
The 5 year old Robert, born Martham, is recorded on the 1901 census at Black Street, Martham. This is the household of his parents, Henry, (aged 39 and a Builder from Martham) and Alberta (?), (aged 38 and from Gt.Yarmouth). Their other children are:-
Alberta……………aged 10………born Martham
Edward……………aged 6……….born Martham
Emily……………..aged 14………born Martham
Flora………………aged 3……….born Martham
John………………aged 12………born Martham
Maud……………..aged 19………born Martham….Dressmaker
Thomas………….aged 17……….born Martham…..Carpenter
Family headstone in the Church yard
In Loving Memory of
Henry
The beloved husband of
Arletta Futter
Who passed away Dec.6th 1938
Aged 77(?) years
Also of the above Arletta
Who passed away Aug.2nd 1958
Aged 98 years
Re-united
Also of Robert
Son of the above
Killed in Action in France
15th September 1916
Aged 2? Years
15th September 1916 Battle of the Somme
The last great Allied effort to achieve a breakthrough came on 15 September in the Battle of Flers-Courcelette with the initial advance made by 11 British divisions (nine from Fourth Army, two Canadian divisions on the Reserve Army sector) and a later attack by four French corps.
The battle is chiefly remembered today as the debut of the tank. The British had high hopes that this secret weapon would break the deadlock of the trenches. Early tanks were not weapons of mobile warfare—with a top speed of 2 mph (3.2 km/h), they were easily outpaced by the infantry—but were designed for trench warfare. They were untroubled by barbed wire obstacles and impervious to rifle and machine gun fire, though highly vulnerable to artillery. Additionally, the tanks were notoriously unreliable; of the 49 tanks available on 15 September, only 32 made it to the start line, and of these, only 21 made it into action
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Flers-Courcelette
An intense preliminary bombardment began on 12 September and at 6.20am on Friday 15 September the advance began in mist and smoke. XIV Corps attack, on the extreme right, where hopes of breakthrough were pinned, fared badly; 56th Division and 6th Division lost heavily as tanks and artillery support failed to neutralise vital defensive positions
www.cwgc.org/somme/content.asp?menuid=27&id=27&me...
151 Soldiers of the 9th Battalion appear to have died on this day using the (late lamented) Geoff‘s Search Engine on the CWGC database.
Garman, Harry…………………………………………………………….(RoH)
Private 2247. 1st/4th Battalion East Yorkshire Regiment. Killed in action in France & Flanders on 18th June 1915. Aged 26. Born Norwich. Lived Great Yarmouth. Enlisted Hull. Railway Porter by trade. Son of William [Railway Gateman - 1901 census] and Elizabeth Garman, of 42, Gatehouse, Martham, Great Yarmouth; brother of Blanche (below). Commemorated: Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial, Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Panel 21 and 31.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=930467
Norlink – no match
The 13 year old Harry, born Norwich and already working as Labourer on Farm, is recorded on the 1901 census at No.42. Gatehouse, Martham. This is the household of his parents, William, (aged 39 and a Railway Gate Man from Aylsham), and Elizabeth, (aged 32 and from Norwich). Their other children are:-
Blanch…………aged 3…………..born Holt …see below
Ernest………….aged 10…………born Norwich
George…………aged 17………..born Norwich……..Railway Porter
Nellie………….aged 8…………born Holt
William………..aged 6…………born Holt
See below for details from Blanche’s headstone.
Garman, Blanche…………………………………………………………(RoH)
Blanche was suffering from Chlorosis, which is a severe form of anaemia which turns to complexion green and can weaken the heart. Whilst workng as a tractor driver in the Land Army her tractor caught fire which resulted in her having a fatal heart attack, between April and June 1919 [GRO reference Flegg 4 b 45]. Aged 21, born 1898 at Holt. Daughter of William [Railway Gateman - 1901 census] and Elizabeth Garman, of 42, Gatehouse, Martham, Great Yarmouth; sister of Harry (above).
Norlink – no match
See brother Harry above for census details.
Blanche is buried in the Churchyard. Her headstone reads
BLANCHE ELIZABETH
The beloved daughter of William and Elizabeth Garman, died June 30th 1919, aged 21 years.
Also of their son
PRIVATE HARRY W.GARMAN ??? E.Yorks
Killed in Action near Ypres
June 18th 1915
Aged 26 years.
Gymer, William……………………………………………………………(RoH)
Private 43219. 1st Battalion Norfolk Regiment. Died of wounds in France & Flanders on 21st September 1916. Aged 19. Son of William and Laura Gymer, of Cess, Martham, Norfolk. Buried: Grove Town Cemetery, Meaulte, Somme, France. Ref. I. H. 14.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=31135
Norlink – no match
The four year old William, born Martham, is recorded on the 1901 census at Cess, Martham. This is the household of his parents, William, (aged 39 and a Coal Carter from Martham) and Laura, (aged 39 and from East Ruston).They also have another son, Arthur E. (aged 6 and from Martham), while Laura has a son prior to marrying William as there is a Walter Watson, (aged 9 and born Martham) whose relationship to William is shown as Step Son.
From a family headstone in the churchyard
In loving memory of
Private WILLIAM GYMER ???Norfolk Regiment
The beloved son of William & Ann Mary Gymer
Killed in action Sept.21st 1916
Aged 19 years.
Buried in the British Military Cemetery, Groves Town.
Also of
HARRIET, the beloved wife of WILLIAM GYMER
Died August 9th 1885 Aged 23 years
Also of
ANN MARY his second wife
Died December 14th 1899 Aged 30 years
Also 2 children died in infancy
GROVE TOWN CEMETERY, MEAULTE
In September 1916, the 34th and 2/2nd London Casualty Clearing Stations were established at this point, known to the troops as Grove Town, to deal with casualties from the Somme battlefields.
www.cwgc.org/search/cemetery_details.aspx?cemetery=3200&a...
From an article in the EDP in 2009
This prolonged carnage on the Somme, one of the lowest points of that war, has resurfaced as the result of a phone call to a former Gorlestonian from a Norfolk family that lost young men in the mud of France in 1916.
Mike King, now of Lowestoft, tells me: “In 1983 an old friend and long-time Gorleston neighbour, Henry Leonard (“Pop”) Gymer, died, aged 80. Later his daughter Lily rang to ask me to visit her at her home off Southtown Road so she could give me some items relating to her father, found in his loft, because she knew of my interest in local and family history.
“Those items made up a small archive of artefacts from the First World War, including: four medals and gold-printed scroll relating to Private John James Gymer, Imperial War Graves Commission book on Grove Town Cemetery in France, 20 postcards of wrecked villages in the Somme area, parcel wrapper sent home from France, and photographs of a large group of people on a railway station and of wooden crosses in a war cemetery.
“Lily explained that John James Gymer was Pop's older brother who was killed fighting on the Somme. The cemetery book's index included an adjacent entry that was also a Gymer, and Lily said these young Gymer men were cousins.”
Recently Mr King researched the Gymers, discovering that James John Gymer. born in 1896 in Martham, lived with his parents, Henry John and Georgiana, and younger siblings Lily and Henry junior in Anson Road, Southtown. On joining the Norfolk Regiment he was assigned to the 9th Battalion.
Also, his cousin, William Gymer, born 1897, lived with his parents, William and Laura Gymer, and siblings at Cess, Martham. He too joined the Norfolk Regiment as a private, assigned to the 1st Battalion. Henry John and William senior were brothers, sons of John and Sarah Gymer, of Martham. The Gymer family had been in the Damgate area of Martham for several generations.
Mr King mused: “Did James John and William junior know each other? It is possible, but by the 1901 census Henry and Georgiana had moved with their children to Anson Road, before James was four. Certainly they would have known of each other's existence. Maybe either family got on the M&GN Railway at Beach Station in Yarmouth, or Martham, to visit one another!”
He wonders if the Gymer cousins, who fought in that epic Battle of the Somme, were aware they were fighting in the same area? “Were they in touch with each other? We will never know.”
“William was the first casualty, killed outright in September, aged 19. James lasted nine more days before dying of wounds although it is possible he was wounded in action much earlier. By coincidence they are buried in adjacent rows in the Grove Town Cemetery.
“The bodies of the fallen were moved there in April 1917 and the cemetery was immediately closed. This cemetery contains the bodies of 1366 UK soldiers, 14 from Australia, one from New Zealand and one from France as well as 36 German prisoners.
“The two photographs are quite poignant and I imagine they were hung on a wall in the family home. About 1920, the Government paid for relatives to visit the graves of their loved ones and the first shows a group - mainly female (mothers and widows presumably), on platform one at Thorpe Station in Norwich - of relatives of Norfolk Regiment casualties.
“Many folk from the Yarmouth area were in this group but the only one I can identify is the lady on the extreme right with a white shawl, Georgiana Gymer. In all probability her sister-in-law Laura Gymer is near her. Those who remember Pop Gymer will see that he was the spitting image of his mother!
“The second photograph is of the grave itself, marked with a temporary wooden cross. Georgiana had put a wreath on the cross with the words 'From his dear mother…' Her umbrella and other personal items can be seen leaning against the cross. “
The name of James appears on the war memorial in St George's Park, Yarmouth, and that of William is on the war memorial in Martham churchyard.
www.edp24.co.uk/news/casualties_of_the_somme_recalled_1_5...
Hayton, George…………………………………………………..(RoH)
Private 6930. 9th Battalion Norfolk Regiment. Killed in action in France & Flanders on 15th July 1918. Aged 36. Born Martham. Enlisted Norwich. Son of George and Emma Hayton, of Martham, Norfolk. Buried: La Clytte Military Cemetery, Heuvelland, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium. Ref. V. E. 1.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=438432 (G)
Norlink – no match
The 18 year old George W., born Martham, and employed as a Carpenters Labourer, was recorded on the 1901 census at Black Street, Martham. This was the household of his parents, George, (aged 48 and a Parish Clerk and Gardener from Martham) and Harriet, (aged 50 and from Ingham, Norfolk). Their other children are:-
Edmund J ………aged 15…….born Martham…….Engineers Labourer
George W……….aged 13…….born Martham…….Carpenters Labourer
James A…………aged 13…….born Martham
Leopold…………aged 17…….born Martham…..Agricultural Labourer
Ruth…………….aged 10……..born Martham
Hodds, John Spencer……………………………………………………(RoH)
Private 18711. 2nd Battalion Norfolk Regiment. Killed in action in Mesopotamia on 22nd April 1916. Aged 35. Born Martham. Enlisted Norwich. Husband of Lilian Maud Hodds, of Repps Rd., Martham, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. Commemorated: Basra Memorial, Iraq. Panel 10.
CWGC www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=866036
Norlink – no match
The 19 year old John, born Martham and employed as an Agricultural Labourer is recorded on the 1901 census at Piggins Yard, Martham. This is the household of his widowed Grandmother, Mary Utting, (aged 74 and a Charwoman from Repps cum Bastwick). Also in the household is John’s brother, William, aged 17 and also an Agricultural Labourer from Martham. On the 1891 census, the 10 year old John is recorded at 2 Repps Road, Martham, the household of his parents Charles, (aged 43 and a General Labourer from Martham) and Elizabeth, (aged 40 and from Martham). As well as William and John, there is a Frederick, (13), Gertrude, (5), Edward (3) and Mildred, (2 months) – all born Martham.
To protect the British owned oil fields in Persia and to stop Turkish domination of the Middle East an Indian Expeditionary Force was sent to the Persian Gulf. As part of this Force the Norfolk Regiment left Belgaum for Bombay under the command of Lieu-Colonel E C Peebles and boarded HM Transport Elephanta on 6 November1914. The 2nd Norfolks arrived at Seniyeh in the Persian Gulf on 15 November 1914 and joined the 18th Brigade, which consisted of the 7th Rajput's, 110th Mahratta Light Infantry and 120th Rajputana Infantry.
www.stephen-stratford.co.uk/pte_wilby.htm
After some initial, (but costly) victories , the Allied force were eventually forced to retreat, and out-manoeuvred, found themselves trapped inside the city of Kut. Most of the 2nd Battalion was caught inside the city walls, although a few were outside, and together with the remnants of another holed up battalion from the Dorset Regiment, formed a composite unit, the “Norsets”, which was involved in several attempts to lift the siege.
The Siege of Kut
During the siege of Kut which lasted for 5 months aircraft were first used to try and drop supplies to the garrison. The aircraft could not carry enough supplies some were shot down and the attempt ended in failure. The Turks used aircraft more successfully in bombing the town, many troops having been wounded were then killed in hospital by an air raid. Several attempts were made to break out across the river on floating bridges, but as the river was in flood at this time of the year the attempts failed. Radio contact with the outside world was kept up until the end.
Towards the end of the siege the daily ration for British troops was reduced to ten ounces of bread and one pound of horse or mule flesh. Indian troops who refused to eat flesh were dying of scurvy at the rate of 10 to 20 a day. In all 1746 people died during the siege from wounds or disease.
Kut falls
On 29 April 1916 Kut surrendered to the Turks. After agreeing terms, Townshend marched his troops out into captivity, and certain death for most of them. Most of the Arabs left in Kut were hanged by the Turks for helping the British.
www.stephen-stratford.co.uk/pte_wilby.htm
On 22nd April the Norsets (part of the 21st Brigade) were in the marsh area trying to relief the Kut fortress. Heavy fighting took part in the early hours of the day. Of the 45 officers and 858 other ranks 22 OR's were killed, 146 wounded and 22 missing.
The attack was beaten back and the Norsets eventually retired when Kut was captured.
1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/lofiversion/index.php/t...
Private Hodds could therefore have died in the relief party who attacked on the 22nd, the day of his death or could have been part of the main Battalion holed up in Kut.
Lagu Pujian - Semua yang dengan Tulus Mengasihi Tuhan adalah Orang Jujur
Bait 1
Murni dan jujur, seperti anak kecil yang polos,
cemerlang dan penuh vitalitas muda,
mereka hanya mengasihi Tuhan, bebas dari daging, seperti malaikat yang datang ke dunia.
Tanpa tipu daya, hanya hati terbuka, mereka bermartabat.
Mereka memberikan hati kepada Tuhan dan memperoleh kepercayaan-Nya.
Mereka adalah orang-orang jujur yang dikasihi Tuhan.
Refrain
Biarkan firman Tuhan membimbing kita setiap hari,
maka kita diberkati dan Roh Kudus memimpin kita.
Kita menerima pengawasan Tuhan, hidup di hadapan-Nya.
Sungguh-sungguh mengasihi Tuhan berarti bersukacita.
Orang-orang jujur memperoleh keselamatan Tuhan dan memasuki kerajaan,
mereka akan hidup bersama Tuhan selamanya.
Kerajaan Kristus adalah surga bagi orang-orang jujur.
Dan itulah rumah mereka yang indah.
Bait 2
Semua yang mencintai kebenaran memiliki hati yang jujur dan pasti akan diberkati Tuhan.
Kita bersukacita dalam melakukan kebenaran.
Dengan menaati Tuhan, hati kita damai.
Kita takut akan Tuhan dan menjauhi kejahatan, hidup oleh firman Tuhan.
Hidup dalam firman Tuhan, kita telah dibebaskan.
Mengasihi Tuhan berarti sepenuhnya bahagia.
Refrain
Biarkan firman Tuhan membimbing kita setiap hari,
maka kita diberkati dan Roh Kudus memimpin kita.
Kita menerima pengawasan Tuhan, hidup di hadapan-Nya.
Sungguh-sungguh mengasihi Tuhan berarti bersukacita.
Orang-orang jujur memperoleh keselamatan Tuhan dan memasuki kerajaan,
mereka akan hidup bersama Tuhan selamanya.
Kerajaan Kristus adalah surga bagi orang-orang jujur.
Dan itulah rumah mereka yang indah.
Bait 3
Penghakiman dan hajaran Tuhan telah mentahirkanku, aku telah menjadi orang jujur yang menyenangkan Tuhan.
Aku korbankan diri untuk Tuhan dan tak meminta imbalan apa pun, aku merenungkan kehendak Tuhan dengan hati dan jiwaku.
Mengasihi Tuhan mendatangkan ketenangan dan kesenangan.
Kita hidup dengan mudah saat kita bertindak sesuai firman Tuhan.
Hanya Tuhan dan kebenaran yang ada di hati kita.
Firman Tuhan telah menjadi keseluruhan hidup kita.
Refrain
Biarkan firman Tuhan membimbing kita setiap hari,
maka kita diberkati dan Roh Kudus memimpin kita.
Kita menerima pengawasan Tuhan, hidup di hadapan-Nya.
Sungguh-sungguh mengasihi Tuhan berarti bersukacita.
Orang-orang jujur memperoleh keselamatan Tuhan dan memasuki kerajaan,
mereka akan hidup bersama Tuhan selamanya.
Kerajaan Kristus adalah surga bagi orang-orang jujur.
Dan itulah rumah mereka yang indah.
Rekomendasi:
🎦 Film Kristen Kisah nyata "UMAT KERAJAAN SURGA" Hanya menjadi orang jujur dapat memasuki kerajaan surga
As a supplement to the Unsung Joe piece on Franklin Parker, a bit-part actor who had tiny roles as newspaper reporters in 30 or so films in the 30s and 40s, here's a front-page news story from 1938 that he featured in, which represents the peak of his fame.
The movie star of the headline is Lyle Talbot, a B-movie actor who you probably haven't heard of (I certainly hadn't). He was in "Plan 9 From Outer Space" (1959), though, so he probably counts as one of Hollywood's immortals.
Franklin and Lyle, both Nebraska boys, had met when Lyle was the leading man in the stock theatre company in Lincoln, Nebraska. Their friendship survived the transition to Hollywood and the fact that Lyle got plenty of decent work while Franklin made do with walk-ons.
Here's what appeared under that headline in the October 25, 1938, edition of the Centralia Daily Chronicle:
"BEVERLY HILLS, Calif -- Trapped by fire on the second floor of his pretentious home here early today, Lyle Talbot, handsome leading man of the films, and his house guest, Franklin Parker, also an actor, leaped to safety early today.
They were taken to the Beverly Hills receiving hospital suffering painful burns. Their condition was declared by attendants to be serious."
Did 'pretentious' have a different meaning in 1938? If not, that would seem to be a needlessly harsh thing to say about the house of a guy who's lying in hospital with serious burns. The article continued:
"Talbot's hair was burned from his scalp and Parker's back was severely burned. The house was nearly demolished by the flames after the pair made their 20-foot leap ... Police theorized the fire may have been started by a burning cigarette, left in the living room. Talbot had entertained last night, authorities said they had learned, but all of the guests except Parker had left the home when the fire broke out."
The following day's papers carried another AP wire story about Parker and Talbot, to which the Galveston Daily News gave the headline: "Burns Inflicted Rescuing Friend From Fire May End Talbot's Screen Career". The story read:
"The red badge of courage belonged tonight to Screen Actor Lyle Talbot, hero of a fire that destroyed his $50,000 home, but the penalty of his heroism probably is a blighted screen career.
Talbot's hands, neck, arms and head were burned so severely he may never appear again before the cameras. He saved the life of his house guest, Franklin D Parker, also an actor, by dragging him from a fiery, smoke-filled bedroom to a second-storey ledge and safety.
Witnesses saw Talbot, trapped on the second floor by flames that started at ground level, trying desperately to drag Parker's unconscious form out on a porch roof from a bedroom. Talbot, choking with smoke, his pajamas aflame, finally got Parker to safety and then leaped 20 feet to the ground to assist firemen who had been summoned by neighbors.
The condition of both men was critical, said physicians at Cedars of Lebanon Hospital."
The story went on to say that Talbot's wife was staying with a friend whose husband was out of town (so perhaps the party at Talbot's house had been a sort of gals-free stag-do sort of affair) and then recounted Talbot's career to date, noting that his last role was in "I Stand Accused" (1938), in which he played a gangster "and met the usual screen death at the hands of the law."
Of Franklin, it said only: "Parker played on the New York stage several years ago. He has had several bit roles and a few featured parts since coming to Hollywood."
Franklin Parker: even when he makes the front page, it's in a bit part.
It seems that the pair's burns were less serious than they appeared to be, because they both continued to work as steadily as they had ever done, and photographs of Lyle Talbot in later years show him with a full head of hair and no visible scars.
Franklin died of a heart attack in 1962, at the age of 60, and Lyle lived until he was 92, in 1996, when he died of 'natural causes'.
This is the Stanley Islander 19 Dual Console. Could it be the perfect Rabbit Island boat? We're currently searching for a boat for summer 2012 and weighing potential options. Built in Canada near Parry Sound it is specifically designed for use on Lake Huron around the rocky islands of eastern Georgian Bay. It is self bailing (it doesn't even have a bilge!), welded aluminum (as opposed to riveted), low maintenance, tough as nails, no-frills, and efficient... but also very expensive. I drove up to Canada to see it at the Toronto International Boat Show a few weeks ago and fell in love. Does anyone know where we could find one used? If so drop a line. Apparently they are very hard to come by because people hold on to them forever and there are very few that have been imported to the States. Other considerations include a used Boston Whaler Outrage 17, Grady White Sportsman 180, or Lund Alaskan 18. These are somewhat easier to find used but do not have the combination of aluminum construction and self-bailing hull (they are either one or the other). Aluminum seems like it would be much easier to maintain than fiberglass and more practical in situations adjacent to a rocky shoreline should it bump against the rocks or get pulled on shore. Which one would you go with? Other ideas? Post them below or on Facebook.
PHOTOs: Right_Harpars Bazaar
www.tias.com/9105/PictPage/3923223996.html
Left_undated, ca. late 1950s-early 1960s
bettyswallow.wordpress.com/2010/08/19/50s-lingerie-ads/
****
" FRILLY AND FEMININE LINGERIE " -
CALLING ALL GIRLS January 1963
Cover : Freeman ELLIOT
****
Calling All Girls
( Parents' Magazine Press, Parents' Magazine Institute )
YM was an American teen magazine that began in 1932. It was published for 72 years and was the second-oldest girls' magazine (the oldest being Seventeen) in the United States.
YM got its start as two magazines in the 1930s—Compact, which was aimed at older teens, and
Calling All Girls, which was intended for younger girls and pioneered the signature embarrassing-moments column, "Say Anything".
By the late 1960s, the publications merged into Young Miss, a small digest-sized mag. In the 1960s the size was increased and the 1980s saw still another title change (this time to Young & Modern) under Bonnie Fuller's direction as editor-in-chief.
The final title change came in 2000 (this time to Your Magazine), though the abbreviation "YM" was the title by which it was commonly referred. It ceased publication in 2004, with the December/January issue featuring Usher. Subscribers received Teen Vogue subscriptions in replacement.
YM is no longer published online and now the domain is only a link to Teen Vogue.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YM_(magazine)
****
Freeman Elliot (b.1922)
BIO >>
www.thepinupfiles.com/elliot.html
****
COVER GALLERY >> Calling All Girls
FIRST Series #1 September 1941 - #89 September 1949
www.mycomicshop.com/search?tid=335481&pgi=51
AND
www.comics.org/series/12682/covers/
AND
www.coverbrowser.com/search?q=Calling+All+Girls
AND
www.atomicavenue.com/atomic/TitleDetail.aspx?TitleID=6877
****
The Vintage April Dachshund @ dachshundlove.blogspot.com
Calling All Girls, April, 1960
AND
other Calling All Girls covers
featuring Dachshunds by Freeman Elliot
dachshundlove.blogspot.com/2011/04/vintage-april-dachshun...
[As transcribed by RGK1958, 14 March 2007. Anything in brackets [..] our my own notes to clarify or add historical context.
Mamee kept a copy of this sermon with her her entire life. So, it must have been truly sentimental to her.
The Mississippi Confederate Grave Registry indicates that Arthur Alexander Morson (20 Jun 1846 - 7 Oct 1914) is buried at Cedarlawn cemetery in Jackson, MS.
Name: Morson, Arthur A.
Born: Jun 20, 1846
Died: Oct 8, 1914, Van Winkle, MS
Rank & Unit: Pvt; Co. E, 3rd MS Inf
Cemetery, City, type Marker: Cedarlawn, Jackson, MS, Private
Enlisted: May 21, 1861
Discharged: Apr 26, 1865
County Contributor: Hinds
Cedarlawn cemetary is located at 2434 West Capitol Street, Jackson, Mississippi just south of Hawkins Field and east of Jackson Zoological park.
Based on the following transcription, the sermon was held in a little school house in Van Winkle. This could possible be Van Winkle Elementary School, 6 miles from Cedarlawn cemetery. It will be interesting to do further research to confirm the location.
]
I N M E M O R I A M
A. A. MORSON
[Arthur Alexander Morson, 1846 - 1914]
--o--
SERMON PREACHED AT MEMORIAL SERVICE
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1914
at
VAN WINKLE, MISSISSIPPI
By
REV. DR. E. T. EDMONDS
--o--
I want to read the Ninetieth Psalm:
"Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.
Before the mountains were brought forth, or ever thou hadst formed the earth and the world, even from everlasting to everlasting, thou art God.
Thou turnest man to destruction; and sayest, Return, ye children of men.
For a thousand years in thy sight are but as yesterday when it is past, and as a watch in the night.
Thou carriest them away as with a flood; they are as a sleep: in the morning they are like grass which growth up.
In the morning it flourisheth, and growth up; in the evening it is cut down, and withereth.
For we are consumed by thine anger, and by thy wrath are we troubled.
Thou hast set our iniquities before thee, our secret sins in the light of thy countenance.
For all our days are passed away in thy wrath: we spend our years as a tale that is told.
The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away.
Who knoweth the power of thine anger? Even according to thy fear, so is thy wrath.
So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.
Return, O Lord, how long? And, let it repent thee concerning thy servants.
O satisfy us early with thy mercy; that we may rejoice and be glad all our days.
Make us glad according to the days wherein thou hast afflicted us, and the years wherein we have seen evil.
Let thy work appear unto thy servants, and thy glory unto their children.
And, let the beauty of the Lord our God be upon us: and establish thou the work of our hands upon us; yea, the work of our hands establish thou it."
UNQUOTE
Let us pray.
Almighty God, we come into Thy holy presence at this time, feeling very much our sense of need and our deep and great dependence upon Thee; that in Thee we live and move and have our being, and that from Thee cometh life, and breath, and all things.
Oh, God, we know not what the day or the hour may bring forth. We are in Thy hands and our destiny is with Thee, and we pray Thee, Father, to make us faithful to the duty and service of life, and so by faith to follow the leading of Thy providence, and we pray that we may be thoroughly guided by Thy spirit, and walk in the ways of peace and righteousness. Our hearts are very sad today, our Father, and very lonely, and we feel that at this hour we miss the dear one, who has left us very much; and we pray, Father, that his spirit may be with us today and worship with us, and we pray that his kind and gentle life may linger with us as a gracious fragrance and a blessed memory; and that his beautiful example may ever before the people of this community; and that others, the men of this community especially, may realize how much his life has meant, that they too may make their lives fruitful in the service of the Lord and of our Christ. And, Father in Heaven, we pray for the dear ones who have given up to Heaven the father and the husband. We pray that thou wouldst give them "beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness."
And we pray, Father, that all of us, in our own way, may be faithful to the duty and service of life as he was; and when the hour shall come, if thou shouldst call us home in the morning, or at the midnight hour, we pray that we may be ready, as he was ready, to pass hence into the everlasting bliss beyond.
Oh, God, be with us, bless us, and lead us in Thine own wisdom. Help us to distrust ourselves and trust Thee and love Thee; and may Christ be ever regnant in our very hearts, and through His name and in His name, and by His blood, may we find peace and acceptance before Thee, and may Thy spirit be with us, fill us and possess us, and lead us, Father, to the eternal home, where thee shall be no death and no separation, and where we shall serve Thee world without end, through Jesus Christ. Amen.
Two verses of number five.
At the close of the service we will sing number two hundred eight, "Just as I am, Without One Plea."
I want to call your attention to a phrase in the Book of Isaiah, the sixty-foruth Chapter and sixth Verse: "But we are all as an unclean thin, and all our righteousnesses are a filthy rags, and we all do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away."
"We all do fade as the leaf." There are a great many expressions in the Old Testament, especially about the brevity of life, and about the swiftness with which death may summon us to the beyond. We are told that our life is like a weaver’s shuttle; and we are told that death comes upon us like a flood. And we are told so frequently that we are like the grass and the flower of the grass, in the morning flourishing, in the evening cut down and withereth.
This phrase in the Book of Isaiah, "We all do fade as a leaf, "is a peculiarly suggestive expression that has often appealed to me, and especially at this season of the year. All the leaves fade.
I was brought up, friends, as a child and as a boy, until I was about twenty years old, indeed, in a country where the leaves never fade; where the bark changes on the tree, but the leaves are perpetually green---that is, the native trees. Of course imported trees that come from other continents bring with them their own habits. And so I must confess to the wonderment that came to me in the first autumn that I spent in Kentucky and beheld the fading leaves of the forest trees. All of the leaves fade: the leaves of the tiny bramble, and the leaves of the mighty oak. And so "death, with equal pace, knocks at the palace and the cottage gate."
And it is an important reflection, friends, to remember about the fading leaves, that they fade when their work is done. There is a very important office, if I may use that word, in the life and foliage of our trees. The animal creation is always pouring out a great tide of poisoned air from the lungs, taking out of the great animal economy all of the poison that, if left, would really destroy the bodies of all animal life, and the leaves through the hot summer continually absorb all those poisons; but when the summer season has ended, and the touch of frost has come to tell us of the coming winter, then the leaves fade when their work is done. And I think, friends, it is so beautiful for us to think of life that way, as fading when our work is done. And God only knows, beloved, when our work is done.
I remember when President Garfield was shot [July 2, 1881] in Washington, D. C., how the nation prayed for his recovery, and the whole world seemed to be in sympathy with the nation that was in grief. And yet he died. And yet, somehow, I think his death was wonderfully blest, for he died in the hope and triumphant expectation of Christian faith, and in the day when Ingersol was preaching his doctrine of materialism and opposing Christian hope. It was a great thing for us when he died to have a Christian die in public life, and in a public way, and in a public place. It helped the world to see the confidence of one’s faith in God.
I don’t know, friends, about the apostle Paul, --what I covet most about him. I think, you know, that he exemplified more of the Christian faith than any other man whose life is found upon the pages of the New Testament. You know he was in prison for a long time, and then he was let out of prison, and then when fierce persecution came, he was arrested and put in prison, [and] condemned to die. I love to think of Paul’s letters so much. I was writing to my brother the other day in Washington, D. C. I have not seen him for many years. But after I had written the letter on the typewriter, I thought of some little message, a little personal message. And I wrote that with a pen. I said to myself, "Now, he will think this is the dearest part of this letter, this little foot note." And that is true. In the very foot notes of Paul’s letters, friends, I find such beautiful things. In that love letter to Phillipians [Philippians] we find a beautiful story. Onesiphorus, who brought to Paul a gift from the Phillipians [Philippians], had been sick and had gotten well. Paul was sending him back. He wrote that beautiful letter to the Phillipians [Philippians], ---Paul’s love letter. At the bottom of the letter, I find this postscript: "All the saints salute you, chiefly they of Caesar’s household." The very soldiers that guarded Paul had become his own brethren. And when Paul wrote that letter he told them how much, how much he loved them. And so Paul added at the end of the letter, "All the saints salute you, chiefly those of Caesar’s household." And then when he was going to die, his life was fulfilled as God’s providence would seem to have it fulfilled. He wrote that final letter to Timothy---Timothy, that wonderful preacher, that young man Paul loved as he loved no other man.
You can tell a whole lot by a man’s friends, the kind of people who are his friends. I like to think of Paul’s friends. Paul’s friends are interesting. Timothy was one of them. He wrote this final message to Timothy. "I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand." He wrote, "I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith. Henceforth, there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which God, the righteous judge, shall give me at that day, and not to me only, but to all of them also that love his appearing."
I was in the city of Rome in 1896 and went to the prison in which Paul very likely wrote this beautiful letter. Leaving the bright sunlight of Italy, on an August day, I went into a dungeon and there was just enough light to dimly light it up. Then the tonsured monk lighted a little taper, and we went down into a lower dungeon that has been there for centuries and centuries. And I thought of Paul in that dark dungeon writing this beautiful letter: "I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished the course, I have kept the faith." And it seems to me, friends, that the very light of Heaven must have come in a flood into that dark dungeon in which he was writing. And so he added: "Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which God, the righteous judge, has given to me, and not to me only, but unto all of them also that love his appearance." It is a great thing to finish life with our work done, and well done.
I thought I was going to die some years ago, friends, and there were perhaps six doctors, in the next room talking about my condition, and the doctors said I was in a very dangerous condition. I did not think so, but the doctors said so. But do you know the things that worried me as I thought of dying,--it was the unfinished tasks, the incompleted [uncompleted] things that I had started and had not finished. I was building a great church, a stone church. I had set my heart upon its completion. And Oh, I did pray to the Lord that I might finish that at least, and I did. And, you know, I think when we come to die, we will think very much of the things that are unfinished, the unfinished tasks of life; and Oh, I try now, friends, as I get older to hurry to completion everything I undertake, and leave it completed and finished. "I have fought a good fight, I have kept the faith, [and] I have finished the course." Oh, for a completed life, and Oh, for a satisfied sense of completed service when the Master calls us home.
And the leaf, friends, is brightest when it fades. You know a great many people think that spring time is the joy of life, that when these branches that have been singing their miserere [misery?] through the weary months of winter, put on their new foliage and every hillside has its carpeting of green, and the first flowers come and are sending out upon the passing breeze their fragrance, and giving color against the green patches of grass, that the spring time seems to be the welcome time of the year. But, you know, I love the fall of the year, I love the autumn, I love the season of the fading leaves. Walking from the station over here this afternoon, I felt I would have fifty times preferred to walk rather than to ride; to feel the joy of coming through the forest on an autumn day. There is a stillness, friends, about the woods, there is a stillness about the air, there is a carrying quality about the atmosphere in the fall of the year that I miss in every other season. And then, friends, I used to love, when I was in Arkansas, to go up into the Ozarks, in the fall of the year. As the train traveled up from the river level, up the mountain side, up and up, arising to an ascent of about sixteen hundred feet above the sea level, and then we could climb to a two thousand foot level. It was something worth while to look down upon the mountain when the first frost had tinted the leaves, and to behold that marvelous sunset of color, all the yellow and gold, and the green and all the mingling colors. That great mountain side seemed to me to be more beautiful than the sunset upon the Mediterranean Sea. That is the time, friends, when the appealing voice in the fading leaf somehow speaks to me a great message from the Father. The leaf is brightest when it fades. I think that is the way of life, friends; it ought to be.
Oh, it is sweet to take a little baby with its eyes of blue, its unfathomed mysteries as you look into the light of its eyes. There must have been, for Jesus took a little child and set him in the midst and said unless you become converted and become like this little child you cannot enter the Kingdom of Heaven. The purest thing under the canopy of Heaven, Jesus said, is a little child, that precious thing. But I love to think of life, friends, not in its childhood or youth, but as it is fading out; and as we are leaving behind the life of flesh and blood, the soul life, the divine life and the God life are speaking out their mysterious, wonderful something through the eye and through the hand, speaking to us of that life that is beyond, when we shall be transformed into the likeness, the image of Jesus Christ. It is brightest when it fades. And so, friends, as the fires of life dies, as the passions fade out, as the great physical powers are sinking, there seems to come up out of the soul, out of the inmost life, there seems to come up the likeness of the very Christ, and so out of the "muddy vesture of decay" we see the developement [development] of that spiritual life that is to find its home in glory. And then friends, the leaf fades in hope, in hope, in hope.
Next spring these dry, withered leaves, rattling through winter’s weary months, with every passing breeze, upon these oak branches---you will not have to cut them off; the swelling bud will push them off. They will fall to the ground. And so this life friends, fades in hope. And so the Christian fades in hope; and thus he passes away with the assurance and expectation of the joy that is beyond, "where never fading spring abounds and never withering flowers."
I never can forget, friends, an experience I had in traveling in Switzerland in the month of August, a few years ago, near the place where the river Rhone rises under a great glacier and flows into the great southern reaches of France. And I remember the night I was there. It was freezing a little all night. And early in the morning we got up and went to the Rhone glacier, and walked over a great bed of ice that had been there for centuries and centuries and centuries; and through the great crevasses we could hear the flowing stream and trickling drops, the beginning of the great Rhone river [River]. And then as the sun came up, what a glory! There was a great encircling range of mountains capped with eternal snow, and as the sun came up the peaks were crimsoned with the new light of day. After we had had breakfast, we walked over to the station, or traveled in a carriage, then too the train. Under the mountains there is a very long tunnel between eight and nine miles long. We went into the darkness of that tunnel. The difference between the elevation of the mountain and the valley below is so great that the descent would be too great to go straight down, so the tunnel winds around like a corkscrew and lets you down in that sort of way. And for twenty minutes we were in that darkness. It was almost as much as I could endure to live through those twenty minutes. I think it was the longest twenty minutes of my life. And yet there came all in a moment, as we left the tunnel at the other end, into a valley of Italy, there came the bright glory and glad sunshine, the flowers, the songs of the birds, and the leaping streams down the mountain sides. I said it is wonderful, it is wonderful. This, it seems to me, is what death means. We leave behind the sin and winter and the bitterness, and the momentary darkness is perhaps the experience of death, and then we are ushered into the glad light, into the eternal sunshine, into the never-fading glory of that world beyond that is so beautiful. We know not what we shall be, we do not; but we know that when he shall appear, "we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is."
Beloved friends, I do not want to start anew the fountain of tears. I would not make the aching heart sore again. Rather would I heal it.[?] Yet, I must confess to you that an awful sense of loneliness and loss came over me as I came into this little school house [This appears to be a metaphor for the church the Reverend was speaking in. However, read on.] this afternoon; an awful sense of depression. I felt as if one had left us whose face was always here; whose glad hand was always ready with its manly greeting and whose voice was always vibrant with truth and righteousness,--a manly Christian. And what a good man dear Brother Morson was! I think of him, friends, so much, as a man, as a good man. I was talking a moment ago at the Edwards House to a young man, and we were talking about a merchant, and I said, "He has a good stand for business," but he said, "That isn’t much of a stand," he said, "It is the man that is getting the business, it isn’t the stand at all." Do you know, friends, I have come to look at life that way very much indeed. Back of every contract I make I want to see the man. Back of every piece of goods I buy I want to see the man. Back of every promise and pledge I want to see the man. When I feel there is a man behind every transaction, I am not so particular about how the contract reads, or how the goods look; if I have the pledged word of the man, it means so much. Friends, the greatest thing we are doing in America is making men, making men, and our republic will never die and go into decay as long as we are rearing God-fearing men an women and have in every community such a citizen as this good man was, with the life that was always breathing the very spirit of Christ. What a valuable citizen he was! Why, they tell me in Jackson, when they had one of the meetings for this projected creamery [According to my Dad, A. A. Morson was in the Creamery business], after everybody had spoken, this modest man sat in the corner and said nothing. Somebody called on him to speak and they said he told them more about it than they had ever known about this enterprise. His few words of wisdom revealed a lifetime of experience tersely and clearly put and he sat down as the accepted authority upon the question.
I always felt, friends, that I wanted to know Brother Morson better, I knew him so slightly. You know, there are some people you meet and you do not want to meet them intimately again. And there are some people you meet, and the more you meet them the more you feel their faults and failings. And yet there are some other people the more you meet them the more you like them, and he was the kind of a man to me; the more I knew him the more I loved him, and the more I wanted to know him. He was one of those wonderful men, so simple, so modest, so true, and yet so wonderfully wise, I felt as if I wanted to know him and take him to my heart to love. I have never known a man for such a brief time, who made a deeper impression on my heart than he made. And I am sure you will miss him. You will miss him so much. But I am persuaded that his example and his life will remain in this community of years as a blessed fragrance of the Christ.
And then what a father he was! I have thought so much of this family of children that he and his dear wife [Bessie Eppie Dameron, 1860 - 1835] have brought up. These thirteen children [See list below]. And I have thought of these children, how they have developed, how they have gone out into life to find their place and reflected honor and credit upon their mother and father. And wherever they have gone they have carried his good name unsullied. I think it is a great thing.
[
Along with their mother, all thirteen living children attended the ceremony:
Name, DOB - DOD, age in 1914
Bessie Eppie Dameron, 1860 - 1935, 54
Louis Alexander Morson, 1879 - 1879, would have been 35
Arthur James Morson, 1880 - 1950, 34
Mildred Berry Morson (Youngberg), 1881-1934, 33
Robbie Mae Morson, 1882 - 1883, died
Hallie Taylor Morson (Kennington), 1884 - 1967, 30
Elizabeth Kate "Bessie" Morson (Greene), 1885 - 1971, 29
John Andrew Morson, 1886 - 1962, 28
Rosalie Vere Morson (Emerson), 1888 - 1962, 26
Julie Dameron Morson, 1889 - ???, 25
Hugh Blair Morson, 1891 - 1925, 23
Sara Francis Morson (Boteler), 1893 - 1982, 21
William "Willie" Todd Morson, 1895 - 1943, 19
Phillip Hull Morson, 1897 - 1960, 17
Margaret Priscilla Morson (Hood), 1900 - 1978, 14
Mary Roberta Alexander Morson (Sexton), 1903 - 2002, 11
]
You remember the old story in the Roman history we used to learn when we were children. The story of the Graechi,--the mother who lived in a great mansion, beautiful home,--her husband was an illustrious senator. Somebody said to her, when she had shown them everything, "Now, madam, where are your jewels?" She brought her two boys,[;] she said "These are my jewels." I tell you, fathers and mothers, it does not matter how many acres you own, how much bank stock you have, there is not anything that will give you credit quite as much as your noble sons and your splendid daughters,--your children, your children, who grow up to be noble men and women, to do Christ’s work, serve God, and their country. I am sure these children loved this dear father. I am sure they will love his memory. And I am sure our very heart goes out in sympathy and affection and love to this home that has lost the father, the husband and brother, and to this community that has laid away this noble citizen.
I am interested in what you are doing here. I pray that these men, noble men they are, may take up this work and carry it forward, and Van Winkle may feel the influence of the holy work you are doing in this little school house [this confirms it really was a school house and not a church]. And when your daughters and sons have gone forth into the world, may they look back to this place and say, "Right here in this little school house in Van Winkle, it is here I found God and came into the possession of the new life, and there was formed the might resolutions that made my character." I pray that God may bless you all in what you are doing.
Now, we are going to sing this beautiful hymn, "Just As I Am, Without One Plea;" we are going to sing just two verses, the first and last verses.
And I want to say this; if there are those here today who are not Christians, who have never given themselves to the Lord Jesus, while we sing these two verse if you feel you want to declare your faith in Christ, you may come forward and give me your hand and the Lord your heart.
And now may the God of Peach, that brought again the Lord Jesus from the dead, that great Shepherd of the Sheep, through the blood of the everlasting Covenant, make you perfect in all things to do His will, working in you that which is well pleasing to His will, through Jesus Christ, the Lord Amen.
Contact me here: butchpetty.com/contactus.html
This is a 1958 "Field & Stream" Travel Trailer ( canned ham ). This vintage style of camping trailers were referred to as "car trailers" back when they were being built because of their size, light weight and ease of towing. The cabin part of the trailer is 12' long, the tongue is 2' making the total length only 14'. It pulls beautifully going down the highway, no fish tailing at all. You can forget your pulling a trailer.
This trailer is 95% original, no modifications. This trailer has not been restored and I have only made a couple of small repairs. If you are looking for a great platform for making a complete restoration then this would be an absolutely great trailer for such a project.
The interior is all wood, top to bottom and front to back and it is all original wood. I have installed a self-contained 12 volt electrical system and it doesn't need 120 volt. Everything runs off of 12 volts. However all of the original 120 volt wiring is still in place and hasn't been touched, even the original 120v light fixtures are still in place. All of the cabinet hardware is still in place, working and original. All the hinges, handles, and everything is original. The original "icebox" and oven/stove are still in the camper and work great. It also has the original factory installed "Kenmore" cabin heater and it also works great.
When I got the trailer someone had changed the paint scheme so I re-painted it to the original design. The rear couch makes into a double bed. Above the rear couch it has a removable bunk bed/hammock that is original factory equipment also. The dinette also makes into a double bed. There is a lot of storage in the camper. It also has a 10 gallon fresh water tank with a manual hand pump.
The trailer also comes with 2 30 lb propane tanks, a new spare tire and wheel.
The following items are new in the past three months:
New Interior 12 volt light throughout the camper
New 240 watt solar panel
New "Sunforce" 12v, 30 amp charge controller
4 new "Everstart" 750 cold crank amp deep cell marine batteries
New "Cen-Tech" 1500 watt continuous , 3000 surge 120v power inverter (for microwave, etc.)
New Rival 700 watt microwave
New manual water pump for sink
New Shakespeare SeaWatch 15" Marine TV Antenna (model 3015)
Toshiba 17' Flat Screen TV
All new blinds on the windows
New roof top vent
This is one great little camper. I bought it for hunting plus the nostalgia. It was used this past hunting season and worked great. However with four adult men it was a little cramped. So I plan to up size for next year. I pulled it off road in BLM land in Teller County and down in the Phantom Canyon area and had no problems at all.
Because this trailer is extremely rare there are not many sources of photos to be had but you can follow the link below to another "Field & Stream" trailer. As you can see the interiors are very similar as it is all original like mine: girlcamper.blogspot.com/2015_07_01_archive.html
(Update) You can see a video of the interior of my camper here: youtu.be/NA1VfPU8Sd8
Now the best part last: YES, I DO HAVE A CLEAN CLEAR TITLE IN HAND, AND CURRENT REGISTRATION ALSO. So unlike most trailers you see of this vintage you will not have a problem with registration and it will be registered as a "Field and Stream" not a home-made trailer as is usually the case with trailers bought without a title.
If you have questions please ask. I am asking $5000.00 cash, make offer, no trades. I will sell it to the first person who makes me an agreeable offer with CASH ONLY. I will consider local delivery after the cash transaction.
Aerial View
Jay Pritzker Pavilion, 2004
Millennium Park
Architect: Frank Gehry
chicagopublicart.blogspot.ca/2013/08/jay-pritzker-pavilio...
_______________________________________________
VIEW TAKEN FROM:
Skydeck (observation deck)
Stories: 103
Height: 1,353 feet / 412 meters
theskydeck.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/skydeck_onsite_...
Willis Tower
Formerly: Sears Tower
233 South Wacker Drive
Construction: Started, Aug 1970 + Finished, May 1973
Architects: Skidmore, Owings and Merrill
Stories: 110
Height (roof): 1,450 feet / 443 meters
Height (antenna): 1,730 feet / 520 meters
chicagoarchitecture.info/Building/375/The-Willis-Towe...
For nearly 25 years, Willis Tower was the world's tallest building (surpassing the World Trade Center towers in New York). Today, the Willis Tower is the 2nd tallest building in the USA, and the 8th tallest freestanding structure in the world. It is a magnificent icon, impossible to miss within Chicago's skyline.
Skydeck Chicago is the observation deck on the 103rd floor - visited by approximately 1.5 million tourists every year. On a clear day, you can see over 50 miles in each direction and see four US states. The elevators within the building are among some of the fastest in the world, operating as fast as 1,600 feet per minute.
HISTORY:
In 1969, Sears Roebuck and Co. was the largest retailer in the world (350,000 employees), and needed one large office space. Architects Skidmore, Owings and Merrill were commissioned to design the building, and Fazlur Khan, the structural engineer, designed the “bundled tube” design that handled both wind and gravity.
Sears Tower took 3 years to complete. The builders used enough concrete to make an eight-lane highway 5 miles long. Within the building, there are 25 miles of plumbing, 1500 miles of electric wiring , 80 miles of elevator cable, 796 restroom faucets, and more than 145,000 light fixtures. The last beam put in place was signed by 12,000 construction workers, Sears employees and Chicagoans. In 1988, Sears Roebuck and Co. sold and moved out of the building, but the Sears Tower name remained until 2009 when the building was renamed after the Willis Group, a London- based global insurance broker.
Entire article on Justaddwater.dk: More Visual HTML Jokes
Photo modified from www.flickr.com/photos/nickfindley/10717783/
From A Noise Within's web site:
"Constructed in the mid-fifties, the Stuart Pharmaceutical building was listed on the National Register in 1998. As provided in the National Register Registration Form, the property is significant at the state level "as an outstanding example of mid-century modern architecture in California, one of the earliest expressions... of the New Formalist (or Neo-Formal) style and of architect Edward Durell Stone's philosophy and work."
In 1958, The Stuart Pharmaceutical Building won the American Institute of Architecture's (AIA) prestigious Honor Award and appeared on the cover of Time Magazine alongside architect Edward Durell Stone. Noteworthy for its dramatic perforated facade screen, golden columns, reflecting pools and fountains, cantilevered eves, light filled atrium, and ingenious landscaping (designed by Thomas Church), the building operated under the ownership of Stuart Pharmaceutical Company until 1993.
Thomas Dolliver Church (1902-1978) was a pioneer in American landscape design and opened the door to the modern movement in landscape architecture with what came to be known as the "California Style." In 1951, Church received the Fine Arts Medal of the American Institute of Architects in recognition of his contribution to modern landscape architecture. "
The new theater was therefore built behind the existing facade, and its low to the ground construction preserves the look of the property. The old wall is now one side of a really neat breezeway, with sliding glass doors on the other side. You can sit out there. This, too, is very Old Socal.
Compared to the former venue in The Monolith, which was essentially a Masonic mastaba, the openness of this venue is most striking.
I like it.
www.sfcityguides.org/public_guidelines.html?article=505&a...
Jack Kerouac Alley Mural
by Sue Walsh
Perhaps as you stroll along Columbus Avenue in North Beach, you pay little attention to the sixty-foot-long Jack Kerouac Alley, aptly situated between the landmark City Lights Bookstore and legendary Vesuvio Café. The passageway that served as a transportation shortcut from Chinatown to North Beach was once a refuge for back-alley drinkers and rotting garbage. Today, Jack Kerouac Alley is transformed into an inviting pedestrian-only thoroughfare complete with decorative lampposts and poetry from eastern and western cultures inscribed on the brick walkway connecting the two neighborhoods. The renovated alley was opened to the public on March 31, 2007, under the funding and direction of the Chinatown Alleyway Improvement Project.
Pre and post alley renovation, since October 1999 the mural Vida y sueños de la cañada Perla (Life and Dreams of the Perla River Valley) has adorned the wall of the City Lights Bookstore that faces Jack Kerouac Alley. This mural is a reproduction of Mexico City artist Sergio Valdéz Rubalcaba’s original work that was painted in the jungle village of Taniperla, home to the Tzeltal Mayan indigenous people in Chiapas, Mexico.
Depicted in the painting are revolutionary leaders Emiliano Zapata and Ricardo Flores Magon and ski-masked rebels observing routine daily life activities in the community. The mural represents local autonomy of this indigenous group and was painted on the wall of the new municipal headquarters for the Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) in the village of Taniperla. EZLN fought for indigenous land rights, education, and social welfare in the late 1990s.
At dawn on April 11, 1998, one thousand Mexican Army troops stormed the village of Taniperla and occupied the territory. Cornfields, coffee plantations, and houses were burned; local leaders were arrested. Artist Sergio Valdéz Rubalcaba was among those arrested and beaten. The mural was destroyed by the Mexican Army. Charged with rebellion, Rubalcaba was sentenced to nine years in prison for designing the mural. Due to international protests and pressure from human rights groups, he was released from prison after a year and a half and did not complete his full sentence.
In solidarity with the indigenous people’s fight for justice and dignity, global human rights workers who witnessed the demolition of the original mural and invasion of Taniperla canvassed locations throughout the world to paint reproductions of Vida y sueños de la cañada Perla. In addition to the location on the outside wall of City Lights Bookstore, other reproductions may be found in Oakland; Barcelona, Madrid, and Bilbao, Spain; Florence, Italy; and Mexico City.
City Guide Sue Walsh leads the North Beach by Night and Ferry Building tours.
El verdadero amor de Dios | El juicio es la luz
Mi nombre es Zhao Xia. Nací en una familia común y corriente. Debido a la influencia de aforismos como “cría fama y échate a dormir”, y “Un árbol vive con su corteza; un hombre vive con su rostro”, la reputación y el prestigio se convirtieron en algo particularmente importante para mí. Todo lo que hacía era para ganarme las alabanzas de otras personas, sus cumplidos y su admiración. Después de que me casé, las metas que me impuse fueron: viviré una vida más rica que los demás; no debo permitir que nadie diga cosas negativas acerca de cómo trato a los ancianos o sobre mi comportamiento y mi conducta; y me aseguraré de que mi hijo ingrese a una universidad famosa y que tenga buenas perspectivas, para agregar más brillo a mi prestigio. Por lo tanto, nunca peleé con mi familia política. En ocasiones, cuando me decían cosas desagradables, me sentía tan afligida que me escondía y lloraba en lugar de enfrentarlos. Cuando veía a otras personas comprar ropa a sus padres durante el Año Nuevo Chino y en otras festividades, de inmediato iba a comprarle algo a mi suegra, por supuesto algo de la mejor calidad. Cuando venían parientes de visita, ayudaba a comprar comida y a cocinar. Incluso cuando era un poco arduo o agotador, yo seguía completamente dispuesta. Temerosa de estar en peor posición económica que los demás, después de que nació mi hija, la dejé después de un mes y me fui a trabajar. Como resultado de ello, mi niña sufrió desnutrición y llegó a ser hueso y pellejo porque no la amamanté. Su situación mejoró sólo después de recibir cien inyecciones nutricionales. Yo estaba tan cansada que todos los días sufría de dolor de espalda. Aunque era difícil y agotador, toleré el mal momento y di sin cansancio para ganarme una buena reputación. Al cabo de unos pocos años, me convertí en una famosa nuera en la aldea, y mi familia se volvió muy rica y era envidiada por la gente que nos rodeaba. Como resultado de ello, mi familia política, mis vecinos, parientes y amigos me alababan constantemente. A la luz de la alabanza y de los elogios de los que me rodeaban, mi vanidad se encontraba muy satisfecha. Sentí que las dificultades que había atravesado en los últimos años no habían sido en vano, y me sentía muy honrada por dentro. Sin embargo, mi tranquila vida se interrumpió después de que mi cuñado se casó. Su esposa siempre me hablaba con sarcasmo, y decía que yo tenía motivos ocultos para tratar bien a nuestra suegra porque simplemente quería sus posesiones. Siempre decía que nuestra suegra no era imparcial, ya que nos daba más cosas a nosotros que a ellos, y con frecuencia peleábamos por esto. Me sentía muy apenada y quería discutir con ella en público para defender mi inocencia, pero eso hubiera arruinado la buena imagen que se había formado de mí en los corazones de la gente. Por ende, me obligaba a mí misma a no decir nada, y cuando no lo toleraba más lloraba a más no poder en privado. Luego, la cuñada tentó su suerte al ocupar el terreno asignado a mi familia, lo que me llenó de ira y por lo que no comí ni bebí durante días. Incluso tuve ganas pelear con ella. No obstante, el hecho de pensar que me podía dejar mal parada, dañar mi reputación, y hacer que quienes me rodeaban me desacreditaran, hizo que me tragara todo, pero dentro de mí me sentía tan reprimida que vivía un verdadero tormento. Lucía triste y suspiraba todo el día, sintiendo que era demasiado doloroso y agotador vivir y no saber cuándo esa clase de vida llegaría a su fin.
El final del hombre realmente es el inicio de Dios.
...
Fuente: es.easternlightning.org/testimonies/judgment-is-light.html
Recomendación: Relámpago Oriental
A text, in english, from www.arthurgrosset.com/sabirds/burnished-bufftanager.html :
Burnished-buff Tanager (Tangara cayana)
Male Burnished-buff Tanager, Parque Olhos D'água Brasília, Brazil, 20/07/2007.
There are several subspecies of Burnished-buff Tanager and they are normally divided into two groups: the cayana group found north of the Amazon and in Venezuela and Colombia, and the flava group found in south and east Brazil.
Male Burnished-buff Tanager.
The main difference between the two groups is that the male of the flava group, as shown in the first two photos, has a broad black line running from the throat down the middle of the belly. This is lacking in the cayana group. The female is much duller and lacks the black below.
Male Burnished-buff Tanager.
They are found in savannas, cerrado, gallery woodland and forest borders.
Em Português:
Este saíra vive aos pares ou em pequenos grupos, freqüentando árvores com frutos maduros, como a aroeira-vermelha (Schinus terebinthifolia) e magnólias (Magnolia spp).
Alimentação: frutos e insetos como cupins e vespas.
Nidificação: o ninho, em forma de taça aberta, é feito com folhas, raízes e capins e envolto por finas raízes. Ele é colocado em ramos com folhas a cerca de 2 m do solo, em árvores baixas e isoladas. Os 2 ovos são esbranquiçados, azul-pálidos ou branco-pardos com manchas pardas num dos pólos. A fêmea, embora auxiliada pelo macho, é a responsável pela maior parte da construção do ninho, incuba os ovos e aquece os filhotes. Durante este período o macho permanece nas proximidades do ninho e alguns podem alimentar a fêmea. O macho auxilia também na alimentação dos filhotes.
Hábitat: matas abertas e ciliares, áreas cultivadas, parques e jardins.
Tamanho: 14,5 cm
Fonte: USP
# Tangara cayana, Saíra-amarelo, Burnished-buff Tanager
The following email came straight to my inbox this afternoon:
Everett High School
Message sent - 1/18/2007
Attendance Message
Hello, this is EVERETT HIGH SCHOOL calling to notify you that your child, BETHANY, was absent from EVERETT HIGH SCHOOL on 1/18/2007 for periods 1, 6. In order to waive an absence the parent/guardian must submit a waiver application form with appropriate documentation attached. Thank you.
---
First of all, I never knew that I had a daughter named Bethany all along. Seriously, why does no one tell me things? Secondly, BETHANY? She's probably blonde. I bet she's on the cheerleading squad, too. Clearly, Bethany did not inherit any of my genes. Finally, the hell was Bethany doing, skipping class during periods 1 & 6? (I like to think she inherited some of my genes by sleeping in through period 1 and sneaking off-campus for lunch during period 6.)
Maybe I should ask Bethany if she could teach me how to dance...in return for signing her waiver application form for periods 1 & 6.
PS: Everett High School is in Michigan. It's hella freakin' cold in Michigan, I hear. If I had a daughter named Bethany, Bethany and I would not be living in Michigan. I think we just might live in the UAE instead, where apparently it's sunshine-y and warm year-round.
PPS: The above email reminded me of Jamelah's post from last year. Jamelah is on flickr, too, by the way. And she's a ROCKSTAR! who merits all capitals and an exclamation point.
PPPS: Most importantly, those are my nieces, pictured above. They are also rockstars. You can see some of their silliness in action - on the same day as the above photo - here. (Or click straight here.)
Priyanka Chopra proud to represent Girl Up campaign at the UN Global Leadership Dinner! - www.bolegaindia.com/gossips/Priyanka_Chopra_proud_to_repr...