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Every part of the monastery was damaged in the Siege of 1991, but we had no way of knowing how extensive the damage was.

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

April Scavenger Challenge 24. This month, we are reprising an old Education Center topic. Please read the instructive material and then make a low-key shot (#24)

 

There's only so much 'putting off' that can be done this month. Here's one of several that I've been avoiding.

 

550D on the tripod, (seated in my wheelchair), cored release and 2 second self timer, ISO to 400, Av f 5.6, lens to 'manual' having first auto-focused it, LED torch on another tripod with a single layer of diffuser handheld very close, headband torch off as were all the other lights, cropped square in Aviary otherwise SOOC. Best and last of 13 attempts

St Mary the Virgin Merton Park

 

First Doorway is said to have come from Merton Priory

Nelson worshipped in this church.

 

I'd taken only the 70-300 VR for nature shots and decided to take this. Quite instructive and I think quite successful.

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

From the New Yorker:

"Though it’s hard to pick the best records of the year in today’s highly ramified pop scene, it might be instructive to pit some of the year’s top albums against one another. Some of these matches find wily veterans battling promising newcomers; others feature more unexpected pairings."

 

Read full article

The Qol Sharif mosque has a permanent and highly instructive exhibit on the history of Islam, including many nice books.

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

The Divine Handiwork

 

"For every man threw down his rod, and they became serpents.

But Aaron's rod swallowed up their rods." Exodus 7:12 (NKJV)

 

This incident is an instructive emblem of the sure victory of the divine handiwork over all opposition. Whenever a divine principle is cast into the heart, though the devil may fashion a counterfeit, and produce swarms of opponents, as sure as ever God is in the work, it will swallow up all its foes. If God's grace takes possession of a man, the world's magicians may throw down all their rods; and every rod may be as cunning and poisonous as a serpent, but Aaron's rod will swallow up their rods. The sweet attractions of the cross will woo and win the man's heart, and he who lived only for this deceitful earth will now have an eye for the upper spheres, and a wing to mount into celestial heights. When grace has won the day the worldling seeks the world to come. The same fact is to be observed in the life of the believer. What multitudes of foes has our faith had to meet! Our old sins--the devil threw them down before us, and they turned to serpents. What hosts of them! Ah, but the cross of Jesus destroys them all. Faith in Christ makes short work of all our sins. Then the devil has launched forth another host of serpents in the form of worldly trials, temptations, unbelief; but faith in Jesus is more than a match for them, and overcomes them all. The same absorbing principle shines in the faithful service of God! With an enthusiastic love for Jesus difficulties are surmounted, sacrifices become pleasures, sufferings are honours. But if religion is thus a consuming passion in the heart, then it follows that there are many persons who profess religion but have it not; for what they have will not bear this test. Examine yourself, my reader, on this point. Aaron's rod proved its heaven-given power. Is your religion doing so? If Christ be anything he must be everything. O rest not till love and faith in Jesus be the master passions of your soul!

God bless

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Each year at the beginning of the warm/sunny season, I am reminded in stark and unambiguous terms that I am, indeed, caucasian. Here we are sitting atop the Sterling Vineyard hill on their outdoor patio. Sterling is a cool winery to visit because you park down below then take a gondola up the mountainside to the winery. They also had an unusually instructive, self-guided tour that explained the winemaking process. Although the tour wasn't personal or intimate, I would highly recommend it.

Credit: Adam Schultz / Clinton Global Initiative

 

The Courage to Create

 

Many of the world’s most effective technologies or social movements grew out of organized brainstorms and were launched through a combination of hard work, strong mentors, and the courage to create. These successful innovators—whether working in dorm rooms, labs, studios, or classrooms—were able to start out and scale up despite having limited resources and few precedents for their work. While their impact may be widely recognized today, the hurdles and lessons learned from their earliest stages of design and implementation are as instructive and valuable to others. This session will bring together creative, impactful voices from a wide range of sectors to discuss:

 

• What first inspired their confidence in the process of innovation and creativity, and what some of their earliest challenges were.

• How to incentivize the invention and innovation process among young people through expanded access to seed funding, mentorship, technical training, and lower-risk student loan repayment plans.

• How students, universities, NGOs, and businesses can support a broader culture of creativity and collaborative design as core components of 21st century citizenship.

The Fisher Boy - 1908

 

Charles Webster Hawthorne (American, 1872 - 1930)

 

Hawthorne's favorite and most characteristic subject was the hardworking fisherfolk of Cape Cod, whom he began painting about 1899. His works are monumental images of human toil and of man's struggle against nature, yet they are also portraits of individuals surrounded by the tools of their trade. Encased in Hawthorne's thick glazes and dark, Old Master tonalities, these humble fishermen possess poise and dignity.

 

Provincetown cod fishermen typically spent the summer months off Newfoundland's Grand Banks, storing the daily catch in salt and returning home in September when the salt ran out. (1) “Fisher Boy” is one of a number of single-figure portraits of these local fishermen, many of which capture events or introspective moments surrounding the fall return of the fishing boats. Against a foggy background, through which the sails and masts of a fishing vessel are visible, a teenage boy surveys his home after months at sea. Slung over his left shoulder is a bag; under his right arm is a beautiful blue-glass jug, which may have held water-—or wine--during the journey. (2)

 

Hardworking immigrants were a favorite subject of a number of realists painters, such as Robert Henri, Jerome Myers, Hawthorne, and others, who disdained the upper-class genteel subject matter preferred by the conservative art world. Contemporary critic Charles H. Caffin appreciated such pictures as a "natural and wholesome reaction from the vogue of frippery, tameness, and sentimentality" that characterized many of the visual images of the era, which kept art far removed from actual experience. (3) For other reviewers, Arthur Hoeber among them, Hawthorne's images conveyed the immigrant’s attempt to build a new life in a new country through back-breaking work. More than simply picturesque characters, Hawthorne’s Portuguese fisherfolk were depicted as "real, tangible human beings, full of hope, ambition and the struggle for existence."

 

Charles Webster Hawthorne grew up in the fishing village of Richmond, Maine, where his father was a sea captain. About 1890 he went to New York, where he attended night classes at the National Academy of Design and at the Art Students League, studying with conservative academic painters Frank Vincent DuMond, George de Forest Brush, and Harry Siddons Mowbray; during the day he worked at a stained-glass factory. Hawthorne began attending summer classes at William Merritt Chase's Shinnecock, Long Island, art school in 1896, and the next year became Chase's assistant. In 1898 he traveled with the class to Holland, where he was exposed to Frans Hals's brushwork and picturesque scenes of fisherfolk. In 1899, after Chase's school closed, Hawthorne moved to Provincetown, Massachusetts, and opened the Cape Cod School of Art, which flourished under his direction until his death thirty years later. A highly esteemed teacher, he gave weekly critiques and instructive talks but never dictated his own methods.

 

Hawthorne's earliest still lifes of fish with pots and pans betray Chase's influence in their dark tonalities and bravura brushstrokes. After moving to Provincetown, Hawthorne began focusing on portraits of the hardworking fishermen of the village. In an era when facile brushwork, picturesque views, and genteel Impressionist subjects dominated but were quickly becoming outmoded, Hawthorne's early works were often praised for their ruggedness, realism, psychological insight, and American subject matter.

 

In 1906-7 Hawthorne traveled to Italy with his new wife, artist Ethel Campbell. He studied the Old Masters and developed new painting techniques, such as the use of oil glazes over tempera, which produced his marvelous color-saturated, glistening surfaces. Although he had begun exhibiting frequently after 1902, his success increased after he returned to Provincetown from Italy. He began showing at New York City’s influential Macbeth Gallery, and in 1908 was elected an associate at the National Academy of Design. In the early teens he exhibited at the Paris Salon and with the Society of American Artists in New York.

 

Hawthorne’s reputation was based on his portrayals of Provincetown fishermen and their families and of members of Provincetown society as well as on his generic, sentimental images of "American madonnas." Toward the end of his career he also painted watercolor views of Provincetown landscapes.

 

_________________________________

 

"Acknowledged as the first museum in the world dedicated solely to collecting American art, the NBMAA is renowned for its preeminent collection spanning three centuries of American history. The award-winning Chase Family Building, which opened in 2006 to critical and public acclaim, features 15 spacious galleries which showcase the permanent collection and upwards of 25 special exhibitions a year featuring American masters, emerging artists and private collections. Education and community outreach programs for all ages include docent-led school and adult tours, teacher services, studio classes and vacation programs, Art Happy Hour gallery talks, lectures, symposia, concerts, film, monthly First Friday jazz evenings, quarterly Museum After Dark parties for young professionals, and the annual Juneteenth celebration. Enjoy Café on the Park for a light lunch prepared by “Best Caterer in Connecticut” Jordan Caterers. Visit the Museum Shop for unique gifts. Drop by the “ArtLab” learning gallery with your little ones. Gems not to be missed include Thomas Hart Benton’s murals “The Arts of Life in America,” “The Cycle of Terror and Tragedy, September 11, 2001” by Graydon Parrish,” and Dale Chihuly’s “Blue and Beyond Blue” spectacular chandelier. Called “a destination for art lovers everywhere,” “first-class,” “a full-size, transparent temple of art, mixing New York ambience with Yankee ingenuity and all-American beauty,” the NBMAA is not to be missed."

 

www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g33847-d106105-Revi...

  

www.nbmaa.org/permanent-collection

 

The NBMAA collection represents the major artists and movements of American art. Today it numbers about 8,274 paintings, works on paper, sculptures, and photographs, including the Sanford B.D. Low Illustration Collection, which features important works by illustrators such as Norman Rockwell, Howard Pyle, and Maxfield Parrish.

 

Among collection highlights are colonial and federal portraits, with examples by John Smibert, John Trumbull, John Singleton Copley, Gilbert Stuart, and the Peale family. The Hudson River School features landscapes by Thomas Cole, Asher B. Durand, Martin Johnson Heade, John Kensett, Albert Bierstadt, and Frederic Church. Still life painters range from Raphaelle Peale, Severin Roesen, William Harnett, John Peto, John Haberle, and John La Farge. American genre painting is represented by John Quidor, William Sidney Mount, and Lilly Martin Spencer. Post-Civil War examples include works by Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, George de Forest Brush, and William Paxton, and 19 plasters and bronzes by Solon Borglum. American Impressionists include Mary Cassatt, Theodore Robinson, John Henry Twachtman, J. Alden Weir, Willard Metcalf, and Childe Hassam, the last represented by eleven oils. Later Impressionist paintings include those by Ernest Lawson, Frederck Frieseke, Louis Ritman, Robert Miller, and Maurice Prendergast.

 

Other strengths of the twentieth-century collection include: sixty works by members of the Ash Can School; significant representation by early modernists such as Alfred Maurer, Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Max Weber; important examples by the Precisionists Charles Demuth, Charles Sheeler, Preston Dickinson, and Ralston Crawford; a broad spectrum of work by the Social Realists Ben Shahn, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Jack Levine; and ambitious examples of Regionalist painting by Grant Wood, John Steuart Curry, and Thomas Hart Benton, notably the latter’s celebrated five-panel mural, The Arts of Life in America (1932).

 

Works by the American Abstract Artist group (Stuart Davis, Ilya Bolotowsky, Esphyr Slobodkina, Balcomb Greene, and Milton Avery) give twentieth-century abstraction its place in the collection, as do later examples of Surrealism by artists Kay Sage and George Tooker; Abstract Expressionism (Lee Krasner, Giorgio Cavallon, Morris Graves, Robert Motherwell, Sam Francis, Cleve Gray), Pop and Op art (Andy Warhol, Larry Rivers, Robert Indiana, Tom Wesselman, Jim Dine), Conceptual (Christo, Sol LeWitt), and Photo-Realism (Robert Cottingham). Examples of twentieth-century sculpture include Harriet Frishmuth, Paul Manship, Isamu Noguchi, George Segal, and Stephen DeStaebler. We continue to acquire contemporary works by notable artists, in order to best represent the dynamic and evolving narrative of American art.

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Ternopil State Medical University is one of the best positioning medicinal colleges of Ukraine giving high caliber instructive therapeutic projects that meet worldwide principles. The university offers high-quality education with advanced and updated techniques and highly qualified professors. Indian students can take admission directly at Ternopil State Medical University without appearing any entrance exams. Contact 9111777949 for more information. visit - lakshyambbs.com/show-university/9/Ternopil-State-Medical-...

Abidul Islam is a blogger. he is the youngest blogger in Bangladesh. Abidul Islam has several websites. Abidul Islam is doing this from at age of 15 . his main topic is technology. specifically, Abidul Islam writes on mobile, internet, cloud, gears, and blogging tips. write he has more than 24 sites al site topic are different. but all areconnected to technology.

In his early career, he faces many failures .but he never gives up. today, he is one of the best bloggers in his country. A few days back, Abidul Islam starts a YouTube channel .You Tube channel Name "ABIDUL ISLAM". where he teaches blogging and also reviews some gears, mobile, and laptop

 

Abidul Islam is the eldest in his family. He has 2 sisters who are younger than him. He stays with his family in Chittagong, Bangladesh. He was born on 04 May 2003.

 

Abidul Islam got his initial training from Baitul Izzat Border Guard Public School, Chittagong. It is a fine instructive organization that has given the great establishment to Abidul Islam. He has finished his Intermediate from Ispahani Public College, Chittagong.

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

E-book Read The 48 Laws of Power Mobi

 

THE BEST & MORE SELLER

Click Link to Offer details: bit.ly/book3Ak

 

The 48 Laws of Power DESCRIPTION :

Amoral, cunning, ruthless, and instructive, this multi-million-copy New York Times bestseller is the definitive manual for anyone interested in gaining, observing, or defending against ultimate control ? from the author of The Laws of Human Nature.In the book that People magazine proclaimed ?beguiling? and ?fascinating,? Robert Greene and Joost Elffers have distilled three thousand years of the history of power into 48 essential laws by drawing from the philosophies of Machiavelli, Sun Tzu, and Carl Von Clausewitz and also from the lives of figures ranging from Henry Kissinger to P.T. Barnum. Some laws teach the need for prudence (?Law 1: Never Outshine the Master?), others teach the value of confidence (?Law 28: Enter Action with Boldness?), and many recommend absolute self-preservation (?Law 15: Crush Your Enemy Totally?). Every law, though, has one thing in common: an interest in total domination. In a bold and arresting two-color package, The 48 Laws of Power is ideal whether

  

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

I like to observe the behavior of animals.

It is always instructive and funny!

This time was this hummingbird taking care of its feathers.

I believe this is a Swallow-tailed Hummingbird (Eupetomena macroura).

A masterpiece of the nature!

During the wing-flapping, the Hooded Merganser shows off the speculum pattern in the wing. This shot also shows some detail on the head pattern as seen from behind. As photographers, we often try to have the eyes in the shot. As birders, every look is not always at the ideal angle. It's sometimes instructive and sometimes just interesting to see how a bird looks from an odd angle. Photographed at Silver Lake in Belmar, Monmouth County, NJ.

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

June 22, 2017 - A visit to the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding Base. Check out the official website for more information:

www.panda.org.cn/english/

 

"Welcome to Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding. From our peaceful, beautiful natural environment to our quality service, your visit will be one of calm and enjoyment. You will learn about giant panda conservation, and how we need your help to protect our earth for us and future generations. We are looking forward to your contribution as a part of our efforts to conserve the natural environment!"

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

From the museum label: These abstract works - an oil pastel on paper and an oil painting on canvas - share a similar composition: a blue void surrounded by a series of folds in modulated tones. Though O'Keeffe turned increasingly to oil paint after moving to New York in 1918, she continued to develop her technique in pastel, which she found to be an instructive corollary. In pastel she achieved smooth gradations of color by using her fingers to rub pigment into paper, an effect she achieved in oil by blending with a brush.

Link to other paintings from the exhibition "Georgia O’Keeffe - To See Takes Time".

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

The museum has 28 or so dioramas depicting the significant events in Gandhi's life. They are beautifully made, and really quite instructive.

The Dress Maker - 1915

 

Charles Webster Hawthorne (American, 1872 - 1930)

 

Charles Webster Hawthorne grew up in the fishing village of Richmond, Maine, where his father was a sea captain. About 1890 he went to New York, where he attended night classes at the National Academy of Design and at the Art Students League, studying with conservative academic painters Frank Vincent DuMond, George de Forest Brush, and Harry Siddons Mowbray; during the day he worked at a stained-glass factory. Hawthorne began attending summer classes at William Merritt Chase's Shinnecock, Long Island, art school in 1896, and the next year became Chase's assistant. In 1898 he traveled with the class to Holland, where he was exposed to Frans Hals's brushwork and picturesque scenes of fisherfolk. In 1899, after Chase's school closed, Hawthorne moved to Provincetown, Massachusetts, and opened the Cape Cod School of Art, which flourished under his direction until his death thirty years later. A highly esteemed teacher, he gave weekly critiques and instructive talks but never dictated his own methods.

 

Hawthorne's earliest still lifes of fish with pots and pans betray Chase's influence in their dark tonalities and bravura brushstrokes. After moving to Provincetown, Hawthorne began focusing on portraits of the hardworking fishermen of the village. In an era when facile brushwork, picturesque views, and genteel Impressionist subjects dominated but were quickly becoming outmoded, Hawthorne's early works were often praised for their ruggedness, realism, psychological insight, and American subject matter.

 

In 1906-7 Hawthorne traveled to Italy with his new wife, artist Ethel Campbell. He studied the Old Masters and developed new painting techniques, such as the use of oil glazes over tempera, which produced his marvelous color-saturated, glistening surfaces. Although he had begun exhibiting frequently after 1902, his success increased after he returned to Provincetown from Italy. He began showing at New York City’s influential Macbeth Gallery, and in 1908 was elected an associate at the National Academy of Design. In the early teens he exhibited at the Paris Salon and with the Society of American Artists in New York.

 

Hawthorne’s reputation was based on his portrayals of Provincetown fishermen and their families and of members of Provincetown society as well as on his generic, sentimental images of "American madonnas." Toward the end of his career he also painted watercolor views of Provincetown landscapes.

 

_________________________________

 

"Acknowledged as the first museum in the world dedicated solely to collecting American art, the NBMAA is renowned for its preeminent collection spanning three centuries of American history. The award-winning Chase Family Building, which opened in 2006 to critical and public acclaim, features 15 spacious galleries which showcase the permanent collection and upwards of 25 special exhibitions a year featuring American masters, emerging artists and private collections. Education and community outreach programs for all ages include docent-led school and adult tours, teacher services, studio classes and vacation programs, Art Happy Hour gallery talks, lectures, symposia, concerts, film, monthly First Friday jazz evenings, quarterly Museum After Dark parties for young professionals, and the annual Juneteenth celebration. Enjoy Café on the Park for a light lunch prepared by “Best Caterer in Connecticut” Jordan Caterers. Visit the Museum Shop for unique gifts. Drop by the “ArtLab” learning gallery with your little ones. Gems not to be missed include Thomas Hart Benton’s murals “The Arts of Life in America,” “The Cycle of Terror and Tragedy, September 11, 2001” by Graydon Parrish,” and Dale Chihuly’s “Blue and Beyond Blue” spectacular chandelier. Called “a destination for art lovers everywhere,” “first-class,” “a full-size, transparent temple of art, mixing New York ambience with Yankee ingenuity and all-American beauty,” the NBMAA is not to be missed."

 

www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g33847-d106105-Revi...

  

www.nbmaa.org/permanent-collection

 

The NBMAA collection represents the major artists and movements of American art. Today it numbers about 8,274 paintings, works on paper, sculptures, and photographs, including the Sanford B.D. Low Illustration Collection, which features important works by illustrators such as Norman Rockwell, Howard Pyle, and Maxfield Parrish.

 

Among collection highlights are colonial and federal portraits, with examples by John Smibert, John Trumbull, John Singleton Copley, Gilbert Stuart, and the Peale family. The Hudson River School features landscapes by Thomas Cole, Asher B. Durand, Martin Johnson Heade, John Kensett, Albert Bierstadt, and Frederic Church. Still life painters range from Raphaelle Peale, Severin Roesen, William Harnett, John Peto, John Haberle, and John La Farge. American genre painting is represented by John Quidor, William Sidney Mount, and Lilly Martin Spencer. Post-Civil War examples include works by Winslow Homer, Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, George de Forest Brush, and William Paxton, and 19 plasters and bronzes by Solon Borglum. American Impressionists include Mary Cassatt, Theodore Robinson, John Henry Twachtman, J. Alden Weir, Willard Metcalf, and Childe Hassam, the last represented by eleven oils. Later Impressionist paintings include those by Ernest Lawson, Frederck Frieseke, Louis Ritman, Robert Miller, and Maurice Prendergast.

 

Other strengths of the twentieth-century collection include: sixty works by members of the Ash Can School; significant representation by early modernists such as Alfred Maurer, Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Max Weber; important examples by the Precisionists Charles Demuth, Charles Sheeler, Preston Dickinson, and Ralston Crawford; a broad spectrum of work by the Social Realists Ben Shahn, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Jack Levine; and ambitious examples of Regionalist painting by Grant Wood, John Steuart Curry, and Thomas Hart Benton, notably the latter’s celebrated five-panel mural, The Arts of Life in America (1932).

 

Works by the American Abstract Artist group (Stuart Davis, Ilya Bolotowsky, Esphyr Slobodkina, Balcomb Greene, and Milton Avery) give twentieth-century abstraction its place in the collection, as do later examples of Surrealism by artists Kay Sage and George Tooker; Abstract Expressionism (Lee Krasner, Giorgio Cavallon, Morris Graves, Robert Motherwell, Sam Francis, Cleve Gray), Pop and Op art (Andy Warhol, Larry Rivers, Robert Indiana, Tom Wesselman, Jim Dine), Conceptual (Christo, Sol LeWitt), and Photo-Realism (Robert Cottingham). Examples of twentieth-century sculpture include Harriet Frishmuth, Paul Manship, Isamu Noguchi, George Segal, and Stephen DeStaebler. We continue to acquire contemporary works by notable artists, in order to best represent the dynamic and evolving narrative of American art.

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Abidul Islam is a blogger. he is the youngest blogger in Bangladesh. Abidul Islam has several websites. Abidul Islam is doing this from at age of 15 . his main topic is technology. specifically, Abidul Islam writes on mobile, internet, cloud, gears, and blogging tips. write he has more than 24 sites al site topic are different. but all areconnected to technology.

In his early career, he faces many failures .but he never gives up. today, he is one of the best bloggers in his country. A few days back, Abidul Islam starts a YouTube channel .You Tube channel Name "ABIDUL ISLAM". where he teaches blogging and also reviews some gears, mobile, and laptop

 

Abidul Islam is the eldest in his family. He has 2 sisters who are younger than him. He stays with his family in Chittagong, Bangladesh. He was born on 04 May 2003.

 

Abidul Islam got his initial training from Baitul Izzat Border Guard Public School, Chittagong. It is a fine instructive organization that has given the great establishment to Abidul Islam. He has finished his Intermediate from Ispahani Public College, Chittagong.

This seasonal wetland provides an instructive example for how to create a diverse wetland ecosystem that also serves to hold back and treat stormwater runoff

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

You know why I'm smiling? It's because one or two of you are going to get a ticket today for driving over the Angeles Crest without your headlights on. I could warn you, but it will be more instructive if you learn on your own. Happy trails.

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

Inside the laboratory of Thomas Edison

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

An historian and revolutionary, Volney begins _The Ruins … of Empires_ by invoking ruins for their meditative and instructive possibilities. He hails them and says, “my heart finds in contemplat[ing them] a thousand delicious sentiments,” and finds them “Pregnant with useful lessons.” They call “upon us to contemplate [an] example of Equality.” So, even though this levelling of the architectural symbols of power typically takes centuries, Volney mobilizes the freshly made ruins of the Revolution as signs of democratization in his present France.

Minori's family very kindly invited me along to a family barbeque on my first weekend in Japan. We drove through hours of insanely twisty mountain roads and eventually fetched up here. As far as I can tell the place is something of a hold-over from pre-war Japan: there was a tannoy system which crackled into life at pre-determined hours and played vaguely militaristic instructive songs at us...

Rev Densmith provides an instructive lecture on the evils of drink.

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

The arrow piercing was painful but instructive.

 

Actually, he didn't even really need me for anything.

Seattle also has some busway facilities that are instructive for design.

There are proficient CV essayists who can give instructive CVs that can mirror your abilities and mastery. The enlistment offices ought to be furnished with all the applicable subtleties so it is anything but difficult to look through the correct kind of occupation. Tributes from past bosses, capabilities, abilities and mastery, work inclination, etc ought to be given to the business enlistment offices.

rafiyaoverseas.com/

 

These men knew how to live!

A stunnung property with impressive houses and a beautiful park-like garden!

 

during an impressive, entertaining and instructive visit of the Edison & Ford Winter Estates, Fort Myers, Florida.

It was a great time there and I enjoyed every minute!

 

Edison & Ford Winter Estates

 

My site

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.

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