View allAll Photos Tagged interpretation
it is exactitude in art or the complement of art :-)
Charles Nègre
Justice Matters!
sunrise, Duck, outer banks, north carolina
The arcades at the "Rua Augusta" are beautiful. One of the many places a tourist has to visit in Lissabon. Here you can see my interpretation of this fascinating architecture.
The Inntel Hotel in Zaandam/Netherlands is definitely the main attraction of the city but also of the whole country.
The twelve-storey-high hotel tower with 160 rooms is a stacking and interpretation of various green-painted house types typical of the Zaan region, ranging from a stately notary’s dwelling to worker’s cottages. ‘The Blue House’ has been inspired by the work Claude Monet painted at Zaandam in 1871.
Construction finished in 2010, design by WAM architecten.
An interpretation of the metro station "Brudermühlstraße" - U 6 - Munich - Germany
A very special station with interesting perspectives and a very cool mood.
Metro Blues # 21
A misty morning at Triabunna. My favourite interpretation of the scene was this high key version. It was a devil of a scene to try to convert to a pleasing image.
Photo By Steve Bromley.
My first post for 2023, and so a belatedly Happy New Year to everyone, I wish the best for all of you for this year 2023. This photo I took back when it was all snow and planet Hoth, I took this whilst riding on the back of a Tauntaun. The scenario of the snow, the sun and the green reminded me of having all four Seasons in one day, so why not pay a little tribute to Vivaldi, my best friend's favourite composer, of whom we watched a performance in Berlin by five very talented string players, classical music live is absolutely amazing!
I hope everyone is well and so as always, thank you! :)
My own interpretation of this masterpiece by the architect.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stadthalle_Bremen
It's a joke what Bremen did with the "Klangbogen".
www.kunst-im-oeffentlichen-raum-bremen.de/werke/klangboge...
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My second interpretation of the round bales at dusk.
Thank you very much for your views, comments and likes. I highly appreciate them.
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Meine zweite Interpretation der Rundballen in der Abenddämmerung.
Vielen herzlichen Dank für alle Views, Kommentare und Likes. Ich weiß sie sehr zu schätzen.
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- Your interpretation has been fabulous Miss Haru. She has managed to capture the energy of the heroine through her gaze and body tension. We know that she studied at a prestigious drama school, but, everyone says that there is something else... What is that secret of her success?
- The secret of my success... Shhh... I always carry it with me!
Thank you all very much for your visits, comments, awards, invites and faves! <3
Another one of the pics I got of that storm on Lake Michigan. I really enjoyed taking these pics.... I think I need to invest in a good camera. I had a lot of trouble getting decent shots (of course it could be because I'm such a noob at taking pics lol).
Textures used:
www.flickr.com/photos/inaboxofpaint/4445711632/in/set-721...
www.flickr.com/photos/dontellaura/4856864113/in/set-72157...
www.flickr.com/photos/49522960@N05/4626507684/
www.flickr.com/photos/playingwithpsp/sets/72157604052440248/
**View over the river Elbe to the Elbphilhamonie.**
The programme at the Elbphilharmonie and Laeiszhalle is all about quality, diversity and breaking down genre boundaries. Lively interpretations of classical masterpieces are just as important as the discovery of contemporary music from various cultures – performed by the world’s best artists and the resident orchestras and ensembles of the two halls: the NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, Ensemble Resonanz and Symphoniker Hamburg.
The Elbphilharmonie is a total work of art combining breath-taking architecture, excellent acoustics and a unique location. The Herzog & de Meuron architecture firm breathed new life into the traditional brick base, placing the concert hall on top like a glittering crown to great effect.
In the second phase of my trip I went to Puerto Varas (southern Chile) a lovely city of German influence, located on the shores of Lake Llanquihue.
Equally lovely and also on the shores of the lake we have Frutillar, a beautiful town with only two parallel streets and some transversal full of cafes and bistros with delicious interpretation of German cuisine.
The city has annual music festival. In fact there are several references to music, as you can see in the photos to come.
An interpretation of metro station "Dülferstraße" - U 2 - Munich - Germany
Metro Blues # 5
Sony A7R III - Pixelshift - Voigtländer Hyper Wide Heliar - 10 mm - f 11 - 1 s - ISO 100
Renovation of the Civil Engineering building, located on the old Val-Benoît Campus in Liège. This is the place where I studied, some 25 years ago. It was a great experience to re-discover the place once entirely redesigned...
The architects, Arlette Baumans and Bernard Deffet, have really done a great interpretation of the building, transforming it while keeping the strength of its structure..
Different thing for different people’
.“illusion - VNV Nation”
www.youtube.com/watch?v=pu-8wGbWMro
I do believe nature is subject to a million interpretations
Naturalis..
I give an interpretation :-)
Andre Kertesz
HBW!! Ukraine Mattters!
rose, 'Dick Clark', little theater rose garden, raleigh, north carolina
Eine Interpretation eines oft und gerne fotografierten Treppenhauses in der Münchener Innenstadt.
An interpretation of a frequently photographed staircase in downtown Munich.
Website: www.heiko-roebke-photography.de
(English follow)
J’aime façonner des interprétations personnelles de mon monde… de sa nature, de la vie sociale qui l’habite, des énigmes qui nous entourent. Ces interprétations ressemblent souvent plus à des « demain » ou des « ailleurs » qui scintillent plutôt qu’à des mondes réels. Alors, croyez-moi, un jour, je trouverai bien ma route vers les étoiles.
Patrice
Photo originale : Cette photo n’a pas été prise sur la planète Enigma où j’habite à temps partiel, mais sur les rives de la Baie de Fundy, en Nouvelle-Écosse (Canada). Cette région est l’endroit où on observe les plus grandes marées du monde, soit près de 20 mètres! À l’endroit exact où je me trouvais pour prendre cette photo, il y avait 6-8 mètres d’eau quelques heures plus tard…
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I love to shape, to create personal visual interpretations of my world. . . of its nature, of its social life, of the enigmas that surround it. These visual poems frequently seem more like "glitters in the future" or "sunny dreamlands" rather the real world. So, trust me, one day I will find my way to the stars.
Patrice
Original photo: This photo was not taken on the Planet Enigma (where I leave part time), but on the shores of the Bay of Fundy, in Nova Scotia (Canada). This region is where the highest tides in the world are observed, almost 20m! At the point where I was while taking this photo, there were 6-8m of water few hours later ...
Cabot Tower a historical landmark located on Signal Hill a National Historic site in the City of St. John's on the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland and Labrador Canada
Cabot Tower is a tower in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, situated on Signal Hill. Construction of the tower began in 1898 to commemorate the 400th anniversary of John Cabot's discovery of Newfoundland, and Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
In 1901, Guglielmo Marconi received the first trans-Atlantic wireless message at a position near the tower, the letter "S" in Morse Code sent from Poldhu, Cornwall, United Kingdom. Cabot Tower is now the centre of the Signal Hill National Historic Site of Canada,] with walking trails and an interpretation centre.
Located at the highest point of Signal Hill, overlooking the city and the ocean, Cabot Tower is an example of late-Gothic Revival style. Built of irregularly coursed red sandstone, it is composed of a two-story, 30 foot, square structure with a three-story, 50 foot octagonal tower that stands on the southeast corner of the building. The corners are buttressed at the first floor level and further emphasized through the use of heavier blocks of stone. On the main body of the building, at the top of the second storey level, is a line of repeating pattern like an exaggerated dentil row or inverted crenelations. The attached tower, which houses the main entrance, is very plain with a double string course marking the divisions between second and third storeys and heavy corbel tables marking the eight corners of the turret at the flared upper level. The windows on both the corner turret and the body of the tower proper are rectangular and set under heavy stone lintels.
The architect of Cabot Tower, William Howe Greene, was a prominent St. John's architect and an associate of the Royal Institute of British Architects. Wikipedia
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Disney's interpretation. Thank you for your views, favs and comments. It's a pleasure sharing images with you.
“Color is descriptive. Black and white is interpretive.” - Eliot’s Erwith
This is another attempt to do a black and white image. The wonderful play of light and shadow on the snowy hill seemed to lend itself to a monochrome edit. Happy Monochrome Monday!
Here's my interpretation of this morning's walk with Marnie. I didn't take my camera with me, so I photographed this with my Samsung phone. We were just entering the park when a herd of cows appeared, running down to take a drink in Powell's Pool in Sutton Park. After they'd had a drink they all settled down and had a bask in the lovely sunshine. It was delightful ! So I did a painting. Hope you like it !
Every summer cows are permitted to graze in Sutton Park, many people objecting, as they leave their large cow pats. Dogs do like to roll in them, but thankfully, Marnie does not. She rolls in other things, but not cow pats !
Sutton Park is a National Nature Reserve and cows help to keep the grass and weeds to a minimum in certain areas.
~ Edited in Topaz Studio - especially Topaz Impresson 2 ~
Thanks as always for your wonderful friendship - Happy and peaceful trouble-free weekend and week ahead.
This is my humourous interpretation of this week's theme for Macro Mondays "Lost/Found".
When I read the new theme on Wednesday, my mind got stuck on what www.flickr.com/photos/janettowbin/ wrote about how it is literally imposible to photograph something which is lost and I started humouring the notion and trying to come up with funny and creative ways to portray it. I realise that this not my most artful macro creation, but I founf it funny enough to want to share. As the new rule of one pic per week is already in application, this shot will not be submitted to the group pool, but I really hope you enjoy it anyway ;D
So I wish you all a very pleasing Sunday evening, my dear friends, and promise to catch up with everyone tomorrow since I've missed a couple of days' uploads... :((
Big smiles to all :)))
Last year I photographed the fine Rustic Gothic manor house "The Grange", and gave it a romantic feel (link below). In the previous shot today, I described how this unique house came to be built in the colony in 1847, with a link to more information about its fascinating owner, Dr William Valentine, the surgeon and naturalist.
In this photograph I will again steer us into an artistic interpretation through the use of black and white. The light was perfect for it and that white picket fence is incorporated to create a sense of "distance" between us and this gothic building.
House - Palace of Quiñones.
MURALLA Y PORTÓN./ WALL AND ENTRANCE GATE .
- Construido en el S. XVI, sufrió un incendio importante en 1915 y fue reconstruido en los años 70.-
En su interior hay numerosos edificios y se encuentra, actualmente, la Casa del Parque Natural de Babia y Luna. ( Centro de Interpretación ).
- Built in the 16th Century, it suffered a major fire in 1915. It was rebuilt in the 70s and, currently, contains the Interpretation Center of Babia and Luna natural Park.
En / In:
Riolago. Babia baja. León.
Castilla y León. España. Spain.
Spending a lot of time at home can lead to mischief. I've watched some tutorials I've had for a long time and have bought some new ones to keep me occupied. In this image, I used a technique to enlarge the lighthouse in order to counter its miniaturization from having used a wide-angle lens. Going that far I played with some Orton like affects which look pretty to me (today), if a bit unnatural. Feel free to be critical if this isn't your kind of thing. Stay safe.
It is a real problem, is it not? How can we come to an understanding of this utterly diverse and complicated world whilst sitting in the particularity of our home? It is true that the media, from newspapers to TV and social media, offer us a daily digest of selected information. We would, I sincerely hope, critically examine these news and think for ourselves. However, even so, we would have to deal with the selective nature of the information. We never see "the whole picture". Our knowledge, even at the best of times, is necessarily fragmentary. It is absolutely important to be aware of this limitation - it is one of the virtues that make us human.
I am saying this because AI is on the march. AI has never ever left its ivory tower, it never "left home". It never made any experiences. AI has not seen anything. It does not know how to suffer. What it does is to harvest and (often illegally) exploit printed or published materials, information it has neither created nor even collected. It does not know what it does not know. And yet AI will come up with explanations and scenarios that are untroubled by any kind of self-doubt. AI does not know when it is peddling false information. AI will interpret the world whilst staying at its "home" and will not even be aware of it. Leica M8 plus Voigtlaender 35/1.4 at approx. F8.
Visual interpretation of Newton's 3rd Law of Motion.
From a series I'm working on - visual representation of the laws, theories and hypothesis that govern the universe.
So-- above is my interpretation of the fabulous Goldfrapp's album art "Head First." I absolutely LOVE Goldfrapp...I think I could use every song she ever made in my pics... 😀
Below-- is the amazing original album art for "Head First." I really enjoyed this photo challenge.
Any one can join this fantastic SL photo competition that is about re-creating your favorite album at Mon Joli Cadeau!!! Please see Avalon Bouvier or Yoh Boa in world for more details.
Here is your taxi!!!
Here is a link to one of the awesome songs on the album!!!
I love simplicity, but thoughts are complicated, sometimes you need a complicated image to invoke your thoughts at that moment. The story behind this image is to reflect what an artist sees through another artist's work.
It is very hard not to capture other bystanders in a public display. I took many shots with my tripod and use Photoshop Stack to remove all the other point and shooters but this photographer. He just stood there for a long time and appeared on most of my frames. So I put him back on this image to reflect his admiration at that frozen moment.
The book in the image and title, written in Greek, is a dictionary of dream interpretations and is over sixty years old. It was scanned. The leaf was photographed on the street. The two images were basically processed in Lightroom and combined using Gimp layers.
Various interpretation of the bonnet livery--one war and one blue--have the Santa Fe adequately represented against the calm morning waters of the Meramec River at Times Beach, the second of 4 encounters H STLTUL4 18A will have with the Meramec on its trip "upriver" across the Cuba Subdivision in southern Missouri. The Frisco selected a three deck truss span design to bridge the river at this location, the current configuration of which rests on the concrete half of the inconsistently constructed piers left from when the route was double tracked on its easternmost 34 miles between St. Louis and nearby Pacific. Times Beach is more well known as the infamous site of one of America's more memorable residential contaminations, described in detail in a prior posting for those intrigued: www.flickr.com/photos/54360625@N08/31929037954/in/photoli...
I have made my first step into the Macro World and I have to say, I find it fascinating. I know that Dandelions are very popular subjects but I am not sure you have seen this interpretation before.
At the first look of this closeup, I have directly seen the allegory with the human brain. Even with less complexity and features, I believe Nature is much nicer graphically.
Langzeitbelichtung mit Graufilter: Eine weitere Interpretation der Architektur dieses ungewöhnlichen Gebäudes an der Podbielskistraße in Hannover.
Long exposure with gray filter: Another interpretation of the architecture of this unusual building on the Podbielskistraße in Hannover.
Architekten: Bünemann & Collegen Hannover
Website: www.heiko-roebke-photography.de