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Fish Kill Cycle (Fish kills peak during hot rainy summer months)

due to frequent demand, I'll try to explain the picture even though a picture should always speak for itself: I tried to create a metaphor for guilt. a man looking into the mirror. what he sees is himself but he is surrounded by his guilt. guilty of hurting somebody he loves he his emotionally dominated by his act... (or something along those lines, it's really difficult to explain what you try to convey sometimes)

 

technically I have taken a photograph of the movie Kill Bill, which I projected to the wall and another photograph of myself in the mirror. I then pasted them together in two layers and faded them in...

McGavock Confederate Cemetery

Franklin, TN

 

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23/6/2012

Rock a Field, Luxembourg

Has been left fallow for two years

Bike Kill XI was held yesterday in Bushwick Super Outlaw Steezy. Luckily 5-0 was sleeping and the day was super dope!

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Best Damn Day of the Year!!!

 

You better axe sumbody!

 

Bike Kill 10 photos - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157637036419823/

More Bike Kill Photos, here:

Bike Kill 9 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157631879905622/

Bike Kill 7 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157625156141919/

Bike Kill 666 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157608378247130/

Bike Kill XI was held yesterday in Bushwick Super Outlaw Steezy. Luckily 5-0 was sleeping and the day was super dope!

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Best Damn Day of the Year!!!

 

You better axe sumbody!

 

Bike Kill 10 photos - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157637036419823/

More Bike Kill Photos, here:

Bike Kill 9 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157631879905622/

Bike Kill 7 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157625156141919/

Bike Kill 666 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157608378247130/

Live music in the Village Inn as part of the Hanwell Hootie.

David Steele Killed - Obituary | Dead - Passed Away

David Steele Death – Dead: A great loss was made known to InsideEko. As friends and families of the deceased are mourning the passing of their loved and cherished David Steele.

 

To a fellow triathlete whom I often meet for sunrise swims; a tragic car accident on his bike out training with his club teammates. RIP David Steele.

 

To a fellow triathlete whom I often meet for sunrise swims; a tragic car accident on his bike out training with his club team mates. RIP David Steele. @Portmarnocktri1 pic.twitter.com/X9hE3bBQBK

— Deric (@deric_tv) September 21, 2020

 

Having heard about this great loss, the family of this individual is passing through pains, mourning the unexpected passing of their beloved.

 

This departure was confirmed through social media posts made by Twitter users who pour out tributes, and condolences to the family of the deceased.

 

More details have not been released about this death, and the actual death age and date are yet to confirmed by us. We are still working on getting more details about the death, as a family statement on the death is yet to be released. insideeko.com/david-steele-killed-death-dead-david-steele...

Natures cycle.

This crocadile kill sequence was quite distressing because the Spotted Deer survived for such a long time. We had seen lots of Marsh crocodile and had started to take them for granted. Clear evidence that standing too close to the water is inadviseable!

 

Marsh crocodile, also known as 'the Mugger" are treated with more respect by locals than the other resident species, the Saltwater Crocodile.

 

Yala National Park

Sri Lanka

 

March 2011

A billboard in front of Hysteric in Harajuku advertising the Niagara "Detroit Kill City" art show in 2007.

Signet Book 1369 (2nd printing, 1957)

 

Wade Miller

Cover art by James Meese

The Kills @ Olympia

 

I've been to many shows but this one is one of my top shows...

 

Pure Rock n Roll...

The Energy on Stage...

Wow!!!

St Peter, Claydon, Suffolk

 

Claydon is a large village on the outskirts of Ipswich. Its medieval parish church was declared redundant in 1977. This was a time when a number of churches were made redundant with a speculative view to a sale. It was assumed that planning permission for conversion to a house would be easily obtained. Often, these sales failed to materialise, but the Diocese refused to allow local trusts or charities to take their care on for no financial return. Claydon was one of these, and the writer Sam Mortlock quotes from the Redundant Churches Fund report for 1987: Within sight of new housing and burgeoning prosperity the diocese left this historic church to rot for eleven years while attempts to find an alternative use came to nothing. It is one of the most conspicuous cases of neglect we have come across.

 

In the end, bad publicity appears to have shamed the Diocese into allowing the church to be vested in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust. Today, the church is beautifully cared for by local people, but eleven years of abandonment have taken their toll. Incidentally, it may seem extraordinary that the parish church for a village of 6,000 people should be declared redundant, but there is another medieval church in the hamlet of Barham on the outskirts of Claydon which is larger, with a bigger graveyard, and which was perhaps considered at the time less saleable.

 

St Peter, Claydon, is one of the great forgotten 19th century rebuildings. In style and substance it looks the work of an amateur Pugin, which is pretty much the truth. The Rector for most of the second half of the 19th century was Father George Drury, one of the great High Church eccentrics. So often in Suffolk, we see the fruits of Anglo-catholicism in their early 20th century ascendancy, as at Kettlebaston and Lound. Here at Claydon, we see evidence of a movement besieged, in the struggles of half a century earlier. Drury suffered attacks on his person, property and reputation. The convent he established was broken into by a mob, who 'rescued' a nun and carted her off to a lunatic asylum, where she was incarcerated under the orders of her father. She stayed there until he died. Drury's rectory suffered so many assaults that he was forced to build a nine-foot wall around it, which soon became covered with anti-catholic slogans.

 

It has to be said that 'Firm Father George' rose to the challenge with enthusiasm. In the 1870s, fifty years before such things became acceptable, his congregation would parade through Claydon with banners of the Blessed Virgin flying, kneeling down with them in a field while singing the Ave Maria. High Mass was accompanied by incense, vestments and candles. The local protestants were scandalised beyond belief. Supported by popular opinion and the low church Bishop of Norwich, they hatched plot after plot against him. The most famous of these was the Akenham burial case, which led to a change in national burial laws.

 

The major rebuilding here was by worthy enthusiast R.M. Phipson, the diocesan architect, under Drury's direction, for the Drury family also presented to the living. This was not unusual, of course; many landed families held the patronage of their local church, and often presented a younger son to it. But by the second half of the 19th century, it was becoming less common, as younger sons preferred the opportunities for advancement out in the Empire. It survived only where the family embraced evangelical or Tractarian ideals. For them, the nature of the priesthood had a somewhat higher status.

 

Phipson built a massive pair of transepts across the western half of the former chancel, leaving a great cruciform church with a small chancel. Although this is demonstrably the work of Victorians, there are a number of earlier survivals visible externally, including long and short work at the two western corners of the nave. This is usually indicative of Saxon work, although it is difficult to say how much of this is genuine, and how much Drury and Phipson's sleight of hand.

 

Drury's great secular passion was carving. He produced much work here in wood and stone. The pulpit is his, as are many of the little details on roof and walls. The pulpit is an extraordinary thing, a bubbling, lacy extravaganza, with niches to the two front corners. These are currently filled with early 20th century images of St John and the Blessed Virgin, taken from a rood group, although whether Drury ever filled the niches with anything is unclear.

 

The rest of the interior carving, by the great Henry Ringham, was under Drury's direction. This work is an extremely early ritualist makeover, dating from the 1850s. Newman had crossed the Tiber barely 5 years before, and the Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus of the reredos must have caused a few racing pulses. The interior is all Drury's design, including the beautiful east window with its pseudo-medieval roundels, and the whole thing is an extraordinary memorial to the man.

 

The interior suffered greatly during the years or abandonment - for example, of the large four evangelist carvings under the crossing, only St Mark survives, and the stained glass, especially that in the transepts by Albert Moore, is still peppered with holes from stones thrown by the descendants of those who had stoned Drury himself a century before. The marble mensa stone, with its consecration crosses, was brought here from the similarly early ritualist church at Shipmeadow, when that was declared redundant a few years before Claydon. Several features were removed from the church during the course of the 20th century, including the rood screen that Drury had made to go under the crossing, and a large, magnificent war memorial depicting the Madonna and Child by Henry Moore, given to Claydon in 1948 and now to be found on the other side of the village at Barham. I wonder what Drury would have thought of it.

 

Drury was an all-round handyman. He had a brick kiln of his own in the garden, and also built large flint walls in a medieval style around his vegetable garden, using tracery from the ruined church at Thurleston, a mile or so off. The walls culminate in a towering folly, and you can still see this over the graveyard wall.

 

His funeral in 1895 was carefully documented by 'ritualism-watchers', who noted the robed choir, the cross carried in procession, the incense and the sign of the cross. Drury would have been amazed that his position would have been fairly mainstream by the 1930s, but less so, perhaps, by its rapid retreat today. His large grave is guarded by railings in the south-east corner of the churchyard, beneath the great yew. For one moment there, one forgets the surrounding suburbia of bungalows and semi-detacheds, the modern High School across the road, the new housing estate. Here, the 19th century still exists.

 

And then, back down to the village centre. At the bottom of the hill, a group of new houses is called Drury Road. A rather mundane memorial to one of the Church of England's great loose canons.

One person was killed and at least six others were injured Sunday afternoon when a construction crane attached to an apartment building fell across the street into the top of an occupied apartment complex, crushing several apartments and scattering debris into a courtyard at a site on the northern edge of downtown Dallas.

 

Dallas Fire/Rescue crews searching Elan City Lights apartments found a woman inside an apartment after the crane crashed into the east side of the building, DFR spokesman Jason Evans said. She was later pronounced dead.

 

Six other people were hospitalized at Parkland Memorial Hospital and Baylor University Medical Center. Two were transported in critical condition, three were in serious condition and one was treated and released, Evans said.

 

Crews were called just before 2 p.m. to the 2600 block of Live Oak Street, near U.S. Highway 75 and North Good-Latimer Expressway, Evans said.

 

It was not clear late Sunday afternoon whether other people were missing or trapped inside the apartments and collapsed parking garage. Police dogs from Plano Texas were brought in to help first responders search the structures, he said.

 

Residents fill out sign-sheets so emergency management personnel can get an accurate count of all residents who were forced to evacuate. There was no timetable for when residents would be able to return to their apartments.

 

Bike Kill XI was held yesterday in Bushwick Super Outlaw Steezy. Luckily 5-0 was sleeping and the day was super dope!

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Best Damn Day of the Year!!!

 

You better axe sumbody!

 

Bike Kill 10 photos - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157637036419823/

More Bike Kill Photos, here:

Bike Kill 9 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157631879905622/

Bike Kill 7 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157625156141919/

Bike Kill 666 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157608378247130/

Movieposter: "Kill Bill 1" a film by Quentin Tarantino, Miramax Films, 2003.

Bike Kill XI was held yesterday in Bushwick Super Outlaw Steezy. Luckily 5-0 was sleeping and the day was super dope!

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Best Damn Day of the Year!!!

 

You better axe sumbody!

 

Bike Kill 10 photos - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157637036419823/

More Bike Kill Photos, here:

Bike Kill 9 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157631879905622/

Bike Kill 7 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157625156141919/

Bike Kill 666 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157608378247130/

Bike Kill XI was held yesterday in Bushwick Super Outlaw Steezy. Luckily 5-0 was sleeping and the day was super dope!

 

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Best Damn Day of the Year!!!

 

You better axe sumbody!

 

Bike Kill 10 photos - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157637036419823/

More Bike Kill Photos, here:

Bike Kill 9 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157631879905622/

Bike Kill 7 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157625156141919/

Bike Kill 666 - www.flickr.com/photos/jimkiernan/sets/72157608378247130/

More In Comments

 

Walk the Line - Domestication Kills

 

Inspired from the movie Ginger Snaps. I love that movie. In the beginning of the movie the sisters are taking pictures of staged deaths. One of the shots they did was death by lawn mower. I have been wanting to do a picture like this for a long time. I just never had a lawn mower.

 

Thanks Pikespice for talking about getting run over by a lawn mower, it made me think of Ginger Snaps which of course works perfectly for this challenge.

We Are The In Crowd on the Glamour Kills 2014 Tour. Photographed for Rumored Nights Press.

 

We Are The In Crowd

Glamour Kills Tour 2014

House of Blues Chicago

October 25, 2014

Chicago, IL

 

More from Rumored Nights Press here: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Flickr

Do you see the thoughts that run through my head? They twist, turn and race in and out of the darkness. Do you see them emerging in frantic and mischievous ways? Do you see now?

 

Can You See the Things in my Head?

5 x 5” watercolor & ink on paper

2011

First and quick test of Action POV (if you have a better name, please !). I have to get rid of the wires !

Taken last summer in the French town of La Rochelle, this street artist was mimicking people as they walked by.

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