View allAll Photos Tagged material

Be careful with that bomb.

 

See also R3/\/\1X\/\/0RX.

What did they use materials like crocodiles for I wonder?

One of the tables in the dining area. Totally creepy how all of these personal items and dining utensils are still here.

Adorou esses tecidos delicados? Confira as aplicações que mostramos nesse artigo - elas deixam seus looks com um ar mais romântico: abr.io/1J4f

 

Foto: ThinkStock

Good morning!! Let's have an energetic breakfast!

素材辞典_Vol.80_女性-美とリラックス編

About the Artist: Beth Lipman

 

Beth Lipman’s family is obsessed with food. When she was a girl, her mother would drive her from their home in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to New York City. A day there might include a stop at Zabar’s, then Bruno Ravioli, and then across the street to Key Avenue for lunch, then later that same day to H&H Bagels. Lipman came to see contemporary food culture as a metaphor for consumption.

 

Because of where they lived, Lipman’s family was surrounded by Pennsylvania Dutch folk art. Her mother created it herself using how-to and still life painting books. Her mother’s collection and the family’s fascination with food fed Lipman’s own interest in traditional still life as a way to explore ideas like consumerism and mortality.

 

Lipman earned her bachelor of fine arts degree in both glassworking and fiber arts from Temple University in Philadelphia. Both disciplines inform the meticulous work she makes. The glass elements of her still lifes are blown, solid sculpted, kiln fired, and flameworked. She credits the balance of her complex yet highly organized arrangements to her fiber arts background and her work with patterns.

 

The Details

 

•Title: Material Culture

•Maker(s): Beth Lipman

•Accession Number: 2010.4.43

•Place Made: United States, WI, Sheboygan; and United States, NY, Brooklyn

•Dimensions:

oOverall Dimensions:

Height: 175.3 cm

Width: 114.3 cm

Depth: 106.7 cm

•Date: 2008

•Technique: blown glass, assembling

•Materials: silicone, wood table

•Credit Line: 20th Rakow Commission

 

Interpretive Text

 

Material Culture was made using vessels of different shapes and sizes, some broken or fragmentary. Beth Lipman did not try to alter her traditional forms or bypass their function. Instead, she created new meanings and contexts for them. The vessels were glued together to form a tower of glass that overwhelms a too-small table. By assembling such an abundance of objects, Lipman comments on cultures of excess. The sculpture also refers to the amassing of vast collections housed in museums like this one.

 

The Studio at 20

 

The Studio has been a starting point for emerging artists and an incubator for new work by established artists since 1996. To celebrate 20 years, we’re highlighting works in the Museum’s permanent collection created by artists who have taught or who have been artists in residence at The Studio. Pieces by this artistic community can be found in the Glass Collection Galleries, where they are identified by the Studio at 20 symbol.

Yerba Buena Lane, San Francisco, CA

deployment by helicopter in very remote east of east timor areas of sensitive and non sensitive electoral material for the upcoming 9 october suku elections. UNPOL and PNTL also are deployed to remote areas where they at times need to walk a further 2 to 3 hours to their post. Photo by Martine Perret/UNMIT 8 october 2009

Materials:

1 Aluminum bar 1/8" thick. My bar was 3 feet long.

1 3 3/8" "Blind Spot" convex mirror

4 #8 x 32 x 4" machine screws

12 #8 x 32 nuts

12 #8 washers

4 #8 Lock washers

1 Ikea Septum light shade

1 piece of Aluminum sheet. Thick enough to hold mirror well.

radioactive material left in the destoryed abandoned factory outside Copenhagen

Material: Glass & PVC

 

Made by Smart Man 1212 Laser Machine

Trailhead basin wildrye at the Bridger Plant Materials Center. June 2006.

hair wreath object d'art in the John Harris-Simon Cameron Mansion

Jessie J

Webster Hall

New York City

Wednesday, April 29th, 2015

© 2015 LEROE24FOTOS.COM

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED,

BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.

THE VOLUPTUOUS HORROR OF KAREN BLACK (VHOKB)

Bowery Electric

New York City

March 2nd, 2014

© 2014 LEROE24FOTOS.COM

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED,

BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.

Teal and Chocolate Swirl Covers Pillow

Teal and Chocolate Swirl Covers Pillow use materials are top quality home decor polyester. Embroidered With Gold Geometric Pattern gives a classic, neutral. Makes for a luxurious addition to any room.

 

All pillow covers are sewn professionally, over-locked with finished edges to prevent fraying and has invisible zipper enclosures for easy removal and cleaning.

 

Refresh your home and office decor distinctively and luxuriously to add comfort and elegance to your living spaces. Ideal for friends, parents wedding gift, housewarming gift.

Your complete satisfaction is extremely important to me. Each Stitched pillow cover goes through a litany quality checks, ensuring each pillow cover is beautiful and built to last.

 

These pillowcases are also great for a gift shop or store as you can see exactly what you’re getting on the label on the display front detailing it’s contents. One of the only gifts that could look so sophisticated and swanky in an adults room, yet would look so cool and fun in a kid’s room too!

 

Material Pillow Covers :

 

Polyester Peach Skin

Soft and durable 100% spun polyester cover

Independent designs, custom printed when you order

With pre-shrunk fabric, machine washable at normal temperature.

Concealed zip opening for a clean look and easy care

Both functional and decorative.

Note: Some designs are not available in all sizes.

Machine wash gentle, lay flat to dry. saizoshop.com/product/teal-and-chocolate-swirl-covers-pil...

Juniper planting, plant materials center, September 1980.

About the Artist: Beth Lipman

 

Beth Lipman’s family is obsessed with food. When she was a girl, her mother would drive her from their home in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to New York City. A day there might include a stop at Zabar’s, then Bruno Ravioli, and then across the street to Key Avenue for lunch, then later that same day to H&H Bagels. Lipman came to see contemporary food culture as a metaphor for consumption.

 

Because of where they lived, Lipman’s family was surrounded by Pennsylvania Dutch folk art. Her mother created it herself using how-to and still life painting books. Her mother’s collection and the family’s fascination with food fed Lipman’s own interest in traditional still life as a way to explore ideas like consumerism and mortality.

 

Lipman earned her bachelor of fine arts degree in both glassworking and fiber arts from Temple University in Philadelphia. Both disciplines inform the meticulous work she makes. The glass elements of her still lifes are blown, solid sculpted, kiln fired, and flameworked. She credits the balance of her complex yet highly organized arrangements to her fiber arts background and her work with patterns.

 

The Details

 

•Title: Material Culture

•Maker(s): Beth Lipman

•Accession Number: 2010.4.43

•Place Made: United States, WI, Sheboygan; and United States, NY, Brooklyn

•Dimensions:

oOverall Dimensions:

Height: 175.3 cm

Width: 114.3 cm

Depth: 106.7 cm

•Date: 2008

•Technique: blown glass, assembling

•Materials: silicone, wood table

•Credit Line: 20th Rakow Commission

 

Interpretive Text

 

Material Culture was made using vessels of different shapes and sizes, some broken or fragmentary. Beth Lipman did not try to alter her traditional forms or bypass their function. Instead, she created new meanings and contexts for them. The vessels were glued together to form a tower of glass that overwhelms a too-small table. By assembling such an abundance of objects, Lipman comments on cultures of excess. The sculpture also refers to the amassing of vast collections housed in museums like this one.

 

The Studio at 20

 

The Studio has been a starting point for emerging artists and an incubator for new work by established artists since 1996. To celebrate 20 years, we’re highlighting works in the Museum’s permanent collection created by artists who have taught or who have been artists in residence at The Studio. Pieces by this artistic community can be found in the Glass Collection Galleries, where they are identified by the Studio at 20 symbol.

Wenn man mal Langeweile hat, dann bastelt man sich einfach ein eigenes Aquarium, bestehend aus oben genannten Materialien.

素材辞典_Vol.186_CGバックグラウンド-シーズン&フラワー編

Bird Cliffs at Latrabjarg, Iceland

Photographed by School of Architecture Visual Resources Collection TA Amelia Mickelsen.

 

Ring made from scratch by hand, labor-intensive wire-wrapping technique.

Materials : oxidized (tinted) and polished silver + zircon.

-height (measured on the outer edges)2,4cm.

-width (measured on the outer edges) 2,0x2,3cm.

-adjustable circuit.

 

Curated by the UTSOA Materials Lab.

 

Photographed by School of Architecture Visual Resources Collection Photography TA, Katie Slusher.

www.electricteeth.co.uk & www.electricteeth.com

 

You are free to:

 

Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format

 

Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially.

 

You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.

 

You must give appropriate credit and provide a link to the original post: www.electricteeth.co.uk/foreo-issa-review/

 

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International

creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

 

Artist: Barbara Leaney

Title: African Spirit 3

Material: mixed media

 

Norwich 20 Group Exhibition

Changes May 2018

9th May to 26th May 2018

 

The Undercroft, Norwich Market

 

Norwich, Norfolk, England, UK

 

1 2 ••• 52 53 55 57 58 ••• 79 80