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Cleethorpes Town Sportsman Dinner - 9th November 2012 - Featuring Alan Buckley, John McDermott, Dave Moore, John Frazer, Tommy Watson, Gary Childs, Gary Croft At Stamford Club Cleethorpes, Linden Homes Club and Comedian Jimmy Carroll
Creator: H. Allison & Co. Photographers
Date: c.1941
Original Format: Glass Plate Negative, 9.5 X 7.5 inches
Description:
McDermott family - Wedding Portrait
PRONI Ref: D2886/W/Wedding/465
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John McDermott, director of A4NH, making a presentation at a side session on 'Food safety: Options for addressing a growing crisis', organized by the CGIAR Research Program on Agriculture for Nutrition and Health, at IFPRI's 2020 Conference, 'Building Resilience for Food and Nutrition Security', in Addis Ababa, 15-17 May 2014 (photo credit: ILRI/Susan MacMillan).
Thomas McDermott, as photographed by Carl Van Vechten in 1943.
Image courtesy of Marquette University Archives. Image No.:MUA_KJP_02262front
Related images at
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) makes a visit to the Smithsonian's traveling exhibition "Jim Henson's Fantastic World" when it stopped at Seattle's Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum.
Kevin McDermott of Llanerch Country Club hits an iron from the fairway during during a Middle-Amateur Championship Qualifier presented by Callaway Golf at Meadowlands Country Club (par 71, 6,484 yards).
Built in 1908, this Colonial Revival-style house was designed by Peter Linhoff and built by Carl P. Waldon, and was home to the McDermott family for much of its early history. The house features a gambrel roof with red shingles, broad overhanging eaves with brackets, a cornice with dentils, three front dormers with arched windows, pilasters, decorative trim, and pediments, a front oriel window in the center bay, and a front porch with a decorative cornice, brick columns, and a low-slope hipped roof. The house is a contributing structure in the Historic Hill District, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) views a photograh at the Smithsonian's traveling exhibition "Jim Henson's Fantastic World" when it stopped at Seattle's Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum.
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) speaks at Seattle's Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum when it hosted the Smithsonian's traveling exhibition "Jim Henson's Fantastic World."
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) speaks at Seattle's Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum when it hosted the Smithsonian's traveling exhibition "Jim Henson's Fantastic World."
Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) makes a visit to the Smithsonian's traveling exhibition "Jim Henson's Fantastic World" when it stopped at Seattle's Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum.
Performance and Media Artist Robert Lepage brought his talent and unique multidisciplinary perspective to MIT during his residency from April 24-26, 2012. His time on campus was full from morning to night as he met with and collaborated with MIT students, faculty and staff, participated in two public programs and received the 2012 Eugene McDermott MIT Award in the Arts at MIT during a gala held in his honor.
"The Science of Illusion" was co-presented by the Arts at MIT and the MIT Museum as part of the Cambridge Science Festival, on the topic of science, illusion and culture. John Durant, Director of the MIT Museum and Adjunct Professor in the Science, Technology and Society Program opened the panel and introduced the other panelists, whose work and research provided a range of perspectives on illusion and magic. In addition to Mr. Lepage, other panelists were Professor George Barbastathis, Singapore Research Professor of Optics and Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Assistant Professor Graham Jones, Anthropology; and Seth Riskin, Manager, Emerging Technologies and Holography/Spatial Imaging Initiative at the MIT Museum.
The panelists held a lively discussion about the relationship of illusion to human perception and offered insights into how magical thinking drives technological innovation and the human imagination. Panelists discussed everything from holograms to invisibility cloaking — techniques to make objects vanish by bending light to fool the eye — and the audience was treated to some magic tricks by Graham Jones–including a book that burst into flames.
For more information: artsm.it/17uLib1
All photos ©L. Barry Hetherington
Please ask before use
Dylan McDermott speaking with attendees at the 2023 Mad Monster Arizona Party at the Renaissance Phoenix Glendale Hotel & Spa in Glendale, Arizona.
Please attribute to Gage Skidmore if used elsewhere.
(L-r) ZACH GALIFIANAKIS as Marty Huggins, JASON SUDEIKIS as Mitch, DYLAN McDERMOTT as Tim Wattley and WILL FERRELL as Cam Brady in Warner Bros. Pictures’ comedy “THE CAMPAIGN,” a Warner Bros. Pictures release.
Performance and Media Artist Robert Lepage brought his talent and unique multidisciplinary perspective to MIT during his residency from April 24-26, 2012. His time on campus was full from morning to night as he met with and collaborated with MIT students, faculty and staff, participated in two public programs and received the 2012 Eugene McDermott MIT Award in the Arts at MIT during a gala held in his honor.
"The Science of Illusion" was co-presented by the Arts at MIT and the MIT Museum as part of the Cambridge Science Festival, on the topic of science, illusion and culture. John Durant, Director of the MIT Museum and Adjunct Professor in the Science, Technology and Society Program opened the panel and introduced the other panelists, whose work and research provided a range of perspectives on illusion and magic. In addition to Mr. Lepage, other panelists were Professor George Barbastathis, Singapore Research Professor of Optics and Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Assistant Professor Graham Jones, Anthropology; and Seth Riskin, Manager, Emerging Technologies and Holography/Spatial Imaging Initiative at the MIT Museum.
The panelists held a lively discussion about the relationship of illusion to human perception and offered insights into how magical thinking drives technological innovation and the human imagination. Panelists discussed everything from holograms to invisibility cloaking — techniques to make objects vanish by bending light to fool the eye — and the audience was treated to some magic tricks by Graham Jones–including a book that burst into flames.
For more information: artsm.it/17uLib1
All photos ©L. Barry Hetherington
Please ask before use