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I keep a little box that I fill with notes about special memories. Today I laughed and I cried as I added to my box of memories
#SideOtelleri arasında yer alan Memory Apart Hotel hizmetinizde, şimdi inceleyin!
www.erkenrezervasyon.tv/memory-apart-hotel//?utm_source=f...
#EkonomikTatil #SideErkenRezervasyon #SideKalınacakYerler #SideOtel #SideTatil #UcuzTatil
It was a great Fall day full of color, fresh air, laughter and good company. It had all the makings of great Fall "Memories"
View in Black
As part of the PNCA Alumni Reunion, PNCA celebrates the new home of Memory 99 a significant work by PNCA alumnus Lee Kelly ‘59, on the Northwest Park Blocks adjacent to PNCA’s future Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design. Kelly’s Memory 99 was the cornerstone of the Portland Art Museum’s retrospective of the artist’s work and finds a permanent home in this future park block thanks to a gift for its purchase provided by The Ford Family Foundation.
Made possible by a grant from the Visual Arts Program of The Ford Family Foundation (Roseburg, Oregon) to preserve public access to works of consequence by Oregon’s most significant visual artists.
October 19, 2012. Photography by: Matthew Miller '11.
I have several trays of slides that I am going through from the war. I'll be posting some of the more interesting ones.
Please enjoy the history.
I apologize that some of these slides are upside down, I didn't realize it when I scanned them.
As part of the PNCA Alumni Reunion, PNCA celebrates the new home of Memory 99 a significant work by PNCA alumnus Lee Kelly ‘59, on the Northwest Park Blocks adjacent to PNCA’s future Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design. Kelly’s Memory 99 was the cornerstone of the Portland Art Museum’s retrospective of the artist’s work and finds a permanent home in this future park block thanks to a gift for its purchase provided by The Ford Family Foundation.
Made possible by a grant from the Visual Arts Program of The Ford Family Foundation (Roseburg, Oregon) to preserve public access to works of consequence by Oregon’s most significant visual artists.
October 19, 2012. Photography by: Matthew Miller '11.
Watercolor pencil and Ink, and Water soluble graphite.
I didn't have a reference photo for this....just sorta combined memories of several areas and scenes I saw while there....:)
inside the memorial arch, are many walls with names of 10's of thousands of soldiers whose bodies were never found