View allAll Photos Tagged phillips
I have added this to group, My Own Favourite Flickr work. This is a small sketch completed a while ago now and long ago given away, I still hold this one as an aspirational sketch of my work wants to go, free and full of energy. Usually my more popular Flickr posts are the more careful and detailed compositions.
I arrived late for the Urban Sketchers Sydney opening meet up for a ANZAC long weekend of sketching. It was getting dark and there was a bit of rain. When I arrived everyone was already finishing up their sketches and getting ready to move on to the Orient Hotel for drinks. So here is my effort, a scribble sketch, so I could catch up with everyone else and enjoy a chat .
You can see the Church of St Peter and St Paul in the hazy sun.
The Memorial was erected to comemorate the death of Jack Philips, the radio operator on the Titanic, a Godalming man. It was paid for by public subscription and designed by the local architect, Thackeray Turner, planting designed by Gertrude Jekyll. It takes the form of a brick and tile cloister and sits in the watermeadow near to the parish church.
The rocks are called ''the Nobbies''. Phillip Island is a very small, peaceful island. Many birds, wallabys and even wild penguins live there.
The man who taught George Harrison to play the sitar, and still an incredible guitarist. On the Moody Blues Cruise January 2-7, 2018.
This little bundle was delivered by Caesarean Section this afternoon. Congratulations to my sister, Susi & her husband, Deon!
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Charlie Phillips is known as “one of Britain’s great photo-portraitists”
Arriving in London from Jamaica at the age of twelve, he grew up amidst a background of hostility and prejudice. He began taking photographs at the age of fourteen and later worked as a freelance photographer for magazines including Harpers Bazaar, Life and Italian Vogue. While living in Notting Hill, he explored aspects of urban life in the 1960s, photographing friends and neighbours, creating a pictorial documentary of a community at a particular moment in time. Phillips has also chronicled the passion and style of African-Caribbean funerals in London over several generations.
His photos capture the richness and complexity of the lives of the immigrant community, and are a hugely important archive of British culture.
©Kings Davis 2022
Please do not use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or
any other media without my explicit permission.
Northern Illinois Airshow
Waukegan National Airport
Waukegan, IL
Sept 2018
Follow on Instagram @dpsager
At the Palm Springs Art Museum
After growing up in Southern California’s Coachella Valley, Phillip K. Smith III received his Bachelor of Fine Arts and Bachelor of Architecture at the Rhode Island School of Design. From his Palm Desert, CA studio, he creates light-based work that draws upon ideas of space, form, color, light + shadow, environment, and change.
-pks3.com
Off the coast of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Phillip Island on a rainy overcast day. Much of this area is designated as Important Bird Area. Nesting spot for LIttle Penguins (Fairy Penguins), which we saw at dusk/ dark by the thousands. Also kangaroos and wallabies live and graze in the hills surrounding the area.
The black rock is from a long ago lava flow from up in the mountains.
Check back to my album 2016 Australia, New Zealand and French Polynesia -- should be posting more ( almost) daily
Phillip waited, waited and waited until his patience could wait no longer. At last, Marble was asleep down deep into some dream. Phillip knew when she was dreaming for he never slept, he was just a teddy bear you know. He watched Marble many a night and knew the signal when she was far away: the twitch of her left big toe. Game on. He gathered his gear and tip-pawed over to the tank. Carefully he removed the small cork and slowly slid in the hook. Oh, did the fish look plump and tasty. Again he waited patiently as only teddy bears can do. Just when he had a nibble from Finn a bird in the outside tree began squawking something in crow that he didn't understand. Marble stirred and with one eye, Phillip was caught. His line of defense? He made up some story about it being shark week and how he was just practicing a new toss and bob technique that puts sharks in a trance. He figured it would work on Lucy. Marble knew there would come a time when Phillip would start acting like a grown bear. She figured it wouldn't be this soon. Guess Phillip is just mature for his age.
Statue of Phillip Brooks by Augustus Saint-Gaudens (1848-1907), Trinity Church, Boston, Massachusetts.
Frames a perfect place for a restaurant and fishing wharf and reveals the turbulent tidal flow into Western Port Bay. A blue morning.
JP17 PHL
Plaxton Elite / Volvo B11R
Phillips International Travel of Bewdley
Location: Lodmoor Coach Park, Weymouth
Date: 08/06/2021
Phillip "Governor" Blake - ZazzlVerse The Walking Dead
Credit to TheMooseFigs cause I intensely stared at his Governor for hours and hours to come. :P
Northern Illinois Airshow
Waukegan National Airport
Waukegan, IL
Sept 2018
Follow on Instagram @dpsager
The Phillips Memorial Park is named after John George (Jack) Phillips, who, as well as being a resident of Farncombe, was Chief Wireless Telegraphist on the RMS Titanic. Jack remained at his post sending out distress messages in Morse code, as the ship sank, after striking an iceberg, on 15 April 1912. He was one of the first people to use the new international emergency call sign SOS during an actual disaster, which he interspersed with the old Marconi-preferred version CQD. The Memorial Cloister, at the western end of the Park, was built in 1913, through public subscription, to commemorate his selfless act.
The Cloister was designed by Hugh Thackeray Turner (1850-1937), a local architect renowned as an exponent of the Arts and Crafts style, who also helped to found the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.
The garden inside and around the Cloister was designed by Gertrude Jekyll, who is also well known for her work with Edward Lutyens, and for her book on old west Surrey (highlighting a way of life which was disappearing). The Cloister was created in 1913, by the Municipal Borough of Godalming, at a cost of £700, following the purchase of the surrounding land for £300 (which created the Phillips Memorial Gardens). The Cloister was opened on 15 April 1914. Today the Cloister exists in a slightly altered form, the southern wall (facing the Church) having been replaced with an open pergola structure in 1965.