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Por mi zona de confort, me gusta las encinas desprovistas de sus hojas, troncos viejos, las solitarias...poseo un pequeño listado de ellos y lugares, cuando la ocasión lo pinta me doy un garbeo. De una salida en una tarde con síntomas de nevar.Buen año para todos.
PRADES-PINTURA-ART-PAISATGES-PLAÇA MAJOR-ESGLESIA-FONT-PORXOS-POBLE-BAIX CAMP-TARRAGONA-PINTOR-ERNEST DESCALS-
La monumental PLAÇA MAJOR del pueblo PRADES en un vista general que engloba varios de sus puntos de interés como LA FONT DE PRADES, la Església de Santa Maria con tonos rojizos y las casas que forman la plaza porticada, días de sol y nubes, un poco de viento y mucha luz, los restos de sus antiguas murallas nos llevan la mirada hacia la profundidad con la puerta de entrada al recinto. Pintura de paisajes del artista pintor Ernest Descals con los lugares históricos y arquitectónicos de los pueblos de la comarca del Baix Camp en Tarragona, Catalunya.
Yucca.Pintor with his smoothie recipe. A part of the "Мост 4" West Park Metro Station – Graffiti and Street Art Festival
westmall.bg/en/events/mosta-4:-metrostantsia-zapaden-park...
Esta Cabeza de muchacha, conocida como La despeinada (en italiano, Testa di fanciulla (La scapigliata)) es una obra del pintor renacentista italiano Leonardo da Vinci. Está pintado con tierra oscura, ámbar verdoso y albayalde sobre tabla y mide 24,7 cm de alto y 21 cm de ancho. Está datada hacia 1508. Se conserva en la Galería Nacional de Parma en Italia.
Esta pintura, a pesar de estar inacabada, muestra una gran belleza femenina.
Está documentada su existencia desde 1531, si bien existen algunas dudas sobre su autenticidad y, sobre todo, su datación. Por el estilo, parece uno de esos dibujos que realizó en los años 1500, que retoma ciertos temas de juventud, tratándolos con antigüedad y realismo, de manera más volumétrica. Recuerda por su postura y el peinado, a otro dibujo de esa misma época, estudio para la Leda, que se conserva actualmente en el Castillo de Windsor y muy importante.
es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabeza_de_muchacha_(Leonardo)
La Scapigliata (Italian for 'The Lady with Dishevelled Hair')[n 1] is an unfinished painting generally attributed to the Italian High Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci, and dated c. 1506–1508. Painted in oil, umber, and white lead pigments on a small poplar wood panel, its attribution remains controversial, with several experts attributing the work to a pupil of Leonardo. The painting has been admired for its captivating beauty, mysterious demeanor, and mastery of sfumato.
There is no real consensus on the subject, date, history, or purpose of the painting. It shows an unidentified woman gazing downward while her hair fills the frame behind her. Many theories regarding the subject have been proposed: that it is a sketch for an uncompleted painting of Saint Anne; a study for the London version of the Virgin of the Rocks or Leonardo's lost painting of Leda and the Swan; or a painting left deliberately unfinished for its aesthetic value.
The painting was recorded in the sale in 1826 of Gaetano Callani's collection to the Galleria Nazionale di Parma, the museum in which it is currently housed, but proof of its existence may date back to 1531, when it may have been owned by Isabella d'Este. Although many studies of Leonardo's oeuvre are silent on the issue, most scholars who discuss the painting regard it as an autographic work by Leonardo da Vinci and it has been listed as such in various major Leonardo exhibitions.
This glass was given to my late brother in law. The "Glan Ely Tramps" was the name of the staff dramatic society at the school in Cardiff where he taught.
The Looking close … on Friday group has chosen Words on glass this week.
Taken among the catkins on a beautiful sunny day.
*Lifer for Dave and Dad*
Northern Pygmy Owl
This is the first Pygmy Owl Dave and I have encountered while birding, though we have been looking for one for some time. It was a pleasant surprise as I checked out a little white spot with my binoculars seemingly out of place in the catkins.
We are having an early spring this February. Daffodils and crocuses are up, as well as skunk cabbage in the bogs. Even cherry trees are blooming in some places throughout the Fraser valley.
Hopefully this will bring us some more sun, a rarity lately since a sunny period last November. But that said, it only rains here twice a week in the winter...three days the first time and four days the second time.
This owlet was alerting to the scurry of a mouse or vole at dusk. At between 6.7-8.3 inches long, the Northern Saw-whet Owl is a smaller species that mainly preys on small rodents. However this pint-size predator also has to avoid becoming prey to larger raptors too. What a treat to get to see two of these owlets in the wild! Though wide-spread in the United States, they are seldom seen as they are nocturnal and often roost in dense conifers during the day. Schofield, WI 6/27/22