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Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General together with experts from China, Republic of Korea, Switzerland and the IAEA collected sea water samples near Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. Ukedo Port, Japan. 19 February 2025
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Diana Wall (left) and Holley Zadeh, preparing to sample for nematodes inside a temperature chamber at Lake Hoare.
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General together with experts from China, Republic of Korea, Switzerland and the IAEA collected sea water samples near Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. Ukedo Port, Japan. 19 February 2025
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General together with experts from China, Republic of Korea, Switzerland and the IAEA collected sea water samples near Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. Ukedo Port, Japan. 19 February 2025
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General together with experts from China, Republic of Korea, Switzerland and the IAEA collected sea water samples near Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. Ukedo Port, Japan. 19 February 2025
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
Samples from North Prospect Road Flats before demolition.
© Tim Mills/FOTONOW/North Prospect History Project.
Bali coffee (black), Bali coffee (with sugar), ginseng coffee, hot cocoa, ginger tea, lemongrass tea.
From a self-initiated project, I developed artwork around the theme of ‘everyday life'. The reason I chose this was because I wanted to work on a theme that was not a phenomenon but something that exists in the world we live in and could easily be overlooked. I wanted to re observe my surroundings with fresh eyes as an artist. Starting in the towns and city in the working week in the day especially around lunchtimes - I visited urban and suburban markets, watching people move around different shops - second hand and vintage as well as record shops - and how they interacted with each other and with buskers. From that initial study I investigated everyday home life, preparing a meal -'because what is more everyday than making dinner' - tidying a room -cleaning etc. From the meal preparation I looked at the food waste - onion skins from the diced onions that I had fried. I also thought about the food ingredients that I had used as an artist may thinks about their materials - rather than as a cook - asking myself if these materials could be reused as dyes or materials for my design work. I steamed the onion skins, which left a reduced liquor of pale brown which I used to dye a variety of fabric samples. I experimented with different constructions of materials from fine silks, basked woven cottons and heavier carpet like brocades and velvet. I settled on silk chiffon as this symbolised the fine sheer waxy onion skins and the way it reacted to the stitching produced an interesting bobbly effect replicating a cellular, vegetal look. This work took on the look of a coral reef and once again I started to think about life under the sea. These samples and fashion drawings are made from fabric that I dyed using onion skins.
Made for my class sample display for "Mini Accordion Books," a workshop I'm teaching for Muskego Park & Rec. in Feb 2009.
Samples from Bonnie Inouye's seminar, The Flowing Line.
I've seen examples of this on the ravelry group Warped Weavers, which is why I wanted to take this class. Some of it was very obvious to me and other parts were less so.
It really made me want a 16S loom though. O dear.
At the National Gallery of Art.
NOTE: Look "wall-eyed" at the top pair or "cross-eyed" at the bottom pair to get a 3D image from the fused pictures. Another illustration.
Here's a helpful tip for viewing stereo pairs.
Neil Creek has even more information about 3D photo viewing.
If you'd like to browse a bit, please enjoy a somewhat random sampling of my photos.
Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director-General together with experts from China, Republic of Korea, Switzerland and the IAEA collected sea water samples near Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station. Ukedo Port, Japan. 19 February 2025
Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA
This now abandoned (I think) building sold stone, and so it was faced in samples of all the stone it sold. Amazing.
Two mohair samples: Habu Kit 110 and knitty's Ice Queen cowl knit up with ArtYarns Mohair Bead & Sequins.