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Another enigmatic classical beauty with a mona lisa smile :)

Credit where credit's due: The amazing artist's name is Patrick Pietropoli and the piece is La grande famille

 

www.galerie-europe.com/francais/pietropoli/patrickpietropoli.html

 

The same artist who sculpted this

 

Rated Flickr #1 Most Interesting September 19th 2005.

 

Please, leave me a comment letting me know how you found this photo online. Thanks!

it seems the students have a sense of humor about the current situation.

this is one of the many statues on campus, but this is the first one you see once you get past the gates. the students at my university have place used masks on these local iconic statues for amusement or perhaps frustration.

 

sony a7rii

canon fd 50mm f1.4 chrome nose

Portion of larger ice sculpture that represented a large anchor at formal Navy reception in Seattle, Washington, USA.

Yesterday was the Seymour Show.

 

Now this Cockatoo was something I did as a kind of ;earning exercise. I've wanted to try my hand at larger sculptures for a while, it's not something I've done before, and this cockatoo was really just me practising to learn.

 

And then, at one point yesterday, I'm there near the display yesterday, and this guy and his partner are looking at it. they're just leaning in together, talking amongst themselves, but the thing isn't too well balanced, and I'm concerned it'll get knocked, so I move towards them just in case. That's when I catch the guy saying to his partner, with utmost reverence "It takes a real artist to do something like that."

 

I busily do an internal high-five, it's one of the best compliments I've ever gotten, mostly it's about how he said it, and partly because it wasn't said to me at all, I'm not even sure they noticed me there, but it was obviously the highlight of his day. And they move on.

 

That's why I do these displays. It's about bringing that joy into the world. So whoever you are stranger, High-Five.

This sand scuplture shows Wilhelmine von Grävenitz, the mistress of Duke Eberhard Ludwig of Württemberg in the early 18th century. He lived with her in the palace of Ludwigsburg while his wife stayed at the so called Old Palace at Stuttgart.

The sculpture was created by Dutch sand sculptor Anique Kuizenga. It won the second place in the competition which is part of the exhibition.

Obviously I changed the background here again. I used a texture by Anna Lenabem (www.flickr.com/photos/lenabem-anna/18095123632/in/datepos...). The orginal background was a hedge, not really bad but I wanted a more painterly backdrop for Wilhelmine.

I love going to the museum as interesting scene like this would unfold in front of your eyes. Then you can make up any story with your photographs. Because of that I 've asked my wife to join the membership of Legion of Honor so that we could visit there and the De Young Museum freely for the entire year.

 

Film: Fujifilm Acros 100 II

Camera: Leica M6 Classic

Lens: Leica Summicron 35mm F2 Asph II

"The Royal Menagerie is first referenced during the reign of Henry III. In 1251, the sheriffs were ordered to pay fourpence a day towards the upkeep for the King's polar bear; the bear attracted a great deal of attention from Londoners when it went fishing in the Thames. In 1254, the sheriffs were ordered to subsidise the construction of an elephant house at the Tower. The exact location of the medieval menagerie is unknown, although the lions were kept in the barbican known as Lion Tower. The royal collection was swelled by diplomatic gifts including three leopards from the Holy Roman Emperor. By the 18th century, the menagerie was open to the public; admission cost three half-pence or the supply of a cat or dog to be fed to the lions. The last of the animals left in 1835, relocated to Regents Park, after one of the lions was accused of biting a soldier. The Keeper of the Royal Menagerie was entitled to use the Lion Tower as a house for life. Consequentially, even though the animals had long since left the building, the Lion Tower was not demolished until the last keeper's death in 1853.

 

During 2011 an exhibition was hosted at the Tower with fine wire sculptures by Kendra Haste."

looking towards Scuplture by the Sea

Bondi Tamarama Beaches Walk

Beautiful lady admiring herself in the mirror. Things were no different those days, and they did have make up mirrors!

Street scuplture. Asheville, North Carolina.

This Scuplture is called "Vitality" ("Lebenskraft") and is made by Andreu Alfaro in 1979.

 

The power of life is the double helix, it refers to the structure of DNA.

   

www.dirkschmitz.de

                

Get FAN on Facebook: Dirk Schmitz | Fotografie

 

Artist: Marlene Hilton Moore

 

Gardens of Justice

 

The Gardens of Justice is a series of sculptures and fountains that sit between historic Osgoode Hall, home of the Ontario Court of Appeal, the Law Society of Ontario, and the Superior Court of Justice. Each item is designed to represent one of the fundamental legal rights of all Canadians. This gallery of public art invites us to pause and reflect on our freedoms, whether we are on our way to court, visiting on a class trip, or just passing by.

 

osgoode-hall.stqry.app/1/tour/346/item/5010

A stylized depiction of the mythical Titan Atlas holding aloft the globe; seen at the Hextar World Empire City shopping mall.

 

Petaling Jaya; December 2025

Tetsuro Yamasaki, 'Circle - “Harmony” (2016)'

Sculpture Rocks

Sculpture by the Sea

The Rocks, Sydney 2021

This is one of the scupltures in a "Wild In Art" trail based on the Aardman animated characters "Shaun The Sheep".

 

Various organisations / artists decorate standard sculptures on a theme of their choice.

 

TRAIL GRAZER

This artist has transformed Shaun into a Herdwick

Sheep, which are a strong, hardy and very cute

breed of sheep, found mainly in the Lake District.

This Herdwick is an adventurous young tup, which is

the name for a young male sheep, and likes to be

out and about in the fields getting up to mischief,

just like Shaun.

 

Created by:

Sandra Russell

Sandra Russell is a painter, illustrator and storyboard

artist based in the North East. She mainly works for

advertising agencies drawing digitally how an advert will look

like before it goes into production, alongside her partner Steve

Johnson. She really enjoys painting Wild in Art sculptures as

they bring so much joy and colour to public spaces.

@sandrarussellart

 

wildinart.co.uk/

  

An 80 ft. sculpture in Jersey City on the Hudson River shore.

In the main square of Szigetvár, next to the St. Rókus Church, you can find the St. Rókus Fountain, which was inaugurated on 5 October 2002. The statue was made by Kálmán Veres, the marble for the posttamens was donated by the town of Déva (Szigetvár's sister town).

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The sculpture represents the relative importance of body parts in human brain

 

'It's a human figure with the parts of the body sized proportionally to how much of our brain is devoted to them. Notice that one thumb uses more brain-space than both legs and feet!'

 

- mishylainescorneroftheworld.blogspot.com/2013/11/ontario-...

Sony RX-100 MK3 compact camera

Aperture ƒ/1.8

Focal length 8.8 mm

Shutter 1/500

ISO 125

Sculptures featured on the external walls of Seville Cathedral.

 

Panasonic DMC-TZ100

Aperture ƒ/6.3

Focal length 20.5 mm

Shutter 1/50

ISO 100

...that is my "artistic" interpretation on these granite blocks.

 

(Never any AI, photoshop or heavy pp)

  

Official description:

 

Title:

La Ville imaginaire (The Imaginary City)

 

Sculpture done by João Charters de Almeida, in 1997. This sculpture is made out of white granite from Portugal.

 

A gift from the Metropolitano de Lisboa to the Société de transport de Montréal (Montreal Transport Company) and subsequently to the City of Montréal, this work commemorates the 30th anniversary of Montreal's Metro subway system - and Expo 67.

 

The sculpture is a reflection on how humans create mythical spaces, both out of necessity and in response to challenges.

Post-processing:

- add a multiply layer to the original image, making it darker

- erase the parts that you want to keep luminous

- repeat above 2 steps

- merge layers

- result: dark background, luminous highlights

- add photo filters: cooling #3, green, blue

- add color saturation and a little contrast

- add some diffuse glow filter (filter > distort > diffuse glow) to make highlights stand out even more

- add a strong noise reduction to smoothen image

- add a frame

- post on Flickr

 

View original here

 

#79 on Explore :)

Skulptur Christina Gardahl

François Rude, né le 4 janvier 1784 à Dijon, mort le 3 novembre 1855 à Paris, est un sculpteur français, représentatif de la transition entre le néoclassicisme et le romantisme, dont il est un des maîtres.

Fils de forgeron, il apprend le dessin dans cette ville avec François Devosge et est soutenu par le conservateur adjoint du musée des beaux-arts de Dijon, mécène et ardent bonapartiste, Louis Frémiet, dont il épousera plus tard la fille, Sophie.

 

SolidNature presents Vondel Fountain, Stacked, a monumental installation created with Dutch artist and designer Sabine Marcelis. Revealed during Amsterdam Fashion Week, the sculpture repurposes high-quality blue stone slabs from SolidNature’s award-winning installation showcased at Milan Design Week 2023. After the event in Milan, SolidNature CEO David Mahyari made sure that all the materials were given a new life. Only the bright blue plates had not yet been given a new purpose.

The three stone slabs each have a different orientation, which offers a different dynamic experience from every angle. Water starts to flow from multiple points in the installation, in a cascade with enchanting movement and sound.

 

The fountain will be on display for three months in the Vondelpark, near the Vondelparkpaviljoen. Mahyari secretly hopes that the municipality will decide to keep the work there. "If that is not the case, we will look for a permanent location for the stone and the object."

Near the cathedral's transept, just before the choir stalls, was this altar and a sculpted stone pulpit (at left).

 

The 'Prisoners of Conscience' stained glass window is visible in the background.

 

Salisbury; July, 2005

Ayia Napa, Cyprus, November 2018

Still life photography

Wire art Scuplture /Artist colllection

===================

Photography /Art work / Collection of the artist

For Commissions, HD Image,Reproductions,editorials and other uses

Please contact the artist:

www.ffmendoza.com/

Atelier Art Polifacetico ffmendoza

www.facebook.com/Atelier-Art-Polifacetico-ffmendoza-19119...

========

Estudio de Arte / Atelier Studio ff mendoza

Cuesta del Castillo / n 9

Mojacar /04638/ Almeria

=====Eng

Visits are always welcome in the frequent open days.Also by appointment or when you go through the studio if I am in that moment.

-=====Esp

Las visitas son siempre bienvenidas en las frecuentes jornadas de puertas abiertas.Tambien por cita previa o cuando pasen por el estudio si estoy en ese momento .

=========fr

Les visiteurs sont toujours les bienvenus dans les fréquents journées portes ouvertes.

Aussi sur rendez-vous ou en passant par l'étude si je suis à ce moment-là.

========

Si te gusta este trabajo, apoyarlo, gracias:

If you like this work, support it, thank :

Like ✔ Favorite ✔ Comment ✔ Share ✔ Follow ✔

 

Shibden Hall is a Grade II listed historic house located in a public park at Shibden, West Yorkshire, England. The building has been extensively modified from its original design by generations of residents, although its Tudor half-timbered frontage remains its most recognisable feature

Sculpture de Louise Bourgeois intitulée "Mom", Bilbao, devant le Guggenheim

Sinnataggen "The Bratt", bronze scuplture by Gustav Vigeland in Frogner Parken Oslo, Norway.

People really love this child so much that some years ago the left hand was cut off and stolen surely as a souvenir, it was never recovered so they had to make a new one that's why it was brighter when I took the photo. By now it's the same color as the rest.

Long time ago they stole the whole sculpture and they had to make a replica. Fortunately the original was found and sat in place.

A walk around Shrewsbury, Shropshire

2021

This is one of the scupltures in a "Wild In Art" trail based on the Aardman animated characters "Shaun The Sheep".

 

Various organisations / artists decorate standard sculptures on a theme of their choice.

 

HITSUJI

Inspired by Japanese art and culture, Hitsuji,

meaning ‘sheep’ in Japanese is adorned with

beautiful peonies and koi carp. Hitsuji is a master

of being cool, calm and collected.

 

Created by:

Jessica Perrin

Jess is an illustrator and designer living and working

in Birmingham with her love for character design seen

throughout her work. Jess has painted 70 sculptures for

Wild in Art since 2017, with a selection of her sculptures

selling for over £200,000 for various charities.

@jessp_illustrates

 

wildinart.co.uk/

  

"Cascade"

scuplture

Dutch designers Atelier Van Lieshout

Rotterdam

Netherlands

 

CASCADE, 2010

 

The eight-metre tall sculpture is made of polyester, a material that can almost be regarded as the signature of Atelier Van Lieshout. Eighteen stacked oil drums, which appear to descend from the sky like a waterfall, combine to form a monumental column. From the life-size drums drips a syrupy mass in which one can make out the shapes of a score of human figures. They are anonymous beings, many of them in dramatic poses. Some of them climb upwards. In comparison with the robust contours of the oil drums, the figures are limp and formless. Despite that, these shapes form a network that supports the column. Drums and human shapes, rigid and limp forms, have melted together into a single whole.

Oct. 5, 2016: Stop at Living Memorial Scuplture Garden north of Weed, California.

Pavlovsk park 2022

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