View allAll Photos Tagged singe
Marble Brewery, Downtown Albuquerque
www.facebook.com/p/Keeping-Up-with-the-Joneses-band-10007...
Hi dear friends!! I went to a private concert of Fobia, one of my favorite bands, it was such a great party, I could dance and sing a lot and I liked LEAD's effects so much ;)
Voodoo Girl, Albuquerque
Plus facile à entendre qu'à apercevoir, le singe hurleur pousse un cri qui résonne jusqu'à 16 kilomètres à la ronde! Un souffle long et puissant qui ressemble tantôt à une lamentation, tantôt à une mélopée langoureuse.
J'ai une hypothèse que je vous livre à la dernière photo de cette série.
ENGLISH :
The mystery of the howler monkey. Another endemic monkey from Costa Rica, it is often heard howling in tropical forests. But why does it yell, except to allow him to communicate between the different groups, or to chase the intruders?
Easier to hear than to see, the howler monkey utters a cry that sounds up to 16 kilometers around! A long, powerful breath that sometimes resembles a lament, sometimes a languorous chant.I have a hypothesis that I give you in the last photo of this series.
This young singer gave a sterling performance at the Sandbach Transport and Music Festival Day 1. She had the no nonsense, professionalism of the old time saloon singers and I chose this old style image to best display her.
Scottish singer-songwriter at Sage Gateshead
full set www.harrisonaphotos.co.uk/Music/Wandering-Hearts/i-6bF55X9
Description: A photo of Sargent in his studio in Paris, 1885. Sargent was a portrait and mural painter in London, England.
Creator/Photographer: Unidentified photographer
Medium: Black and white photographic print
Dimensions: 16 cm x 23 cm
Date: 1885
Persistent URL: www.aaa.si.edu/collections/images/detail/john-singer-sarg...
Repository: Archives of American Art
Accession number: AAA_miscphot_8104
La máquina de coser Singer es una de las primeras máquinas de coser de la historia, siendo una versión perfeccionada por Isaac Merritt Singer del modelo de Elias Howe.
Isaac Merrit Singer y Edward S. Clark., fundaron en 1851 la empresa fabricante de máquinas de coser, I.M Singer & Co
These little Savannah Sparrows might be found on any post or sign near an open field singing away at Ridgefield NWR. This one let me take this shot 5/24/11.
Christie’s Catalogue Note:
“The sense of dramatic energy that pervades the best of Sargent’s work finds an explicit rendering in Marionettes, as Sargent presents a quartet of men operating these Sicilian rod puppets within a confined and dramatically lit interior. The shimmering golden palette he utilizes suggests the stifling heat permeating the space, also indicated by the shirtless torso of one of the operators. Indeed, the air feels thick with eager anticipation: although Sargent does not depict the remainder of the audience, a fifth figure watches intently from the stage wings. His clear engagement with the dramatic performance adds to the overall sense of excitement emanating from the scene. Sicilian puppeteers preferred romantic and bloody dramas, and the rendering of two dueling knights watched by a visibly distraught woman in black suggests the specific play the artist depicts here is based on the a 15th century Italian epic poem, Orlando Furioso.”
Street singer performing in a duo in a shopping area on Cozumel, a Mexican island and popular cruise ship port of call in the Caribbean Sea.
Today I visited the Imperial War Museum (especially floors 2 and 3.) John Singer Sargent's late masterpiece Gassed finished March 1919 . It depicts the aftermath of a mustard gas attack during the First World War, with a line of wounded soldiers walking towards a dressing station. Sargent was commissioned by the British War Memorials Committee to document the war and visited the Western Front in July 1918 spending time with the Guards Division near Arras. The painting is a harrowing scene depicting the ugliness of war and its victims, it references Pieter Bruegel the Elder's The Parable of the Blind leading the blind of 1568. If you are in London you should go and see this powerful work.
On a happier note I visited my friend Kate Wilson and her show "Total Rubbish." The paintings although depicting rubbish were very far from rubbish, but a powerful comment on what is often discarded or seen as waste. In some ways there is a sort of link with Sargent and the human detritus of war.
Marble Brewery, Downtown Albuquerque