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Close up of tree bark. Taken at sunset. Close up could look like a canyon or old river bed. Wish I tested out more color options to make it seem different or distant to this planet.
Task One
Last Saturday, Sacramento’s Dragatomi kicked off its first Not Vinyl show. The concept was pretty straight forward: make a toy or some toy art, but you’ve got to use another medium than vinyl. Sometimes you need a little limitation to open up the floodgates of creativity. The Not Vinyl show had pieces made of resin, wood, clay and plush.
More about this show: blog.neonmonster.com/gallery/not-vinyl-show
This robot was built to perform a series of tasks to compete in a competition, one task of which was to pick up balls from one zone and deposit them in specific containers. It sucked them up using brush rollers and then spat them out by reversing the rollers.
Shortly after air assaulting into a farm field, Pfc. Kenneth Armbrister, an infantryman with Company A, 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division scans for enemy activity during Operation Browning in southern Arab Jabour Jan 20.
February 6, 2021 - "Columbus based artist, Alfred Tibor’s sculpture Reach Out is located on the grounds of the Franklin Park Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. Commissioned by the Columbus Aids Task Force, Reach Out was created in memoriam of those who have died from and are living with HIV/AIDS. Tibor states, “the sculpture represents the desperation felt by so many AIDS victims and that it is asking for help for those battling HIV/AIDS”. It was completed and placed on Conservatory grounds in 1992 during the Ameriflora exhibition. After Ameriflora, the piece remained on the grounds, with a red flower bed planted in the shape of a ribbon to surround the piece.
To make place for a Children's Garden, the sculpture is planned to be relocated to a field on the southern side by the end of October 2016." Previous text from the following website:
aidsmemorial.info/memorial/id=243/.html
The sculpture has been moved and this is where it is now located in Franklin Park. Columbus, Ohio