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Venue: Rua Augusta, lisbon, Portugal
Camera: Nikon D7000 + 50mm 1.8
Processing Software: Lightzone 4.0
Information is now up, kids! Wheee!
blythecon2011.parasoldoll.com/
This venue is PERFECT! It's downtown, within walking distance of such fine things as Powell's Books and The Compound (art gallery/re-ment/Japanese toy/shoe store place). You may also easily catch a bus to another part of town.
Those of you who are flying in can catch the MAX at the airport and ride all the way downtown.
trimet.org/schedules/maxredline.htm
We will be putting together a Tri-met how-to for those who are curious about our public transportation. :)
There are hotels near the airport, by our convention center, and downtown, all near the MAX. Easy peasy! If you stay downtown, you can even ride the streetcar to Venue Pearl, and guess what? FARELESS ZONE! We are looking into blocking out some rooms in hotels on the streetcar line.
Plus, this place has plenty of room, light, and they only book one event at a time, so we can dork out has hard as we want. Oh, and this venue supplies tables and chairs, so everyone will be comfortable. :)
Victor Horta's Iconic Building in line with the Times
A Triptych of the Palace of Fine Arts of Brussels :
BOZAR - The Centre for Fine Arts
The Belgian National Orchestra &
Archduchess Margaret of Austria as a Widow by Bernard van Orley above the entrance to the Palais des Beaux-Arts.
A Journey into the Renaissance in Brussels
Bernard van Orley & The Renaissance Exhibition
February 20, 2019 - May 26, 2019
The Art of Printmaking
Prints in the Age of Bruegel the Elder
February 27, 2019 - June 23, 2019
The Palais des Beaux Arts,also known as BOZAR,is an eight-storey cultural venue in Brussels built between 1922 - 1929 in the Art Deco geometric style by the Belgian architect Victor Horta.It is right in the middle of the Mont des Arts,where the upper part of Brussels meets the lower part,which means that once you enter the enormous and complex building,you start ascending the hill of Mont des Arts without even realizing it.I suppose it has to do with the inventive arrangement of space by the genius architect Horta.
It is considered as a historical monument with available surface of 33,000 m², where art meets music,cinema,literature,theatre, architecture,photography and much more.
BOZAR always offers a diverse and high-quality international programme with concerts,exhibitions,shows,and many other cultural and artistic events.
It is also home to the National Orchestra of Belgium.
FRIDAYS WITH THE BELGIAN NATIONAL ORCHESTRA
We did enjoy the programme with the Belgian National Orchestra on April 26,2019 :
Beethoven - Pride and Persistence ( in response to Beethoven's Seventh Symphony
Fantasia on an Ostinato, John Corigliano
Carmen (excerpts), Georges Bizet
The Firebird, Igor Stravinsky
Hugh Wolff conductor & Elisabeth Kulman mezzo-soprano.
(Hugh Wolff is well known for his creative programming and for placing opposing works together,and Elisabeth Kulman is a prominent singer in the international classical music scene ; her sensual voice with the rich,colourful timbre gave Bizet's femme fatale a soul.)
PS : Printmaking,this fascinating synthesis of art,is enjoying a contemporary resurgence through new and digitlal technologies without having replaced older methods.Some artists have continued to explore the untapped potential of more traditional methods.They print on surfaces other than paper and on an unprecedented scale in such ways that they extend the choices and the capacity of the enduring vitality of Printmaking as a fine art.
Exploring the rich culture of Brussels and the Master-Painters of the Golden Age.Brussels has experienced a real Cultural Renaissance in recent years.
In or Out of EU, we Love Brussels ...
Long exposure photo of Ben Venue in the Trossachs area of Scotland from the top of Ben A'an. Loch Katrine in the foreground.
Originally named the Wells Theatre, this venue opened for vaudeville performances and photoplays in 1918. Later that year, after the Spanish Flu quarantine was lifted, the Wells was sold and renamed the Imperial. It is on the National Register of Historic Places.
Augusta, Richmond County, Georgia USA
[5739-D7500-Neo]
© 2023 Mike McCall
Originally opened in 1924, Soldier Field was known as one of the great venues during the “Golden Age of Sports” and one of Chicago’s most famous landmarks. Crowds in excess of 100,000 were commonplace, marked by several memorable events including the 1926 Army-Navy game and the epic 1927 Jack Dempsey/Gene Tunney heavyweight rematch featuring the controversial long count. In 1944, 150,000 spectators attended a wartime visit by President Franklin Roosevelt and thousands turned out to hear evangelist Billy Graham in 1962. Soldier Field is also the birthplace of the first Special Olympics Game in 1968. Rock concerts, festivals, rodeos, circuses and even a skiing/toboggan event have called Soldier Field home. The Chicago Bears began using the facility in 1971 and played their first game on the renovated Soldier Field on September 29, 2003. Originally dedicated on August 19, 1925, Soldier Field and it's sister, the Navy Pier, were built as monuments to World War I soldiers by the South Park Commissioners.
"The great...Stadium, Soldier Field, has been built as the Parthenon or Coliseum of Rome to endure through the ages. Perpetuating the memory of Chicago's sons who made the supreme sacrifice in the World War, it symbolizes in its architecture, in its beauty, and in its strength the youth and the courage and the will to win - the spirit of the city's young manhood of 1917." -- quote from 1932 in a Chicago Guidebook published in 1969
Soldier Field was added to the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) on August 9, 1984. A portion of the information above and much more not included here was found on the original documents submitted for listing consideration and can be viewed here:
catalog.archives.gov/id/28892472
This photo was taken in 2013 during my previous Project 365…please visit my album for this “REMASTERED” Project 365 as I revisit each day of 2013 for additional photos to share!!
Technical Information (or Nerdy Stuff):
Camera - Nikon D5200 (handheld)
Lens – Nikkor 18-300mm Zoom
ISO – 400
Aperture – f/5.3
Exposure – 1/4 second
Focal Length – 48mm
The original RAW file was processed with Adobe Camera Raw and final adjustments were made with Photoshop CS6.
"For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." ~Jeremiah 29:11
The best way to view my photostream is through Flickriver with the following link: www.flickriver.com/photos/photojourney57/
New custom venue for an stablished (12 years) sales event Designer Showcase.
Probably my fastest redesign to date. Did it all in one day and some minor updates the next.
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sanriku%20Coast/148/136/23
tos/195206786@N04/with/51935916626/
We provide basic and personalized packages.
* Venue
* Officiant/minister
* Photography
* DJ/Hostess
* Wedding invitations
* wedding album
The venue is available from Monday - Sunday. For exact timings or any other questions please send me an IM.
MEDIEVAL JOUSTING KNIGHT ON HORSE WEARING PERIOD ARMOUR COSTUME IN AN EAST LONDON BOROUGH SUBURB STREET PARK FESTIVAL VENUE EVENT ENGLAND DSC02749
The Australian and German women's teams at the 2012 Olympics field hockey venue, in Stratford, London, UK. I believe it's now used by Wapping Hockey Club.
Shot with with a Nikon D7000 and a Nikkor AFS DX 18-200mm F/3.5-5.6G lens, and processed in GIMP and Photoscape.
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Sanriku%20Coast/148/136/23
tos/195206786@N04/with/51935916626/
We provide basic and personalized packages.
* Venue
* Officiant/minister
* Photography
* DJ/Hostess
* Wedding invitations
* wedding album
The venue is available from Monday - Sunday. For exact timings or any other questions please send me an IM.
A concert where all the regular musicians associated with the venue performed for free in support. Fortunately, the audience also showed their support by showing up in large numbers, in fact it was impossible to get a seat for the first hour. Great music and a warm atmosphere.
Line up:
Jesper Løvdal
Mads Mathias
Anders Gaardmand
Kjeld Lauritsen
Janus Templeton
Jan Harbeck
Alice Carreri
Mads Mathias
Sinne Eeg
Elias Kallvik
Ida Hvid
Rolf Thofte
Regin Fuhlendorff
Frands Rifbjerg
Claus Waidtløv
Kira Martini
Jacob Christoffersen
Simon Eskildsen
Andreas Fryland
...and many others.
La Fontaine Jazz Club, Copenhagen.
AMERICAN PINK CADILLAC 1959 REAR VIEW OF FINS AT DAMYNS HALL AERODROME CAR SHOW IN AN EAST LONDON BOROUGH SUBURB STREET VENUE EVENT ENGLAND DSCN0296 C
Taxi
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Isle%20Of%20Currents/135/2...
Big thank you to the amazing Editor Kairi Cristole and Photographer Heahter Falls from FOCUS magazine! Fantastic work ladies - thank you!
Hi shoppers ♥
ACCESS & PEAK is partnering in this project ♥
• PEAK Group Gift Venue is all ready for you with amazing gifts!
Come check it out!
• Join our VIP group => secondlife:///app/group/137955c6-bafe-3a4e-738a-da13f9a5160b/about to be able to receive high quality gifts from our Designers & Sponsors
• IMPORTANT - Group fee 1000L$ paid once - after that every month you will have access to new gifts, just being a member! •
TP: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/PEAK/66/154/3020
Peace • Love • Music
PEAK Club & ACCESS
This landmark venue, designed as an opera house in 1892, hosts concerts by well-known musical acts.
1807 S Allport St
Chicago, IL
February 16th, 2016
All photos © Joshua Mellin per the guidelines listed under "Owner settings" to the right.
Famous venue where once the MC5, Ted Nugent, the Who and Led Zeppelin once played, in a much more sonically brilliant time...
Slightly wrong some might say? This was taken during a song performed by Shanklin Freak Show @ The Venue
The mountain on the left is Ben Venue (the Mountain of the Goblin's) where the old legends say the Urisks (Goblins) of Highland faerie folklore live. On the slopes of the mountain are caves known as Coir nan Uriskan - the Goblin's Caves. Loch Katrine is as still as a mirror reflecting the Goblin Mountain.
Excerpt from Wikipedia:
Meridian Hall is a major performing arts venue in Toronto, Ontario, and it is the country's largest soft-seat theatre.[1] The facility was constructed for the City of Toronto municipal government and is currently managed by TO Live, an arms-length agency and registered charity created by the city. Located at 1 Front Street East, the venue opened as the O'Keefe Centre on October 1, 1960. From 1996 to 2007, the building was known as the Hummingbird Centre for the Performing Arts. From 2007 to 2019, it was known as the Sony Centre for the Performing Arts. On September 15, 2019, it was re-branded as Meridian Hall.
In 2008, the City of Toronto designated the theatre a heritage building. That year, it also underwent renovations to restore its iconic features such as the marquee canopy and York Wilson's lobby mural, The Seven Lively Arts. Restoration of the wood, brass and marble that were hallmarks of the original facility was undertaken, along with audience seating, flooring upgrades, new washrooms and reconfigured lobby spaces. Following two years of renovations and restoration work, the building reopened its doors on October 1, 2010, fifty years to the date of the first opening night performance.
The Centre was built on land formerly occupied by a series of commercial buildings, including the Canadian Consolidated Rubber Company, and previously it was the site of the Great Western Railway Terminal (later the Toronto Wholesale Fruit Market).
The idea for a performing arts centre that could serve the needs of an increasingly dynamic city predates the building's opening by almost 20 years. In the mid-1940s, Nathan Phillips issued a challenge to Toronto industrialists to underwrite the cost of a multipurpose centre for theatre, music and dance. Response to Phillips' challenge was not immediate. E.P. Taylor, the racehorse-loving head of Canadian Breweries, which owned O'Keefe Brewing, offered in early 1955 to build a performing arts centre that would not only serve the needs of local institutions but increase the diversity of entertainment options available in Toronto. Toronto City Council immediately accepted the proposal in principle, but not until 1958 was the project finally approved to be built. Among others, United Church spokesmen opposed the idea that money from the sale of beer would be used for community development. Taylor assigned one of his key executives, Hugh Walker, to oversee building what was to be known, during its first 36 years, as the O'Keefe Centre.
The O'Keefe Centre opened on October 1, 1960, with a red-carpet gala. The first production was Alexander H. Cohen's production of the pre-Broadway premiere of Lerner and Loewe's Camelot, starring Richard Burton, Julie Andrews and Robert Goulet.
Like The National Ballet, The Canadian Opera Company made the Centre its home stage, from as early as 1961 to 2006.
In early February 1996, the facility was renamed the Hummingbird Centre in recognition of a major gift from a Canadian software company, Hummingbird Communications Ltd. The $5-million donation allowed the Centre to undertake a number of capital improvements and repairs, including the installation of an elevator and an acoustic reinforcement system for the auditorium. When the Ballet and Opera moved to the Four Seasons Centre in 2006, it left a hole in the theatre's schedule. At this point, programming shifted to a multicultural schedule by include more content appealing to Toronto's many ethnic diasporas.
On 21 January 2019, the City of Toronto announced a C$30.75 million 15-year partnership with Meridian Credit Union, re-branding the Sony Centre into Meridian Hall, and the Toronto Centre for the Arts into the Meridian Arts Centre. The arts venues formally adopted their new names on September 15, 2019.
Designed by Peter Dickinson, the performing arts venue is a distinctive building and an example of a mid-twentieth century modern performing arts venue. It is four storeys high and is broken up into three main forms: the entrance block, auditorium and fly tower. The central form of the building is highly symmetrical with an open floor plan. Structurally, the performing arts venue is not over complicated and uses steel trusses and concrete to hold the majority of the building together. In addition to the structure, the performing arts venue's auditorium houses a very sophisticated acoustic system, which gives the audience the sense that the sound is surrounding them.
When it comes to materiality, the majority of the original materials are still in the building today. Materials used include: Alabama limestone, glazing, granite, copper, bronze, Carrara marble, carpet, cherry plywood panels and Brazilian rosewood. The performing arts venue is very diverse in its range of materials and employs them in such a way that they are not overshadowed by the unique forms of the building.
The interior also features a grand double-height foyer with coffered ceilings, a 30 metres (98 ft) wide mural by the famous Toronto-born artist York Wilson, cantilevered stairs, polished bronze auditorium doors, and a fan-shaped auditorium with a curving balcony.
Our 19th venue for CoCollage, at the Village at 5th and Bell (a food court that includes Beba's Deli, Belltown Burger and Dos Amigos), in the Belltown neighborhood of Seattle (2301 5th Ave).