Aquatic Wall Art

902 creative works found

  • Small clawed Asian otter / / / / Portfolio Areas / Tigers / Wildlife / Macro / Landscape / Birds / Abstracts / Cats~wild and domestic

  • Panic attacks are unexpected, isolated periods of intense anxiety, fear and distress that are associated with a range of somatic and cognitive symptoms. The onset of these episodes is usually sudden, and may have no apparent start. Although these episodes may appear accidental, they are considered to be a subset of an evolutionary comeback commonly referred to as fight or flight that happen out of context, flooding the body with hormones as particularly adrenalin, that aid in defending itself from harm. The panic attack is different from other forms of anxiety by its concentration and its unexpected, episodic nature. / Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is the term for an acute and continuing emotional reaction to an excessive psychological trauma. The latter may involve someone’s real death or a threat to the patient’s or someone else’s life, serious physical injury, or threat to physical and/or psychological uprightness. It is important to make a difference between PTSD and Traumatic stress, which is an alike condition, but of less intensity and length. Hysteria was also related to “traumatic reminiscences” a century ago. At that time, Sigmund Freud’s pupil, Kardiner, was the first to portray what later became known as symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. Stress is often defined as the reaction to a situation that threatens the balance or homeostasis of a system.

  • Red Lionfish Sold as a laminated print to an unknown RB buyer, thank you!

  • Taken at Steves Bommie divesite in the GBR.

  • pen drawing, colored with photoshop ( this artwork is used on the album “Alright” by Amanda Stewart )

  • According to European folklore, Melusine is a feminine water spirit, with the body of serpent or fish from the waist down, much like a mermaid. Sometimes she is also portrayed with a dragon’s body. She is considered a siren type figure or a nixie. According to Wikipedia “The most famous literary version of Melusine tales, that of Jean d’Arras, compiled about 1382–1394 was worked into a collection of “spinning yarns” as told by ladies at their spinning. .... It tells how Elynas, the King of Albany (an old name for Scotland) went hunting one day and came across a beautiful lady in the forest. She was Pressyne, mother of Melusine. He persuaded her to marry him but she agreed, only on the promise — for there is often a hard and fatal condition attached to any pairing of fay and mortal — that he must not enter her chamber when she birthed or bathed her children. She gave birth to triplets. When he violated this taboo, Pressyne left the kingdom, together with her three daughters, and traveled to the lost Isle of Avalon. The three girls — Melusine, Melior, and Palatyne — grew up in Avalon. On their fifteenth birthday, Melusine, the eldest, asked why they had been taken to Avalon. Upon hearing of their father’s broken promise, Melusine sought revenge. She and her sisters captured Elynas and locked him, with his riches, in a mountain. Pressyne became enraged when she learned what the girls had done, and punished them for their disrespect to their father. Melusine was condemned to take the form of a serpent from the waist down every Saturday. In other stories, she takes on the form of a mermaid. Raymond of Poitou came across Melusine in a forest in France, and proposed marriage. Just as her mother had done, she laid a condition, that he must never enter her chamber on a Saturday. He broke the promise and saw her in the form of a part-woman part-serpent. She forgave him. Only when, during a disagreement with her, he called her a “serpent” in front of his court, did she assume the form of a dragon, provide him with two magic rings and fly off, never to return.[1] In “The Wandering Unicorn” by Manuel Mujica Láinez, Melusine tells her tale of several centuries of existence from her original curse to the time of the crusades.[2]” The original image for this is 12×16” and was created with oil pastels, colored pencils and metallic paints on blue watercolor paper. In this portrait of her, I portrayed Melusine in a psychedelic/art nouveau type of style. I hope you enjoy….

  • Original artwork for sale. Please contact redeye@designbyredeye.com for inquiries. Honu is the Hawaiian word for their green sea turtles. The Green Sea Turtle is the largest hard-shelled sea turtle in the world, and they are currently endangered. In this artwork, I depicted Honu set against a “garden” of abstracted jellyfish, diatoms and other shapes. View more of my artwork online at www.lynnetteshelley.com MIxed Media (liquid gold leaf, acrylics, oil pastels and colored pencil) on blue Canson paper. 25×19 inches. 30 favoritings as of March 8 2010

  • Lovely Aquamarine is a teenage mermaid with beautiful curly blue hair. She loves to swim across the turquoise waves along with her best friend, a little sea horse. / Aquamarine is available also as T-shirts and cool products at my store* / / Coraleen is another of my mermaid beauties. / Find her as T-shirts and Art Prints /

  • Depiction of the mythological figure of Melusine – a siren type figure with the upper body of a woman and the lower body of a fish, serpent or even a dragon, depending on the legend. She is considered a water spirit. This work is created with mixed media (oil pastels, colored pencils, marker pen, and paint pen) on gray watercolor paper.

  • Featured in Art and Photography October 5, 2009.

  • Inspired by children and created for children, a beautiful addition to brighten up the playroom or nursery. Have a specific colour scheme in mind, or wanted to add your child’s name to make it extra special – not a problem! / Simply bmail me and I will see what I can do for you!

  • Best viewed large 2nd Place in the ALL ABOUT WILDLIFE AND NATURE Challenge in the Top Shelf Wildlife & Nature Art Group Featured in “Rural Around the Globe” January 2010 / Featured in “Extreme Close-Ups” January 2010 / Featured in ”# 1 ARTISTS OF REDBUBBLE” February 2010 Another photograph of the bull Moose as it came swimming towards us, desperate to put some distance between himself and the Coyote on the bank behind him…… The Moose had wandered neck deep into the lake where we watched him for over thirty minutes contentedly feeding on aquatic plants (see here and below). We thought he was probably trying to cool off at the same time. Behind him, on the opposite side of the lake to where we were standing we became aware of a Coyote stalking a pair of Sandhill Cranes. The Cranes got wise to this and took off. Alerted by the sudden disturbance behind him, the Moose turned to check out what was going on and became completely spooked when he spotted the Coyote. In a state of panic he came charging through the lake in our direction plunging forward and swimming to the best of his ability as fast as he could. I continued to photograph until the Moose reached the bank just below where we were standing. He emerged from the water in all his glory, took one look at us above him, and charged off to our right into a forested area about a hundred yards away. When you view the larger image you will notice hundreds of small flies around the Moose’s antlers! Photographed in Yellowstone Park, Wyoming USA Canon 40D / 1/200sec f7.1 ISO 200 / 500mm lens + 1.4x converter

  • Two lovey-dovey European Otters (lutra lutra). Canon EOS 50D with Canon EF 70-200mm L IS f/4

  • Even as a small girl, Lucinda’s passion for millinery was immediately apparent. As a small tot, the lovely, quiet little girl put absolutely everything on her head and wore it about. Buckets, bowls, wastepaper baskets, lampshades – even pancakes were not safe from her deep need for headwear. Usually a rather solemn child, nothing brightened little Lucinda’s countenance like an unlikely object balanced precariously on her tiny head. As she grew, her efforts became more elaborate and she constructed origamically engineered masterpieces out of the New York Times and fanciful confections out of bits of lace, satin and felt. Her obsession with millinery was equaled only by her affection for all things aquatic, an affinity that became glaringly apparent when she perpetrated a swift kick in the shin against a distant but wealthy relative as he tucked in to an outsized lobster tail. Such all-consuming passions coupled with introversion can prove socially problematic even for strikingly attractive young ladies, but Lucinda seemed to bear it no mind. She simply tucked her sketchbook under her arm and decamped for the aquarium, where she whiled away endless hours designing headwear by the watery blue glow of the undersea exhibit. It was there that she happened to make the acquaintance of the dashing, handsome and equally odd Captain Lucien Octavio (see “Adventures of Capt. Octavio”). He wasn’t a captain yet, of course, but how could he help but be utterly smitten by a lovely young lady with a small coral reef artfully stitched to her cloche? He called for Lucinda as soon as he got his first ship, the Marinus Profundis, and they were wed on Octavio’s famous deep sea expedition to the Marianas Trench. The newlyweds each gained additional companionship on that trip, and Lucinda named hers Olive. Lucinda immediately set to work creating hats that would allow the Octavios’ cephalopodic companions to accompany them anywhere, and what magnificent chapeaux they were! Elaborate gauges and pumps ensured Olive’s moist comfort, and the octopus proved quite indispensable as a hat-making assistant. This original artwork and story are copyright Ramona Szczerba 2009. Copyright to this material is in no way transferable with the sale of this item. The buyer is not entitled to any reproduction rights – neither image nor story can be reproduced without my express written permission. Thanks!

  • A graceful stylized blue whale. Inspired by native american artwork. Mixed media (oil pastels, colored pencils, art pens, metallic paint pens) on gray watercolor paper. Original artwork is 19×25”

  • I took this photo in 2004 when I lived in Ireland. We spent the day by the beach and were very ready to head back home. We finally got all the way back to the car and I saw this little toy and said “hold on! We can’t leave yet! I have an idea!” I ran back to the beach and took this shot and several others.

  • Sea Nettles Jellyfish (Chrysaora fuscescens) Monterey Bay Aquarium California USA —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- Consider these photos as companions. :-) /

  • It all happens under the surface. Drawings of fish in water colours. / Drawing of water textures in water colour. / Digitized. / Photo layers added.

  • I tried to find a composition depicting a brooding black moor (at the bottom of the painting) as a portly, princely fish, lurking quietly beneath the playful veil-tails above. Oil painting on masonite – 24 inches x 48 inches

  • Original artwork for sale. Please contact redeye@designbyredeye.com for inquiries. I’ve been meaning to paint an octopus for a while now, and when I realized that none of the creatures in my animal ICON series so far were from the sea, I make my little friend here. Mixed media on pastel paper (liquid gold leaf, acrylic paint, oil pastels, colored pencils, black marker, metallic foil collage). 11×15 inches. View more of my artwork online at www.lynnetteshelley.com

  • Taken in the Great Barrier Reef at Steve’s Bommie divesite, off Cairns Australia. Using a Nikon D300 and 60mm Nikkor lens, Sea & Sea housing and dual ys250 strobes.

  • Green sea turtle at the Vancouver aquarium, shot in HDR.

  • On DeviantART / On Zazzle / My Zazzle Gallery / ArtRage 2.5 and graphics tablet All my mermaid artwork

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