Arabesque 

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62 creative works found

  • Arabian Palace in Cordoba,Andalucia,Spain.

  • Wild vines. / / Vignes sauvages.

  • In this abstract, I have attempted to capture the essence of an Arabic street market scene. / I worked quickly and used instinct and subconscious, rather than technical composition skill. I have used glued painted paper shapes, then painted an impressionist watercolour scene around the collage. 16th Sept 2008 update. / I’m currently working on a larger, watercolour-only, version of this 14”x10”. / less abstract and more real, but with impressionistic aspects.

  • i’ve been driving past this tree nearly every day for years, and only recently saw this in it. it faces east, so there’s never going to be a sunset in it’s future, but the sky did beautiful things tonight even in the other direction. maybe one of these days i’ll get up early enough to see how it looks with a sunrise! :)

  • studio

  • Abstract fine art

  • Arabesque anyone?

  • The colours dance and swirl Original Artwork SOLD

  • The Alhambra / Granada, Spain

  • The Alhambra / Granada, Spain

  • “At that instant he saw, in one blaze of light, an image of unutterable conviction, the reason why the artist works and lives and has his being-the reward he seeks-the only reward he really cares about, without which there is nothing. It is to snare the spirits of mankind in nets of magic, to make his life prevail through his creation, to wreak the vision of his life, the rude and painful substance of his own experience, into the congruence of blazing and enchanted images that are themselves the core of life, the essential pattern whence all other things proceed, the kernel of eternity.” / – Thomas Wolfe, Of Time and the River, 1935 The Untapped Source Store – Portfolio/Blog – deviantART Shop / “To live a creative life, we must lose our fear of being wrong.”

  • Ultra Fractal 4.04. Thanks for taking a look!

  • I am very intrigued with Asian Art & Culture. The title(and some of the images) are taken from an exhibit that was around a few years ago which I got from one of those postcard ads. I think it pretty much describes this collage(besides being a great title:- It’s also inspired by “Bollywood” movies. /

  • Graphite pencil drawing on Strathmore white paper.

  • Two fat , golden fish, arching and circling in sensuous choreography are tokens of my glorious bounty. / Two gifts representing as the Chinese believed, wealth, abundance,fertility, harmony, and protection from evil. / Embodied yang creatures swim, teaching ancient lessons of the Tao as they conform with and slip through the ever-giving yet supporting watery yin. / / /

  • Canon 400D with 68mm extenders and Cannon 100mm macro lens (0.5; F 10; ISO 400) /

  • Taken at the Oakville Marina. (c) Jocelyne Roy Phillips

  • The Alhambra – Arabic: literally means “the red one”; the complete name is “Qal’at al-Hambra”, which means “The red fortress”) is a palace and fortress complex of the Moorish rulers of Granada in southern Spain occupying a hilly terrace on the southeastern border of the city of Granada. Once the residence of the Muslim rulers of Granada and their court, the Alhambra is now one of Spain’s major tourist attractions exhibiting the country’s most famous Islamic architecture, together with Christian 16th century and later interventions in buildings and gardens that marked its image as it can be seen today. Its most westerly feature is the alcazaba (citadel); a strongly fortified position. The rest of the plateau comprises a number of palaces, enclosed by a relatively weak fortified wall, with thirteen towers, some defensive and some providing vistas for the inhabitants. If you would like to buy a card, print or calendar just go to ‘buy/preview’

  • The Alhambra – Arabic: literally means “the red one”; the complete name is “Qal’at al-Hambra”, which means “The red fortress”) is a palace and fortress complex of the Moorish rulers of Granada in southern Spain occupying a hilly terrace on the southeastern border of the city of Granada. Once the residence of the Muslim rulers of Granada and their court, the Alhambra is now one of Spain’s major tourist attractions exhibiting the country’s most famous Islamic architecture, together with Christian 16th century and later interventions in buildings and gardens that marked its image as it can be seen today. Its most westerly feature is the alcazaba (citadel); a strongly fortified position. The rest of the plateau comprises a number of palaces, enclosed by a relatively weak fortified wall, with thirteen towers, some defensive and some providing vistas for the inhabitants. If you would like to buy a card, print, poster or calendar just go to ‘buy/preview’

  • The Alhambra – Arabic: literally means “the red one”; the complete name is “Qal’at al-Hambra”, which means “The red fortress”) is a palace and fortress complex of the Moorish rulers of Granada in southern Spain occupying a hilly terrace on the southeastern border of the city of Granada. Once the residence of the Muslim rulers of Granada and their court, the Alhambra is now one of Spain’s major tourist attractions exhibiting the country’s most famous Islamic architecture, together with Christian 16th century and later interventions in buildings and gardens that marked its image as it can be seen today. Its most westerly feature is the alcazaba (citadel); a strongly fortified position. The rest of the plateau comprises a number of palaces, enclosed by a relatively weak fortified wall, with thirteen towers, some defensive and some providing vistas for the inhabitants. If you would like to buy a card, print or calendar just go to ‘buy/preview’

  • The Alhambra – Arabic: literally means “the red one”; the complete name is “Qal’at al-Hambra”, which means “The red fortress”) is a palace and fortress complex of the Moorish rulers of Granada in southern Spain occupying a hilly terrace on the southeastern border of the city of Granada. Once the residence of the Muslim rulers of Granada and their court, the Alhambra is now one of Spain’s major tourist attractions exhibiting the country’s most famous Islamic architecture, together with Christian 16th century and later interventions in buildings and gardens that marked its image as it can be seen today. Its most westerly feature is the alcazaba (citadel); a strongly fortified position. The rest of the plateau comprises a number of palaces, enclosed by a relatively weak fortified wall, with thirteen towers, some defensive and some providing vistas for the inhabitants. If you would like to buy a card, print or calendar just go to ‘buy/preview’

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