Artifact 

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  • Another from my Ghost Town series. These make handsome cards.

  • Another view of the empty bottles and saw blades in this abandoned building. This is part of my Ghost Town series. They make handsome cards.

  • Life may have been simpler then, but it certainly wasn’t easier. Sometimes I forget how good technology has made my existence. An image from my Ghost Town series. These make handsome cards.

  • From my Ghost Town series. These make handsome cards.

  • That’s the turn of the TWENTIETH century (1900), of course! From my Ghost Town series. These make handsome cards.

  • ...of his boots, that is. A different crop on this entry in my Ghost Town series. These make handsome cards.

  • !

  • I am not sure what it is. Make an educated guess.

  • An amateur archeologist working in the Netherlands has uncovered something that will send the science world reeling. “I found this Greek boy as I was digging in the garden here in Alkmaar. This is very rare,” stated Ted Widen, clearly emotional even a whole day after the discovery. He said he was shocked at first, “I was shocked at first,” in an impromtu media event planned weeks in advance. There has been no response yet from the science world, indicating their astounded disbelief at the significance of this find. “We have to wait for radio-carbon dating and other tests to come back before we can begin to assess the impact,” stated a British archeology professor who asked to remain anonymous. “We have taken tissue samples from the boy, but now we can only wait to see if there is any viable DNA in the ceramic boy.” He added that finding an authentic Greek statue embedded in the surface soil of Dutch earth is unusual. Mr Widen was questioned about the possibility of this being a fraud, due to the unfortunate Piltdown Man hoax which embarrassed the science community. “I can understand people being leary to accept this,” Widen said, “but it’s not like I just stuck in the dirt. Check the photos… there are plants growing on top of it. Plants done just grow over night, ya know.” He offered no explanation for the ancient script, “Made in China”, found on the statue’s base. THAT is just one more thing that makes this awesome discovery soooooo unique,” he said. “I’m not surprised that the science world has remained silent. This artifact is difficult to explain.” He added that museums around the world are apparently quarrelling among themselves attempting to decide the optimum location to display the Greek boy. “No one has contacted me yet, but these things take time,” Widen said. He added that he will be watching for more unusual things in his garden, “I’ll be watching for more unusual things in the garden.”

  • As a Born-Again Visual Artist, I was destined, by birth, to have one foot set into two different generations of art history. One side of me was raised on the Analogue milk tit, and the other side followed – learning to breath under the surface of a digital buzz of bits, gigs, and ram dimms… The key to surviving in both worlds, for me, has been a story as much about observation, as it has been over implementation. My experience in the music recording business, with Russell Berger, in the mid to late 1970’s, perhaps was my most essential primer. The digital convergence arrived at our recording console as a forewarning to me, personally – that my analogue explorations, in the image capture realm – in which I was also exercising, would come to meet an eventual digital intervention as well – a decade later. That sagacious voyage was one I was prepared for – as I knew my journey through the world of image capture would grow to become a continually amending sojourn. And so it has. Accordingly, in this moment, I slow, and take in a greater apprehension of it all, and what my pliability to the nature of my perceptions has made of me – a maker of Digital Artifacts. – Brad Michael Moore 5/29/2008

  • Alt Title: “Bygone Era” —Eye have no idea what this thing is: remnants of artifact from Another Time; a Bygone Era … This item has lain where you see it: on the edge of a local, non-organic, rotating potato/cornfield since before WW II & no one Eye’ve spoken with seems to be able to ID it … —Any ideas of your own?

  • Religious icon in Taormina

  • The Sword of Serpents

  • Ground Floor Of The Tower At Grand Canyon

  • Part of an abstract collection of work I collaborated on called XX_XX (twenty twenty). Done purely for experimentally abstract fun! The idea was to tap into the noise of the unconscious, using mixed media. No logo’s, no product, no celebrity faces! This piece was inspired by artifacting, nuke tests and a girl at the bar. I’m going to upload a few more so let me know what you think!

  • This is almost at the end of the ceremony there are still a couple of spirits left , they are slowly re-integrating the tomb, the last photo (not posted) of the ceremony is clear of spirit. This is was a reconstitution of a Tainos religious ceremony to the memories of the dead I captured it at the “Manatee National Park ” in Punta Cana Dominican Rep. Caribbean Island. / This is a series of about 12 pictures I took during the religious ceremony, on the first (not posted) we can clearly see the start of the elevations of the spirits of dead Tainos gradually rising from the middle of the artifact skeletons that are covered with a glass top inside a corded barrier for preservation and are in the ground in the middle center of the ceremony, in this picture we can very well and clearly see all of the hundreds of spirits that have raised from the tomb in the ground while the pinnacle of the ceremony was going on… The skeletons and other artifacts more that 500 years old of the Tainos people where found in a archeological excavation of the village that was in the past, on the terrain of the Manatee National Park Preserve. The Taínos were pre-Colombian inhabitants of the Bahamas, Greater Antilles, and the northern Lesser Antilles. It is believed that the seafaring Taínos were relatives of the Arawakan people of South America. Their language is a member of the Maipurean linguistic family, which ranges from South America across the Caribbean. At the time of Columbus’s arrival in 1492, there were five Taíno kingdoms and territories on Hispaniola (modern day Dominican Republic and Haiti), each led by a principal Cacique (chieftain), to whom tribute was paid. As the hereditary head chief of Taíno tribes, the cacique was paid significant tribute. Caciques enjoyed the privilege of wearing golden pendants called guani, living in square bohíos instead of the round ones the villagers inhabited, and sat on wooden stools when receiving guests. At the time of the Spanish conquest, the largest Taíno population centers may have contained over 3,000 people each. The Taínos were historical neighbors and enemies of the fierce Carib tribes, another group with origins in South America who lived principally in the Lesser Antilles. The relationship between the two groups has been the subject of much study. This photo as is , taken with my Photosmart HP R927 camera, NO enhancement watch so ever!

  • Texture & detail of a basket found in an antique shop.

  • I don’t like to have my picture taken too early in the morning because I don’t look so good. So I waited until about midday. Taken in my Taree backyard. Fuji Finepix S7000

  • Strange array seen from sea level

  • Metallic Skull – not human…

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