Benjamin 

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200 creative works found

  • Little Piggie decides to try Piggies ballet skills out. Piggie has never done ballet before so Piggie looks a bit funny.

  • A dragonfly resting atop a flower growing from lilly pads in a pond in Sandakan, Malaysia

  • Using a funky technique called tiltshift, I think this graveyard now looks like a minature doll graveyard.

  • this is what happens when you go for a swim in a sea of springs and you swallow a few hundred and need to get an xray to see what the go is…

  • Taken when my hand had a spasm while trying to take a picture of a light at the end of moonta bay jetty. The effects of warm wind on a summers night and you just capture a picture of lightning better than any you’ve ever captured before.

  • I am hoping to post a series of photo’s taken of a bunch of roses that have been sitting in a vase for 10 years. I will be calling it the Old Love series. Cheers, -Ben

  • Pop Art is a visual art movement that emerged in the mid 1950s in Britain and in parallel in the late 1950s in the United States. Pop Art challenged tradition by asserting that an artist’s use of the mass produced visual commodities of popular culture is contiguous with the perspective of Fine Art since Pop removes the material from its context and isolates the object, or combines it with other objects, for contemplation. The concept of Pop Art refers not as much to the art itself as to the attitudes that led to it.

  • Here is Jamie-Lynn Sigler from Sopranos and such. She was also very nice and came to us to give autographs and gave me a little smile and pose!! :) From The 15th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards 1.25.08 in Los Angeles, CA @ the Shrine Exposition Center. Canon 40D 28-105 Lens. More to come!! :)

  • “Cantus in Memoriam Benjamin Britten” is a short canon written in 1977 in A minor by the Estonian composer of classical music Arvo Pärt (b. 1935) for string orchestra and bell. Cantus… is an early example of Pärt’s own tintinnabuli style, which he based on his reactions to early chant music. The work’s initial appeal is often ascribed to its relative simplicity; a single melodic motif dominates and it both begins and ends with scored silence. However, as the critic Ivan Hewett observes, while it “may be simple in concept…the concept produces a tangle of lines which is hard for the ear to unravel. And even where the music really is simple in its audible features, the expressive import of those features is anything but.”[1] A typical performance lasts about six and a half minutes.[2] The cantus was composed as an elegy to mourn the December 1976 death of the English composer Benjamin Britten. Pärt greatly admired Britten’s work, whom he described as posessing an “unusual purity” he himself sought as a composer.[3] Part viewed the Englishman as a kindred spirtit, however he only read the latter’s music in 1980, after emigrating from Soviet Estonia to Austria; four years after Britten had died.[2] When Britten passed, Pärt believed he has lost hope of meeting the only contemporary composer whose musical outlook, he believed, resembled his own. While Pärt is primilarly known for his reglious music, Cantus is a fully secular work, in that it forms a seemingly spare lament to a fellow composer and is not based on traditional, biblical texts. It is perhaps Pärt’s most popular piece, and a 1997 recording by the Hungarian State Opera Orchestra conducted by Tamas Benedekand has been widely formatted and distributed. Due to its evocative and cinematic feel, the piece has been used extensively as background accompaniment in both film and television documentaries. (Wikipedia) Click here to listen this work.

  • A small passage in the small coastal town of St. Goustan, Brittany, France that leads down to the port.. / This was the Brittany port that Benjamin Franklin sailed into when he came to seek the help of the French during the Revolutionary War. / /

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