Centeral new 

284 creative works found

  • A patriotic tribute to September 11th.

  • World Trade Center a few months before 9/11, New York, USA

  • The Twin Towers WTC in New York City photographed in September 2000. Nothing more needs to be said except that they were iconic and nobody will ever forget the outrage of the following year. I do not support the war on terror as it is happening but this is not the site for political debate. I loved their symmetery and the incredible sense of mans achievement when one simply looked up. The meaning of the word skyscraper multiplied by two. Questions regarding the attacks and our world as we know it. / http://www.zeitgeistmovie.com/main.htm

  • The lights of The Twin Tower Memorial can be clearly seen in this long exposure on New York’s Brooklyn Bridge. One night each year New Yorks lights the Twin Beams which illuminate the night. The City, excepptional and magical at the best of times leaps to another level.

  • Minimalist abstract study of speeding cyclists, focusing more on the dynamics of the speed and motion of their movements / Oil on Stretched Canvas – No Airbrushing 37 X 59 inches / 94 X 150 cm contact my Agents at Gallery 112 / .....................................................................................

  • Watermelon , family Cucurbitaceae refers to both fruit and plant of a vine-like herb originally from southern Africa and one of the most common types of melon. This flowering plant produces a special type of fruit known by botanists as a pepo. The watermelon fruit, loosely considered a type of melon, has a smooth exterior rind and a juicy, sweet, usually red or yellow, but sometimes orange, interior flesh. The flesh consists of highly developed placental tissue within the fruit.

  • Taken from the roof of a Brownstone in Brooklyn Heights in 1999, these are the twin towers on a spring night in 1999 with low clouds scraping across the tops.

  • I was in New York recently on business and managed to find a little time to wander around. I walked up to Rockefeller Center and took some shots. Unfortunately I didn’t have a tripod so the night shots were a little difficult, but I did manage to get this one of Radio City Music Hall. I really like the Deco feeling of this shot. I wish there had been just a bit more steam or fog. The shot was originally in color, and while the signage looked nice I think the black & white makes a better image. I did some minor dodging and burning to darken some of the darker areas a little more and lighten some of the lighter areas. I added a platinum tint and some film grain. More processing details can be found here Copyright © 2008 James W. Howe – All rights reserved

  • Amazing sculpture in front of the Rockefeller Center facing 5th avenue in New York City /

  • The World Trade Center seen from street level through a sclupture.

  • Black and White panoramic photograph of the New York City Skyline as seen from the Staten Island Ferry

  • Mid Town Manhattan Skyline shot from New Jersey

  • West side of New York City shot from New Jersey

  • This shot was grabbed back in 1985 in midtown Manhattan.

  • I created this mandala image for a logo for a local restaurant. Digitally created in Paint Shop Pro. The restaurant has fallen on hard times, as has happened to a lot of businesses lately. They are in danger of having to thrown in the towel so I’m giving all proceeds of any sales of this image on RB to them to help. They have fabulous, organic, international cuisine in a very cool, funky little space in an old building in downtown Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

  • Prismacolor pencil drawing.

  • Two fractals created in Iterations, merged and post processed in PSP. Let the north star guide you / she is always constant / always glowing / always shining / to light your way Owlspook was inspired by this image to write the following fabulous short-short story. Thank you very much Owl for your wonderful, imaginative work!! Please stop by to see her creative artwork and more of her wonderful writing! as focused as I was on my new duties as first mate on the clipper LongStar I nearly forgot to take the reading … picking up the glass I walked to starboard … you can imagine my amazement as I saw the north star as I had never seen it before … it was magical … however even now in 1860 I need to be careful with my words .. if the crew new of who I was I would be thrown overboard … but how little they know that it is my powers alone that have brought us so far into the unknown … alas I live in a dark age … no time to talk more, my friend, a log entry needs to be made and the captain commands my presence ….

  • Sunset from the top of Rockefeller Center’s terrace in early November 2008, New York.

  • A late phase star, beautiful, evolving, and disappearing. Be here now. Thanks for stopping by!

  • Life goes on, down by the river. Folks are peacefully mingling about the World Trade Center complex. I imagine this must have been just like this on Sept. 10th, 2001. Oddly enough, if you look really close at the left side of this image, (at the second set of palm tree trunks inside the building), does it not appear as if one of the towers is kicking out a white cloud and above the cloud it appears to be crumbling? Crap, not sure that I can leave this posted now, I just can’t bear watching images of the towers pancaking and coming down …. Taken with Nikon D200 and Nikkor 24-120mm lens. HDR image created from single RAW image using ReDynaMix. / Best viewed in Large for sure! This image is currently on display at the Walls Fine Art gallery in Downtown Norfolk, VA. Price here closely matches gallery price.

  • As we are nearing the 8th anniversary of 9/11, I wanted to post this shot of Lower Manhattan. I am a bit ashamed to say, that I have not seen the New York City skyline with the World Trade Center Towers. I can only imagine how magnificent it must have looked. We shall never forget!

  • (1884 – 1886) Client: People of France / Author: Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi / Height without stand: 46.05 meters / Height with Pedestal: 92.99 meters / Weight: 27,000 tons Located on Liberty Island, which bathes the Hudson River and approximately 2.5 kilometers away from Manhattan, the famous Statue of Liberty stands as a splendid symbol of freedom to doubt the whole world. Frédérick-French sculptor Auguste Bartholdi, was commissioned by the French authorities to carry out this giant sculpture that donate to the city of New York to mark the centenary of the Independence of the United States in 1886. The structural engineer Maurice Koechlin, author also of the structural design of the famous Eiffel Tower, build the skeleton to form the basis for the French sculptor carve the 350 pieces that make up the work. The sculpture was built in France at the workshop in 1884 and dismantled for parts arrive by ship to New York in 1885. The famous drawing (Skyline) today offered the city’s skyscrapers of Manhattan, can be seen also from the island itself. The 350 copper panels have a thickness of 2.37 mm each and are the material of the huge sculpture, along with steel internal structure that supports it. A museum is located inside the pedestal that would fund various sources of the United States of America. Corrosion caused by the weather of the place, is offered by the green color characteristic of the statue. In 1984 the Statue of Liberty would be declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The famous statue would be inaugurated on 28 October 1886, and today is a symbol of the island of Manhattan. The statue holds in her right hand a torch covered in gold. In his left hand the statue holds a table with the inscription "July IV MDCCLXXVI" (July 4, 1,776), the day that America declared independence. ESPAÑOL Cliente: Pueblo de Francia / Autor: Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi / Altura sin pedestal: 46.05 metros / Altura con Pedestal: 92.99 metros / Peso: 27.000 toneladas Localizada en la Isla de la Libertad que baña el río Hudson y a 2.5 kilómetros de distancia aproximadamente del sur de Manhattan, la famosa Estatua de la Libertad se erige espléndida como un símbolo indudable de libertad para el mundo entero. El escultor francés Frédérick-Auguste Bartholdi, recibía el encargo por parte de las autoridades francesas para la realización de esta gigante escultura que donarían a la ciudad de Nueva York con motivo del Centenario de la Independencia de los Estados Unidos de América en 1.886. El Ingeniero estructural Maurice Koechlin, autor también del diseño estructural de la famosa Torre Eiffel de París, construiría el esqueleto que serviría de base para que el escultor francés esculpiese las 350 piezas que conforman la obra. La escultura fue construida en Francia en el taller en 1.884, y llegaría desmontada por piezas en barco hasta Nueva York en 1.885. El famoso dibujo (Skyline) que ofrecen hoy día los rascacielos de la ciudad de Manhattan, puede ser observado también desde la propia isla. Los 350 paneles de cobre tienen un espesor de 2.37 mm cada uno y son el material empleado en la enorme escultura, junto con el acero de la estructura interna que lo sostiene. Un Museo se sitúa en el interior del pedestal que financiarían diversas fuentes de los Estados Unidos de América. La corrosión provocada por la climatología propia del lugar, es la que ofrece el característico color verde de la estatua. En el año 1.984 la Estatua de la Libertad sería declarada por la UNESCO Patrimonio de la Humanidad. La famosa estatua sería inaugurada el 28 de octubre de 1.886, y a día de hoy es todo un símbolo de la isla de Manhattan. La estatua sostiene en su mano derecha una antorcha recubierta de oro. En su mano izquierda la estatua sostiene una tabla con la inscripción “July IV MDCCLXXVI”, (4 de julio de 1.776) , día en el que los Estados Unidos declaraban la independencia. © José Miguel Hernández Hernández

  • View of World Trade Center, NYC from Harborside Plaza Financial Center, Jersey City, NJ

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