Drought drying 

344 creative works found

  • Aerial view of a drying Tullaroop river lined by dead trees, Victoria, Australia, at sunrise with a hard frost.

  • Skeleton of desert plant. Studio still life. Photo based mixed medium image. Extreme image softness, textures, and grain.

  • Aerial view of a dry river bed lined by dead trees an their equally dead looking shadows. / I will donate 50% of my proceeds of sale of this print to / Australian Conservation Foundation

  • ghostly trees – a striking contrast with the dark storm clouds. More landscapes and scenics here More flowers and trees here

  • Image of a property on the way to Toowoomba from Brisbane

  • Please check out Kye Vincent

  • Take a cut lunch to cross this paddock – this was shot across the road from Drought Stricken #2 Drought Set An Australian Artist to watch Rosalie Dale

  • Please check out halftone :) halftone

  • Drought Set Check out Matt’s work

  • Drought Set

  • aerial view of a dry lake Tyrrell, north west Victoria, Australia

  • Where’s the water gone There’s a rather sad phenomenon that’s plaguing our great land / And just like the wary gambler it’s about to play it’s hand. / All the signs have been quite evident and round now for a spell / But we’ve fobbed them off, ignored them all, as far as I can tell. From the times of early childhood when my family drove around / All the creeks were full of water and the bores were rather sound, / Sure enough the droughts they came and went but mate, I have to say / that our Nation’s running kind of dry, hard times are on the way. Hey I think we’ve done our dash old son ‘cause what is going on. / All our dams and bores are getting low and where’s the water gone. / We will have to make some changes and mate make them pretty fast, / as the water’s disappearing and it sure as hell won’t last. Though we’ve held bad hands in years gone by we’ve always lived in hope, / that the rains were somewhere in the deck and til then we would cope. / But the evidence is ominous and looking rather bleak / and we’d do well to consider all the havoc it could wreak. We need each and every one of us to play a vital role, / as we’re playing for high stakes here and there’s need for self-control. / All will have to change the lifestyles that they’ve been accustomed to / And we’ll have to play our hands right and seek out an Ace or two. Hey I think we’ve done our dash old son ‘cause what is going on. / All our dams are bores are getting low and where’s the water gone. / We will have to make some changes and mate make them pretty fast, / As the water’s disappearing and it sure as hell won’t last. © Bush Poet and Ballad Writer Merv Webster / ©2008 Globalphotos All rights reserved. / All photographs, text and images by Globalphotos are the exclusive property of Globalphotos – protected under Australian and international copyright laws. / These images may not be reproduced, copied or manipulated without written permission. / No use for Public Domain. / Use of any image for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright. / Shot taken outback South Australia / 5 layered image

  • Bromo caldera, East Java Indonesia

  • Capturing the dry hills around my mums house at Boonah. I rarely do landscapes so this is a bit of a departure for me:) 60cm x 60cm, acrylic on stretched canvas. /

  • Female figure in mind body immersion with cracked earth.

  • Stark dark clouds coming in over drought affected land between Pinnaroo and Loxton in South Australia. Not a drop fell but it gave the sense of impending rains much needed in that area. The Barb you see is actually the top strand on the original normal stock fence that has been covered over by drifting sands. A new one has been put up behind it.. Quite a scary sight. Just what is happening to our earth??? Nature reclaiming the land? Canon 400D 18-55 lens processed in PS3. HDR originally merged in Photomatix.

  • The title is taken from the poem ‘My Country’ by Dorothea MacKellar, which was written in 1906. 100 years on, with the terrible drought conditions in Australia and the disgraceful state of our precious Murray River, the Coorong and Lower Lakes and other vital waterways, and our government’s lack of a meaningful response to global warming, the words ‘a sunburnt country’ start to take on a new meaning for Australians today. I for one do not love a sunburnt country and ‘the wide brown land’ is not for me. The image of the ‘Black Boy’ grass tree is a xanthorrhoea quadrangulata that was photographed on Mount Barker Summit.

  • The last day of Winter 2008 and this sad image say’s it all. The cracks are 1m deep in the bottom of a watering hole.

  • View other work from this series Dangars Lagoon, Uralla, New South Wales, Australia. Best viewed LARGE

  • View more work from this series Uralla, New South Wales, Australia. / Best viewed LARGE

  • (c) Sarah Moore 2009 Stock used… / Sky / Mill / Paddock

  • Oakey, Queensland…... hot, dry, rarely rains…... [Thanks to Skeletal mess for your fantastic texture] TOP TEN FINISH – Textured Trees – October 2009

  • Location: Taylor, Texas

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