Duke 

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302 creative works found

  • Just taking a brief break from Africa. I took this on a road trip through Arizona. It reminded me a bit of outback Australia. This is the famous Monument Valley where John Ford shot many classic John Wayne westerns. Classic cowboy country,

  • Iron Duke. HDR

  • One of my more successful (I think, but what do I know) oil paintings. The British rail locomotive, ‘Iron Duke’ of the Britannia class prepares to haul the Golden Arrow. This is a straightforward scan of the painting with no manipulation and was painted three or four years back when I was feeling very inspired by the works of Terence Cuneo.

  • Also available as in long sleeve for those cold Darwin nights… It’s a private joke. Shirt for the Darwin Ukulele Kollective

  • It’s a private joke. Shirt for the Darwin Ukulele Kollective

  • An early morning image of Ullswater in the English Lake District taken near to the village of Poolley Bridge, with the Duke of Portland boathouse reflecting on the lake. BEST VIEWED LARGER

  • My CODEGRAPH tribute to the thin white duke

  • Beautiful Loch Achray at her best in the Autumn.

  • search asyrum!

  • The Battle of Waterloo occured on the 18th June 1815 and marked the end of the French domination of Europe under Napoleon Bonaparte. It was a coalition of British, Russian, Austrian and Prussians under the leadership of The Duke of Wellington. Waterloo Bay was visited on the anniversary of this battle thus the current nomenclature. This picture was taken in the pre dawn light using a very long exposure from near Little Waterloo Bay looking along this incredibly ruggard coastline towards Cape Wellington. For more shots from this area check out my Wilsons Promontory gallery. 10% of all profits go to the Wilderness Society

  • Giving a whole new meaning to Honey Do

  • Hunter Thompson should really require no introduction. Quite simply put, he was THE man. But, if you don’t already know him, I guess now you do. The day the news of his apparent suicide broke was the first time a ‘celebrity’ death ever hit me like a sack of bricks. The only other one to’ve effected me in a similar way was that of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (Who, I imagine, will be another subject of mine, soon enough.) This man was and is one of my go-to guys, one of my all-time heroes in life. Another one-hour portrait. Oils on 8” x 10” canvas panel.

  • The Duke of Lancaster during her last season in Sealink service. Capt Evans’ views of the ‘Dukes’ are echoed by Capt John Bakewell. “I was in command of the Duke of Lancaster for only a few weeks when she was loaned to us in Holyhead. Backing out of Holyhead was fine as she steered beautifully with her bow rudder. However when proceeding ahead she was terrible to steer. The rudder didn’t look much bigger than a dinner plate!! Sailing into Holyhead, one had to put the rudder hard over somewhere by the North Stack in order to get her round the breakwater!! Then getting her into the Inner Harbour caused many a grey hair!!” I think he must have crashed into the rocks as it’s been here since. / Taken with my D300 Sigma 10-20 lens HDR and NX2 processed

  • Acrylic on canvas. / 45cm x 60cm

  • He’s got Sax Appeal :)

  • Here is a YOUTUBE link to Duke Ellington and Ella, Take the A Train The music is great, the video doesn’t really relate. Added the billboard. Featured in the Group: Who Needs Color for Beauty?

  • John Wayne was my childhood Hero…I would go to the movies every Sat. morning and be transfixed with the enormity of this cowboy on the silver screen…I just knew I would marry Big John when I grew up and I can honestly say I saw everyone of his movies… many of them many, many times… / My favorite was “Angel And The Badman”...His name was “Quirt” in that movie and I grew up loving that name…I just knew “Quirt” was going to ride onto my grandparents place and we would ride off into the sunset…never happened…John died way too early…I was so sad and felt I had lost a dear friend… This is an original pastel , prismacolor pencil drawing on card stock, smooth bonded, acid free paper. / Thanks for viewing my artwork. /

  • I’ve gotten so many wonderful compliments from my friends here on RedBubble about my imagination. I thought I would invite you all along on a journey to the center of my mind!! / Also you have to check out this video of The Amboy Dukes – Journey To The Center Of Your Mind / Look how young Ted Nugent is!! / Featured in Art In Math /

  • Captured at the 2009 Hot August Nights event in Reno, Nevada.

  • peachy-pink rose @ Duke Gardens in Durham, NC View it larger, then close your eyes – you can almost smell it! :D —— / Canon EOS 450D / Rebel XSi / 60mm (macro) / f/3.2 / 1/500 / ISO 400 / Spot Metered

  • There are nearly 1,000 years of history at this great castle, situated in magnificent grounds overlooking the River Arun in West Sussex and built at the end of the 11th century by Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Arundel. / The oldest feature is the motte, an artificial mound, over 100 feet high from the dry moat, and constructed in 1068: followed by the gatehouse in 1070. Under his will, King Henry I (1068-1135) settled the Castle and lands in dower on his second wife, Adeliza of Louvain. Three years after his death she married William d’Albini II, who built the stone shell keep on the motte. King Henry II (1133-89), who built much of the oldest part of the stone Castle, in 1155 confirmed William d’Albini II as Earl of Arundel, with the Honour and Castle of Arundel. / Apart from the occasional reversion to the Crown, Arundel Castle has descended directly from 1138 to the present day, carried by female heiresses from the d’Albinis to the Fitzalans in the 13th century and then from the Fitzalans to the Howards in the 16th century and it has been the seat of the Dukes of Norfolk and their ancestors for over 850 years. From the 15th to the 17th centuries the Howards were at the forefront of English history, from the Wars of the Roses, through the Tudor period to the Civil War. Among the famous members of the Howard family are the 2nd Duke of Norfolk (1443-1524), the victor of Flodden, Lord Howard of Effingham, who with Sir Francis Drake repelled the Armada in 1588, the Earl of Surrey, the Tudor poet and courtier, and the 3rd Duke of Norfolk (1473-1554), uncle of Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard, both of whom became wives of King Henry VIII (1491-1547). These were politically dangerous times: the ‘Poet’ Earl was executed in 1547; his father, the 3rd Duke of Norfolk only escaped the death penalty because King Henry VIII died the night before the execution was due and the 4th Duke (1536-72) was beheaded for plotting to marry Mary Queen of Scots. There have been two cardinals and a saint in the Howard family; St Philip Howard, 13th Earl of Arundel (1557-95) died in the Tower of London for his faith. By contrast, his son, the ‘Collector’ 14th Earl (1585-1646), as his nickname suggests, was responsible for many of the treasures which can be seen today. The results of all this history are concentrated at the Castle, which houses a fascinating collection of fine furniture dating from the 16th century, tapestries, clocks, and portraits by Van Dyck, Gainsborough, Mytens, Lawrence, Reynolds, Canaletto and others. Personal possessions of Mary, Queen of Scots and a selection of historical, religious and heraldic items from the Duke of Norfolk’s collection are also on display. During the Civil War (1642-45), the Castle was badly damaged when it was twice besieged, first by Royalists who took control, then by Cromwell’s Parliamentarian force led by William Waller. Nothing was done to rectify the damage until about 1718 when Thomas, the 8th Duke of Norfolk (1683-1732) carried out some repairs. Charles Howard, the 11th Duke (1746-1815), known to posterity as the ‘Drunken Duke’ and friend of the Prince Regent subsequently carried out further restoration. / (Text from the Arundel Castle official website) / Panasonic G1

  • Lithuania

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