Magellanic 

27 creative works found

  • The angel appeared, / soft as tear from / a child’s wish, / with the scent of / wisdom, flowing / through frost / colored wings. / The angel answered, / the child, in a voice / more soothing than / a mothers embrace, / I’m sorry I haven’t / any clue where the / Four Seasons might be, / I’m from New York, / visiting friends. CANNON 5D / iso 1000 / 24-300 mm Lens / RAW+S / no flash

  • Digital artwork created from original acrylic on canvas, digital images and effects.

  • Acrylic on Canvas / 100cm x 120cm Original Sold at Spectaculart Exhibition and Crocker Group Art Prize, Mountain Heritage Hotel, 10 October 2008 One of my larger and more significant works, based on the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan in 1492. I came across the term “Magellanic Voyage” / Larry Dossey’s book Space, Time & Medicine> “In medicine today we have taken Magellanic voyages. Our data has changed as a result. We no longer love on the level earth of the molecular model, which has heretofore served well in explaining a more limited data base. Just as navigators and cartographers of the fifteenth century found the earth to be spherical and thus a more complex structure than the plane, today we are forced to recognize that human health is more complex then can be accounted for by molecular behaviour. In bioscience the Magellans have returned with news of strange lands, and the news that modern medical scientists are bringing back is no less revolutionary than that which the earliest circumnavigators announced. We have not had it quite right, they tell us. Our models dealt with limited information and were limited as a result. What is the new information? It is this: consciousness matters. Larry Dossey, “Space, Time & Medicine”, p11

  • photomanipulation (software: Photoshop 7) Universe Surface

  • This work combines one of Rae’s boats on the ocean (www.photosbyrae.com.au) with my acrylic on canvas (Magellanic Voyage). The idea behind the work is seeking a new way of life, leaving behind processes that are outmoded and do not enhance quality of life and wellbeing… journeying into the unknown, towards a strange new world…. there will be challenges along the way, and they may sometimes seem overwhelming… but it is worth it. This journey is both a personal process (that one must take alone) and a global one (which humanity could perhaps achieve if united).

  • 1987, and a 1-hour exposure with stars wheeling around the South Celestial Pole. The range of star colours is fairly well represented in this image, with bluish and yellowish stars clearly distinguished. Near the top, there’s a pink visitor… the supernova SN1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud. / / .......................................................................................... / Image Copyright Duncan Waldron © 2008 / This image may not be reproduced without permission / .......................................................................................... / /

  • Magellan is possibly the cutest kitten alive… my little wide-eyed explorer! He was a rescue and how could I resist?? I mean, just try to be cuter little guy!!

  • I have a lot to say… please listen to me!

  • This is one of the little penguins at Sea World that live in an exhibit just outside of the arctic penguin exhibit. These little guys are Magellanic Penguins, and they happen to love the San Diego weather. =)

  • This gigantic monument, with its 20 foot high figures, was erected near Lisbon, Portugal to commemorate the Portuguese explorers of the 15th and 16th centuries. Men such as Ferdinand Magellan, Vasco da Gama, Bartholomeu Dias sailed under the inspiration of Prince Henry the Navigator into the Atlantic, around the tip of Africa and to the Far East. They colonized what is now Brazil, and although Magellan was killed in the Philippines, his crew were the first men to circumnavigate the globe. The monument juts out over the Tagus river and it was past this point that the explorers first set off to see the world.

  • Valdes Peninsula, Argentina

  • Featured in Zoophoria in September 2009 and in Penguins Galore in October 2009! Thank you!! Second place in the Penguins Galore challenge and also in Playful photogenic animals group challenge! There is a funny story with this penguin :) / This was in Belfast zoo. We were visiting with my husband and he had a map of the zoo in his hand. For some reason he touched the glass with the map and the penguin reacted immediately by trying to byte the paper through the glass. His beak hit the glass in effortless tries. It was sooo funny! :) Where ever my husband put the map the penguin followed. This went on for a while and there was a crowd starting to gather behind us. At one point another person decided to have a go at this fun game and took his car keys, put close to the glass and showed them to the penguin. I am telling you – the expression on that penguin’s face was priceless when he saw the keys!!! His eyes went big and he swam quickly away. It was almost like he was thinking: what the hell is this! Hahaha / Times like these I would really want to know what and how animals think :D Canon 20D / Canon EF 100-400mm L @ 100mm / ISO 100, 1/80sec, f/6,3

  • This penguin thinks he can fly

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of a Magellanic Penguin taken at Sea Lion Island, South Atlantic.

  • Meet one of the Neighbours, called the Large Magellanic Cloud or LMC for short. This is a satellite galaxy in orbit around the Milky Way. At this time of year the LMC is easily visible rising from the Southern horizon just after sunset looking like a detached section of the Milky Way. The Galaxy lies about 175,000 light-years away, which sounds far but is really next door in Astronomical terms. The LMC contains one of the largest star forming regions that we know of in the Universe and certainly the largest in our local group of galaxies. In the very centre of the image appears a blue star which is not a star at all but the giant star forming region known as the Tarantula Nebula / The galaxy is a Barred Spiral that has been distorted by the gravitational pull of the Milky Way. If you look at the Galaxy the central bar is easily visible. The arm at the top of the galaxy is folding underneath the bar from our viewpoint and curls to the right. The spiral arm at the bottom of the bar is easier to see and curls to the left containing the Tarantula Nebula. / The photo was taken with a Nikon D300 using a 50mm f1.4 D lens set at f1.4 (slight halo around bright stars is an effect of this aperture). The exposure was 30 seconds giving minimal star trailing at ISO400 which has minimised the grain. / The image was taken from a country property at Bucketty in the mountains between Mangrove Mountain and Cessnock. Featured in Jpeg cast-offs

  • All photos of the penguins in this calendar were taken in the wild A slideshow of my penguin photos can be seen here

  • Emma’s visage suddenly appeared in the gaseous remnants of a supernova in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small companion galaxy to our own Milky Way familiar to all our fellow travelers down under. Emma is the wife of artist Dave Martsolf. Image Credit: NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA) Acknowledgment: Y.-H. Chu (UIUC), S. Kulkarni (Caltech), and R. Rothschild (UCSD) Calendars for Friends Surreal Paintings Calendar / Surreal Watercolors Calendar Glacier National Park Calendar / Roses Calendar / Works Featured in Red Bubble Groups Sunrise was featured in Fantastic Primitive Art in October 2009. / Alien Beach Resort Architecture was featured in You’re Accepted group October 2009. / Emily’s Ridge Walk was featured in Art for the World October 2009. / Alien Beach Resort Architecture was featured in the Surrealism group September 2009. / Civilization Found Intact was featured in The Voyage of the Surrealists September 2009. / Mother and Child was featured in The Divine Feminine September 2009. / Shadows on the Land was featured in All Parks September 2009. / Forest near Saint Mary Falls was featured in Mother Nature’s Wonders September 2009. / The Last Supper and Civilization Found Intact were both featured in Imaginative Realism in September 2009. / Alien Hive City was featured in C.O.R.E in September 2009. / Classical Construction was featured in Urban Art in September 2009. / Mountain Retreat and Odalisque were both featured in Fantastic Primitive Art in September 2009. / The Boneyard of Unused Shapes was featured in Finks of Inks in September 2009. / The Millenium Stone was featured in Paintings Modern and Beyond – PiMT in September 2009. / Emmas Sunglasses was featured in Paintings Modern and Beyond – PiMT in September 2009. / Stark Contrast was featured in Appalachian Artists in September 2009. / Mount Gould was featured in AMERICA’S National Parks and WILDLIFE Habitat in September 2009. / A Last Minute Apocalyptic Education was featured in Let’s Pay Homage and Avant Garde in September 2009. / A Last Minute Apocalyptic Education also won 5th place in Avant Garde’s Homage to Dali Challenge in September 2009. / Sedimentary Abstract was featured in Visual Texture group in September 2009. / Friends was featured in The Voyage of the Surrealists in August 2009. / Going-to-the-Sun Mountain was featured in Gateways in August 2009. / Full Force was featured in Fantastic Primitive Art in August 2009. / Portents of Genius was featured in C.O.R.E in August 2009. / The Boneyard of Unused Shapes was featured in Works on Paper in August 2009. / Stark Contrast was featured in the Appalachian State Parks group in August 2009. / The Last Supper was featured in Hand Painted or Drawn Buildings and Architecture in August 2009. / Windows of Allegory was featured in FEATURED ONLY , August 2009. / Ferris Wheel was featured in Windmills and Ferris wheels group in August 2009. / Friends was featured in Imaginative Realism August 2009. / Deep Canopy was featured in the Earth Keepers Environmental Awareness group, August 2009. / Emma’s Sunglasses was featured in Digital Artists United August 2009. / The Arguments of Heisenberg and Einstein Weighed by a Partial Observer was featured in Art for the World August 2009. / Black Forest was featured in Water Media group, August 2009 / Surface Tension was featured in Fine Arts group, August 2009. / The Bridge was featured in the Dark Future group and the Oil Painting group in August 2009. / Windows of Allegory was featured in C.O.R.E., August 2009. / Also featured in C.O.R.E. – Civilization Found Intact / and Global Dreaming , both in August 2009. / The Cathedral has been featured in Hand painted or drawn Buildings and architecture . / Surface Tension has been featured at Painted Dogs and at Realist Traditional Art . / Crown Fire has been featured in Appalachian State Parks . / Crown Fire also served as the Avatar for the “Tree” Challenge in Appalachian State Parks in August 2009. / Illumination Beyond Ursa Major has been featured in Dark Future group. / Gold Bejeweled Fertility Goddess has been featured in Works-on-Paper . / Friends has been featured in Parallel Dimensions . / Emma’s Fantasy Stargate Nova has been featured in Surrealism . / Lady of the Flowers was featured in Finks of Inks . Featured Images

  • This artwork was featured by RB group: / 4 Winners Only / It was argued in the Christian Topography that pagans are at war with common sense itself and the very laws of nature, declaring, as they do, that the earth is a central sphere, and that there are antipodes (a diametrically opposed point on the surface of the earth) who must be standing head-downward and on whom the rain must fall up. Ref: Wikipedia.org Therefore, the earth is obviously flat. Makes sense to me :-) Giclee print available on canvas at my Online Gallery. Art by Kinnally Featuring Giclee Art Prints / What are Giclee prints? / Beautiful reproductions of classic paintings / Beautiful Contemporary Art / How to Paint

  • Magellanic Penguins at Otway Sound, near the town of Punta Arenas, Patagonia, Chile Canon 5D Mark II with 100-300mm

  • Taken in the Peninsula Valdez, Argentina in 2005

  • Taken in the Peninsula Valdez, Argentina in 2005.

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