Photograph: The Mayor’s Cat / Photographed: 2007 / Series: Critters / - / If you would like one of the other photos available, please contact me, I’ll be happy to post it for you. to view other photos in my viewfinder collection please visit: / http://www.flickr.com/photos/highlandghillie and / http://highlandghillie.etsy.com Viewfinder photographs are truly unique. / They have a distinct look of vintage photos – rounded corners, soft focus, specks of dust and dirt. / The black borders are a part of the photograph and will be visible.
Copyright © by MOC2, All Rights Reserved. You may not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify this image without written permission.
Ink drawing and digital manipulation Click here to listen Saxofon Solo
Ink drawing and digital manipulation Nothing gonna change my love for you
Coach and horses in the Lord Mayor’s Parade in Liverpool, England. / When an new major takes office in Liverpool there is a big parade which all the dignitries attend. Charities, societies, police, army and all sorts make a carnival through the main streets of Liverpool and people line the route. This coach and horses is like the type that would have gone through the streets years ago before the motor car
For Kofoed This is the way we had to follow to go from Palma to Soller crossing the rocky mountains of the Puig Mayor. / With the big autocar, we had to take the hairpin bends in three times.Unique but excessively dangerous.We saw the drivers shirt getting wetter after each bend and the silly people in the car shouted “Ole” at each bend.Tourists!!
Just a street in Cartagena. In fact this is what us Brits would call High Street. I loved the older buildings and the sweeping bend. It i more unusual to see older buildings like this around my part of Spain. they are either new due to the construction boom or old and falling down! Enhanced by psuedo HDR
slammed merc
“Their guardian angel” was featured in the groups / Soul Mates / Candid Photography and / Queer and Gender Theories (31-10-2009) Photo taken in the Plaza Mayor Square – a central, impressive Madrid square, Spain, in July 2008. This wall is covered with colorful paintings. There was (what seemed to be) a gay wedding going on in and below this building. Below, on the street/square, there were lots of signs of a wedding, with a decorated car waiting, baloons etc. The following info was taken from Wikipedia: Same-sex marriage in Spain was legalized in 2005. In 2004, the nation’s newly elected Socialist government, led by President José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, began a campaign for its legalization, which would include adoption by same-sex couples. After much debate, a law permitting same-sex marriage was passed by the Cortes Generales (Spain’s bicameral parliament, composed of the Senate and the Congress of Deputies) on 30 June 2005 and published on 2 July 2005. Same-sex marriage officially became legal in Spain on Sunday, 3 July 2005. The ratification of this law has not been devoid of conflict, despite support from 66% of the population. Roman Catholic authorities in particular were adamantly opposed to it, criticising what they regarded as the weakening of the meaning of marriage. Other associations expressed concern over the possibility of lesbians and gays adopting children. Demonstrations for and against the law drew thousands of people from all parts of Spain. After its approval, the conservative People’s Party challenged the law in the Constitutional Court. Approximately 4,500 same-sex couples married in Spain during the first year of the law.
The spiral staircase in City Hall, home of the Mayor of London, by the River Thames, London. Access was granted due to a number of private buildings being opened to the public over the weekend as part of London Open House, so I took full advantage and managed to take some shots without being frisked by an enormous security guard! See more of my work at Dan Biggins Photography.
Once again I agonised over uploading this image, unsure as to whether it really is “RB-worthy”...however, I love this building, and wanted to share another view of the quite amazing / crazy staircase with you all. I’ve given it the full HDR treatment to ensure it looks even more insane than it actually is…! See more of my work at Dan Biggins Photography.
The Ross Doocot, in Learmonth Gardens, close to the Strawberry Bank area of Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland. Doocot is the Scots word for a building devoted to the domestication of pigeons. Built by the Barons Ross of Halkhead in the 16th century, to fattened pigeons as part of the winter diet, it is a circular beehive dovecot, containing 370 nesting boxes in its thick rubble walls, bound by three projecting rat-courses. Learmonth Gardens commemorate Alexander Learmonth, Provost of Linlithgow, 1802-1807. A Provost is the Scots equivalent of a Mayor. The Ross Doocot is an Historic Scotland Category A Listed Building (HB Number 37468). Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. BEST VIEWED LARGER Related shots can be found at: Linlithgow, Lowland Scotland or you can look at all my HDR shots.
/ Photography / Smudge Art TM / / Fractalius Art / Fractal Art / Flood Art / By: Madeline M. Allen / Thank you for viewing my work Image copyright © 2008, Madeline M. Allen / Copying and displaying or redistribution of / this image without permission from the / artist is strictly prohibited*
Ink drawing and digital manipulation Base on my original saxophone in D Mayor /
Small shop just outside of the Plaza Mayor in Madrid, Spain. Features / - European Everyday Life in November 2008 / - Experimental Photography in November 2008 Cross processed using an adjustment layer and modifying the curves adjustments.
Oct 2008 / Suburban Scenes by Mike Savad
/ acrylic and oil on rough canvas. mixedmedia painting used photo as reference / MCN:CA128-592C7-33210 / This is De Plaza Mayor Of Albarracin Teruel Spain, My friend send me a lot of beautiful image from Spain, some of those image I use as a reference in my paintins, This painting(The Original) will be send to my friend as a present for her collaboration towards my paintings. /
For affordable canvas prints please click here / City Hall is the headquarters of the Greater London Authority which comprises the Mayor of London and London Assembly. It is located in Southwark, stands on the south bank of the River Thames near Tower Bridge. Designed by Norman Foster, it opened in July 2002. The building has an unusual bulbous shape, intended to reduce its surface area and thus improve energy efficiency. It has been compared variously to Darth Vader’s helmet, a misshapen egg, a human scrotum, a woodlouse or a motorcycle helmet. Former mayor Ken Livingstone referred to it as a “glass testicle”. The new mayor, Boris Johnson, has referred to it more politely as ‘The Onion’. Its designers reportedly saw the building as a giant sphere hanging over the Thames, but opted for a more conventionally rooted building instead. It has no front or back on conventional terms but derives its shape from a modified sphere. City Hall forms part of a larger development called More London, including offices and shops. Next to City Hall is a sunken amphitheatre called The Scoop, which is used in the summer months for open-air performances. The Scoop and surrounding landscape were designed by Townshend Landscape Architects. A 500-metre (1,640 ft) helical walkway ascends the full height of the building. At the top of the ten-story building is an exhibition and meeting space called “London’s Living Room”, with an open viewing deck which is occasionally open to the public. The walkway provides views of the interior of the building, and is intended to symbolise transparency.
The Ross Doocot, in Learmonth Gardens, close to the Strawberry Bank area of Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland. Doocot is the Scots word for a building devoted to the domestication of pigeons. Built by the Barons Ross of Halkhead in the 16th century, to fattened pigeons as part of the winter diet, it is a circular beehive dovecot, containing 370 nesting boxes in its thick rubble walls, bound by three projecting rat-courses. Learmonth Gardens commemorate Alexander Learmonth, Provost of Linlithgow, 1802-1807. A Provost is the Scots equivalent of a Mayor. The Ross Doocot is an Historic Scotland Category A Listed Building (HB Number 37468). Shot taken 11th October 2008. / Camera: Canon EOS 450D Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. BEST VIEWED LARGER Related shots can be found at: Linlithgow, Lowland Scotland or you can look at all my HDR shots. Click here for a random page of photographs
ACRYLIC GLAZE ON CANVAS This is the painting that was selected to be on exhibit in the City of Houston’s Mayors chambers for two years this April 2009. Location:Downtown Houston,Texas
acrylic on canvas the makings of this began at 4AM / Since the New York City Housing Authority and NY officials including Mayor Bloomberg, the officals at the white House and all the others cannot or will not read their mail, perhaps they will read this, I will be sending to all NYC, NYS and all gvmnt officials with absolutely no words attached. Just an image of this.,I will cc to every radio station, tv news station, tv talk shows, etc i can possibly find…will be busy….
I am a member of Helfa Gelf open studios event, 2009. Tonight, my next door neighbour and another contributing Artist had a photocall with the town Mayor-going all out for some real world exposure!!!
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