Museum 

1 member found

4053 creative works found

  • Taken inside the danish art-museum of ARoS. The name comes from the old word for the city, Aarhus, where it is located – ‘Aros’ – and the latin word for art – ‘ars’. It’s an amazing structure – and if you’re ever in Denmark, I would definitely recommend a visit!

  • Rijks museum Amsterdam, Netherlands. 2005. The reflection is real and not a digital composite. Canon PS-A95.

  • Part of the children’s technology museum

  • Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow…..... Natural History Museum, London, England. / One of my most favourite places…....... / . . /

  • First in a series of striking images of the newest addition to the Denver Art Museum, the Hamilton Building designed by architect Daniel Libeskind, represents a different view of the newly famed building. / The sharp lines set against a dark sky create an Orwellian view of the museum creating an other worldly scene.

  • For those who have asked… scroll down through the comments to see a rough cut of the original image.

  • Life is a labyrinth in which we take the bad direction before learning to walk. / Cyril Connolly. Nothing is more tragic than to meet a man out of breath, lost in the labyrinth of the life. / Martin Luther King. Woman is the first labyrinth of the man. / Jacques Attali.

  • This work is dedicated to my dear friend and soulmate / MadVlad / Thanks Vlad, for being such an inspiration! I am a great admirer of his work and creative energy. He is such a good friend and mental coach to me and he makes me laugh so often. A wise man with a heart of gold and a gifted and original artist with the energy of a volcano. Please, buy yourself a good bottle of red wine, some French cheese and some olives. And spend a couple of exciting hours in his amazing port folio. Your life will never be the same again after you have visited The MadVlad Museum Of Art / But remember: entrance only for fools. All images are used with permission of MadVlad. Digital collage.

  • The British Museum / London 03/03/08

  • Another in my train series from the Train Museum at Thirlmere in the Southern Highlands of NSW (Australia) ... this time the old metal, drop-down handbasin. Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM / / / / /

  • Moth display at the Melbourne Museum- with a little help from TTV and Photoshop.

  • The spray-on bricks on the left hand side fascinated my hubby…. Canon 5D w 14mm fisheye, f/5, 1/20sec, ISO 50 Melbourne / Seascapes / New Zealand / Frogs / Lensbaby / Infrared / Industrial / Spam / Panorama / Landscapes / Real Estate Series / People

  • Inside the Ian Potter Gallery, Melbourne Melbourne / Seascapes / New Zealand / Frogs / Lensbaby / Infrared / Industrial / Spam / Panorama / Landscapes / Real Estate Series / People

  • There has been one poster and two card sales of this image. This image was featured by the group, JPG Cast-Offs, on January 15, 2009. Image taken of a one-room school house at the Old Town museum. This museum is located on the same grounds as the Route 66 Museum in Elk City, Oklahoma. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it. ©2008-2009 Patricia Montgomery | Bucks Mountain Galleries | All rights reserved.

  • Even dragons are not out of place in the imagination of children. The tail end of the dragon on the roof of the Providence Children’s Museum. Crossprocessing Velvia F slide film really oversaturated the red and increased the contrast. The Diana camera created a soft light leak on the top of the tail and some slight vignetting. No digital manipulation. This image is featured in the XPro – Cross Processed – Photography group. (c) Paul Lavallee 2007 /

  • “Reminds me of a scene from a French film I’d rather forget” Underground tunnel leading from the Natural History Museum to the Science Museum, London. Untouched Medium Format scan Part 10 in a series

  • Berlin is “The biggest construction site in the world”... International investors and real estate sharks scent in Berlin big business. The opportunity is unique: Never before has an entire capitol been sold and built again. The prices are rising and rising – but the one billion projects are not making progress. The first speculation is out of money. A wave of bankruptcies threatens… This was a quote from “Spiegel” in 1992… Did something change since then?... Berlin is still a big construction site and we still live in a period of transition... We’ve just became accustomed to it… This photo was taken 2009 in Berlin Mitte, at the bridge near the Museumsinsel (Museum Island)...

  • Five Lands National Park – Italy Properties inscribed on the World Heritage List – Italy Portovenere, Five Lands, and the Islands (Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto) (1997) / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / Featured in Visions of Italy Group October – 24 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- Featured in Going Coastal Group October – 17 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-— / Featured in Sea Group October – 16 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- / Featured in Historic Places Group September – 06 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- / Challenge Winner in Style! Class! Elegance! Excellence! Group – The Best Waterscape (sea, river, lake only) Challenge Agoust – 28 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-— / Featured in National Trust Properties Group July – 26 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-— Featured in Unlimited Quality Group July – 21 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- Nikon D300 Sigma 15/30 Vernazza The name is thought to derive from the Latin adjective verna, meaning “of the place” or “indigenous”. Thus the village’s name would be linked to its most famous product, Vernaccia, the local wine. Others maintain that the place name comes from a Latin predial, Vulnetia, indicating a family that owned land. • 1080: the first mention of the village dates to a deed of gift by Albert IV Rufo, grandson of Adalbert II of the Obertenghi family, drawn up in castro Vernazio, i.e. the castle of Vernazza. • 1207: the lords of Vernazza submit to Genoa. • 1242: the inhabitants of Vernazza drive back Frederick II’s troops led by his deputy Oberto Pallavicino. • 1254: in the Cathedral of Santa Reparata in Florence, Florentine judges concede Vernazza to Genoa, together with all lands and castles situated between the Magra river and Genoa itself. • 1310: date of the earliest documents referring to the Church of Santa Margherita di Antiochia. • 1874: the railway line between Genoa and La Spezia is completed, putting an end to the village’s centuries-old isolation. • 1997: UNESCO places Vernazza, together with the other four towns of the Cinque Terre, on its “world heritage” list.

  • Different? My depiction of the mind of someone in personal struggle with society. The light and the dark, happy and sad, known and unknown. All of this moving with random thought processes, pop culture, gossip, media influence, culture clashes and a lot of the time, white noise to fill whatever silence is left. This is modern society. Confusing, confronting, intimidating and at times down right scary. Which way do we go? Title of this piece I have borrowed from one of my favourite songs: “..can I please have some silence. How about some space..“ / Mindcircus – Way Out West. City Of Melbourne Musuem. Not the one in Carlton, housing dinosaur bones and relics though. This is the nondescript one on Spring Street, in the old Treasury Building. It showcases the history of Melbourne as a city, from colonisation to today. This was taken in the vaults, underground. Which have been turned into an interactive journey through the gold rush days. This particular room had only a tv and light in it, both of modern look. The contrast grabbed my attention straight away. It had a spooky yet familiar effect on me. I didn’t know what to make of it, but I kept looking at it, unsure what to think or feel. Slight crop of original photo. Desaturated all and selectively coloured tv screen. Increased contrasted and brightness to achieve higher levels of mood. Featured in Core [C.O.R.E] / Featured in THIS IS RELEVANT / Featured in Around The World Top 10 in Juxtaposition Challenge / Top 10 in Beyond The Edge Of Tomorrow Challenge Canon 50D / 58mm 18 – 55 Processed 11pm MCN :: CDPYJ-XG52B-QUPJP

  • 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!

  • Dinorwig Quarry closed in 1969. Today – rather than fashioning wagons and forging rails – the workshops tell a very special story: the story of the Welsh slate industry. The Workshops and Buildings are designed as though quarrymen and engineers have just put down their tools and left the courtyard for home. / The National Slate Museum at Llanberis invested a £1.6 million lottery grant into bringing back to life the inheritance of the north Wales slate industry, which roofed the industrial revolution. Now, with imaginative interpretation, the remarkable relics of the slate industry can be understood and enjoyed by the many thousands of visitors to this stunning countryside, on the flanks of Snowdon. / The Museum originally opened to the public in 1972. Many of the sites former quarrymen and engineers were employed to present their craft, while equipment was collected from other Welsh quarries. In later years the quarry’s incline was restore to its former glory, and the Museum re-opened in 1999 with new unique features and facilities. In 2005, the National Slate Museum scooped the Wales Tourist Board’s prestigious ‘Sense of Place Award’. History of Slate / Harnessing the latest 21st century technology, it tells the story of the quarry’s development as pictures, words and music combine in a fascinating introduction to the quarryman’s world. People have been quarrying slate in north Wales for over 1,800 years. Slates were used to build parts of the Roman fort in Segontium in Caernarfon, and in Edward I’s castle at Conwy. But it was with the dawn of the Industrial Revolution in the 18th century that the slate industry really took off. / As small villages such as Manchester exploded into large towns and then cities with the coming of mills and factories, there was an enormous demand for slates to roof the long terraces of houses built as homes for the workers – as well as the foundries and factories themselves. In 1787 the ‘Great New Quarry’ of Dinorwig was opened on the slopes between the present village of Dinorwig and Llyn Peris. By the 1870s Dinorwig quarry employed over 3,000 men. Slate had become one of Wales’s most important industries / Wales produced over four-fifths of all British slates in this period, with Caernarfonshire the biggest producer among all Welsh counties. In 1882 the county’s quarries produced over 280,000 tons of finished roofing slates, and in 1898 the slate trade in Wales as a whole reached its peak with 17,000 men producing 485,000 tons of slate. / It’s a story full of hope and magic as well as sadness and poverty. There are regular showings of the To Steal a Mountain presentation in Welsh, French and German as well as English. Nikon D300 / HDR 5 shots, handheld on rail / Photmatix Pro3 / 18-200mm lens / PP in PS SC3

  • This is a museum here in Reykjavik

  • Red Tailed Hawk at the Desert Museum coming in for a landing. Tucson, Arizona Nikon-D-80 / 70-210 mm lens at 210 mm / 1/320, f/4 / ISO-200 / CP filter

  • Nikon D90 / Nikkor 18-200 lens / HDR Palace of Fine Arts was built on the lines of Greek and Roman Medieval architecture. Palace of Fine Arts was built in 1915. Now the Palace of Fine Arts has been reconstructed and converted into a science museum. The Palace of Fine Arts has Piranesi engraving on it and few people know that it is also part of a celebration on the completion of the restructuring of the city of San Francisco after the earthquake of 1905. In 1915 the Palace of Fine Arts housed a total of 11,000 works of art. / A lot of movies have also been shot near Palace of Fine Arts. Famous blockbusters like Vertigo, The Rock, The Bachelor, etc. have featured the Palace of Fine Arts in them.

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 334,900 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Museum T-Shirts

Museum Wall Art

Museum Journal Entries

Museum Writing

Museum Calendars