Couldn’t resist shooting the luna eclipse on some telescopes kindly provided by Mikael Altoff and his Rainmaker Observatory in Brisbane. This was two frames merged together, the full moon didn’t fit in one frame. Got lucky and snagged Neptune off to the side.
Taking at Universal Studio in Orlando, Fl. / Canon PowerShot S3 IS / Post work in Paint Shop Pro 8. Image copyright © 2007, Larry Fridel. Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.
tishalulles personal guide ,soul warrior is highly gifted in the field of psychic engineering her role is vital . / A digi collage manipulated in PS , i became devoted to the production of sci-fi images for a considerable period , DURING THE SUMMER OF 2007, which was immensely enjoyable ,mebbe i will go back there ,soul warriors face was the result of an intricate melding of facial photographs /drawings to the extent that i felt like some kind of plastic surgeon . / The initial result had some semblance of a likeness with the boy king Tut , something to behold . / This work is neither a rendering digital painting or a photo
funny what you’ll see when walking through an airport. this, i believe, was intended to be a calming, soothing, peaceful part of the airport so people who are rushing to their connecting planes can be transported to another space and time. like neptune. the music is rather hilarious, but i loved the light show.
“Neptune’s Sculptures” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © The Twelve Apostles rock formations on the Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia. “I have seen the sea when it is stormy and wild; / when it is quiet and serene; when it is dark / and moody. And in all its moods, I see myself.” / ~ Martin Buxbaum /
I remember being in 7th grade when I stumbled upon these creatures…I had forgot them for a long time….but for some reason for the last few weeks I haven’t been able to get them off of my mind…so today I knew I had to bring him to life….from the depths of Neptune’s reach, here he is for your viewing pleasure…. Pencil on Bristol Also a shirt : )
The break in the rainy day at sunset coupled with high tide being driven by the wind created some surging waves for me to use in the foreground and this gnarled limb or stump washed ahore at the right time for me to add it to the composition. Taken at Neptune Beach here in the great state of Washington.
This artwork is based on a shot I took, while shark diving in Australia in November. I’VE GOT SOMETHING IMPORTANT TO SAY. / Sharks might become extinct, if we don’t do something, and it might hit the human race harder than we think. / Sharks have been here for millions of years. They are at the top of the marine food chain, and keep balance in the ocean. / If sharks disappear from our waters, it will have serious consequences for the ocean…and there by for humans as well. Sharks are not evil killers! As I was surfing a bit in Australia, I know how it feels to see a fin behind you. It’s not the funniest thing to see, but we have to remember, that we are in their waters. My last point. More people get killed by pigs, coconuts, and vending machines, than by sharks! OUR PLANET NEEDS THE SHARKS, AND SO DO WE!!!
Wanted to do the cliche tourist kinda tee, just with a bit more style, and this also doubled as an entry for a blog.
A starfish left behind by the outgoing tides on Neptune Beach
It was March 2005, somewhere near St Kilda....
It was March 2005, somewhere near St Kilda. I was sitting in a room, on a sofa propped on milk crates, staring at the ceiling. Around my neck was a Philadelphia collar and in my hand was a bottle of gin. The collar was the only sign that I had recently broken my C1, 2 & T1 the gin was to stop me thinking about it. I was staring at the ceiling because it was reasonably tricky to stare anywhere else. I sat quietly contemplating my future. Next to me was a chap called Christopher Lansell, Crispy to his comrades, whom I’d known about 8 minutes. He started talking about some things, wild, imaginative things, I started to reply, and back he came with more, this went on quite successfully for a while. One of these crazy things was an idea he’d been playing with to install a 1:1 billion scale model of the Solar System somewhere in Melbourne. It seemed quite a good idea to me. Almost without any warning at all it was 9am on December 10 of that year, my return ticket to the UK forgotten in the back of a drawer somewhere, and 6 months out of date, my neck visible to all who cared to glance. I’m crouched at the door to our St Kilda studio, attempting to drill a hole into Pluto, except this Pluto is only 2mm in diametre, which makes it very tricky. And in half an hour it’s meant to be on a plinth somewhere near Port Melbourne. / / / / Building the Sun Having drummed up some media interest through an interview on ABC radio and an article in The Age and spent a few months constructing the Sun and nine planets by hand we were actually within minutes of taking our disjointed conversation live. / / / / / Painting the Planets / Planet bases Pluto / Mars / Neptune / Saturn / Jupiter / Having finally secured Pluto to it’s stand, we threw all the models in the back of a trailer and hightailed it to the beach, as we roared along the approach to the marina there was a sudden, and slightly sickening crunch. Crispy braked, we looked at each other in silent fear, then out through the back window of the Toyota. Rolling down the road in the vague direction of Acland Street was a 1.39m golden ball of plywood and satin. Hmmm. We exited the car at speed and, to the amusement of the residents, sprinted off after the star. It was not entirely unscathed, but it was still presentable, and anyway, we were out of time. The weekend was long and disgustingly hot, but the model was a success, large numbers of families turned up on their bikes, with their children, The Age article folded in their pockets, planning to ride the full 6km route to Pluto. And being mid summer the beach and passing traffic was plentiful. Seeing kids stand under the 1.28cm hand painted sphere that was Earth (I even managed to dust the Himalayas with some snow) and point out Australia before running 150m to the Sun and smacking it with their ice cream stained hands was quite rewarding. / Earth, a man with a beard & the Moon, which is as far as Man has ever actually travelled, allegedly. (But not the man with the beard, he may have been no further than Geelong, I don’t know) Mars / The Sun / / / By Sunday night we were knackered but content. Then things started getting interesting. Tony Wheeler, co-founder of Lonely Planet rang us up, said he’d heard about the project but had been out of the country and wondered if he could come and see the models, we, unsurprisingly said yes. Then the council rang us up and said they’d had a lot of calls from the general public asking when they were going to do the project again. They said they hadn’t done it in the first place. It was about this point that words like ‘permanent’ began to appear in conversations. We found a sculptor, Cameron Robbins, an eccentric and extremely talented man based in Collingwood, and commenced talks with the council. It was estimated at costing around $70,000, and so the tedious process of money raising became the focus, Tony pledged a large sum of his personal finances, as did some universities. Things looked good. Then the university pulled out, and we experienced our first wedge of bureaucratic council red tape. Things look bad. And that high and low was a microcosm of how it progressed for the next two years. With a hefty focus on the ‘This is just never going to happen’ line of thought. But now, three years and six months after a conversation on a sofa in St Kilda, there are some people down at the foreshore tidying up the metre high bluestone plinths the planets rest on, and no doubt someone polishing the 360kg of bronze that makes up the Sun, in preparation for the opening on September 21. And I’m going to miss it, because I’m in London, so if you have nothing better to do please pop down to the reserve north of the Marina at 4.45, take some photos, get yourself an epic sense of how fragile and unique Earth really is and give Crispy some support for the endless phone calls and meetings and rolls and rolls of tape he’s deftly sliced through. Pouring the bronze Planets / Saturn, Jupiter, Neptune, Uranus cooling off / Half of the Sun / All of the Sun / Polishing the Sun / The sculptor Cameron Robbins next to polished Sun / Saturn / Venus, Mars, Earth, Mercury & Pluto (yeah it’s not a planet anymore, but it was then) / Pouring concrete base for the Sun / Diamond saw cutting bluestone plinths for the planets / Plinths being lifted into place / / The Sun being moved into place / / / / Model Location / And if you ever see anyone chasing an enormous shining sphere down a road, go and give them a hand.
With Earth as the leader, the planets of the Solar System have turned against poor Pluto excluding him from their group of planets. He is now demoted to a dwarf planet. This contemporary themed image is build upon events in which Pluto was degraded and reclassified to a dwarf planet. It is now no longer part of the classic line of planets in our Solar System as I’ve been used to. It’s strange when you’ve been able to memorize the planets ever since you were a kid and for the future will have to leave this little icy rock out. I liked doing a smaller and less extensive project for a change. I had this simple idea, and worked on/off for about a week before completing this. I had great fun stuffing as many little funny details into the image as I could, and I hope you enjoy this as much as I enjoyed making it! Visit MathiasPedersen.com to see more of my artwork.
With Earth as the leader, the planets of the Solar System have turned against poor Pluto excluding him from their group of planets. He is now demoted to a dwarf planet. This contemporary themed image is build upon events in which Pluto was degraded and reclassified to a dwarf planet. It is now no longer part of the classic line of planets in our Solar System as I’ve been used to. It’s strange when you’ve been able to memorize the planets ever since you were a kid and for the future will have to leave this little icy rock out. I liked doing a smaller and less extensive project for a change. I had this simple idea, and worked on/off for about a week before completing this. I had great fun stuffing as many little funny details into the image as I could, and I hope you enjoy this as much as I enjoyed making it! Visit MathiasPedersen.com to see more of my artwork.
www.lalamartinresources.webs.com
One of the many fountains on the Strip in Vegas… /
Featured in the SEA group 24th June 09 / Featured in CORE group 25th June 09 Canon EOS 50D / Canon 28-135mm lens Background: Thornton Beach Cape Tribulation, far North Queensland f/11, 1/400 sec, f/l 28mm, ISO 200 Hand: f/4.5, 1/100 sec, f/l 33mm, ISO 100 CS3 Any critique of how I could better things very much appreciated! Thank you for looking.
Oil On Canvas – 100cm x 100cm
Fountain reflection in Kadriorg park. Tallinn
/ From a pencil drawing, coloured digitally. / > Inspired by Ocean Angel /
\ / / From a pencil drawing, coloured digitally. / > Inspired by Ocean Angel /
/ \ / / / From a pencil drawing, coloured digitally. / > Inspired by Ocean Angel /
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