Oxford 

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458 creative works found

  • Image of a man walking on a bridge against a golden sky backdrop.

  • one of a series of pictures of golden skies.

  • Glorious sun rays bursting across a field in Oxford.

  • bare tree amidst the rape seed field taken during spring time.

  • With the early morning sun and mist, the horses being frisky in the foreground and the spires of Oxford in the background made an interesting contrast

  • Taken at Oxford University parks, I have removed the green to enhance the the blossoms of the tree This picture is the sole copyright of Neville Cowan any use other than for purchase can be considered as theft. this notice is due to a Website or websites copying images from Redbubble.com for their own use and resale.

  • Bikes on Broad Street, Oxford, 6/4/08. This version is roughly what the first one was meant to look like but had colour profile issues… don’t know whether the last two hours have been worth the effort or not!

  • Garden in Dorchester – on -Thames Oxon England

  • People walking past the ‘Next’ store on Oxford Street. Just busily walking, one place to the next, or maybe in this case past even that. _This also constitutes one of a series of shots – six of them taken in London, all vaguely green-tinted to make them somewhat similar even though there is an underlying, unifying theme (or themes). This is a subset of ‘crowds’, its accompanying piece being that of a bunch of people obliviously walking past a message printed on a door. And as a personal ‘guarantee’ of quality: I’ve had all six shots enlarged and framed on my wall. Small-size, white border, black frame, because I don’t have the room for anything too large. I am pleased with them. For what that’s worth!._

  • The story of Viktor von Valkyrie – such a tragic tale! Born in the farthest reaches of the Slav Republic, no one in Viktor’s village could read or write. Yet somehow Viktor managed to take Ph.D.’s in astrophysics, anatomical biology and theoretical mathematics at Oxford – all before he reached age 27. He achieved a full professorship by the time he was 30 – the same year his hearing began to seriously decline. Convinced of an undergraduate conspiracy to drive him mad with their persistent mumbling, he devised a revolutionary ear trumpet and managed to have it surgically implanted. Although it made sleeping unspeakably awkward, it also enabled the good professor to hear small children eating cornflakes several miles away. In retrospect, this was most likely the first hint that something was seriously amiss, but von Valkyrie’s brilliant inventions, like the autonautical dirigible – the first vehicle to successfully negotiate land, air and water travel – distracted colleagues and friends from that knowledge. However, as Viktor continued to have himself altered in alarming ways, even his most ardent supporters had to admit that he was most certainly deranged. On the eve of the unveiling of his stunningly elegant airship, the Vampyricon, Viktor appeared with set of fully functional mechanized bat wings sprouting from his shoulder blades. With such a disturbing appearance, no one could glean much from his increasingly convoluted lectures. When a species Titanus giganticus land beetle emerged from his cerebral cortex, the college elders knew something had to be done. A plot was hatched to lure the professor to an exclusive asylum hidden away in the Swiss Alps, but of course Viktor overheard every detail of the plan. Packing up his fantastic inventions, he vanished as suddenly as he had appeared, although sightings of the flying scholar have been reported from Prague to the very tip of the Siberian Peninsula. If you see the shadow of his wings overhead, whisper a hello. He will hear you.

  • Oxford, UK, 2000.

  • oxford, england, 1999.

  • oxford, england, 1999.

  • oxford, england, 1999.

  • What do you make of this? This ordinary home (built as a semi-detached house in about 1860) suddenly became the centre of world attention, and the headless shark still excites interest today. The headless sculpture, named “Untitled 1986”, was erected on the 41st anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki. Created by the sculptor John Buckley, it is made of fibreglass, weighs four hundredweight, and is 25 feet long. Homeowner Bill Heine who commissioned the work commented: The shark was to express someone feeling totally impotent and ripping a hole in their roof out of a sense of impotence and anger and desperation…. It is saying something about CND, nuclear power, Chernobyl and Nagasaki. THE HEADINGTON SHARK /

  • Hmmm, they are not what they used to be anymore LOL / Oxford Street, London / Copyright Featured in / Neighbourhoods / Digital Photography / Speaking Photos 2nd Place in London Top Ten in Taxis / Top Ten in The Color Red

  • best viewed LARGE canon 50D, hdr of 8 images, tripod, plastic bag, rain, photomatix, cs3

  • old barn with power lines crossing horizon. Canon 50D, 15secs, f10, 13mm, 100iso

  • Foggy morning at Oxford Island, Co. Armagh, Northern Ireland. Hand-held with three year old in harness on back!! Nikon D200 & 18-200 VR

  • Canon 50d / kit lens 18-55 / f5.6 / iso 400 / 1/8000th sec

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