Regenerate Wall Art

178 creative works found

  • psyevent photography : Tranceplant @ Victoria, Australia / an event that promotes regeneration of plants and areas.. plant..then after, we party :) putting back to nature.. / give, as we receive..

  • It’s a few weeks after a bush fire, the burnt bark is peeling off the Paperbarks and the understory is green in stark contrast to the still blackened tree stumps. It’s my favorite time in the Aussie bush.

  • I had deliberated over uploading this photograph for sometime..I don’t expect it to ‘go well’ – But just like to add it to the series for some balance. / / Five weeks after the devastating Gippsland bushfires passed through this particular area (still burning on a large scale to the north and east) A surface trough brought some welcome rain and thunderstorms on the ranges. It was not too long after this that the sheer brilliance of the Australian ‘bush’ came to life…Here in this rainforest gully I had been unsure to it’s ability to recovery. Perhaps the fire’s intensity at this point was not as ‘hot’ as other areas.What ever the reasoning my repeat visits to this gully over the ensuing months saw the most wonderful transition. / / / / Canon EOS A2, Fuji Velvia 50. / ©T.Middleton2007 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— / / / see more of my bushfire related photography by clicking on the preview image below / /

  • Regrowth after Bushfires in Australian Snowy Mountains

  • My husband’s paternal grandmother, Tootsie, died at the age of 95. She had a sound mind and sound body and an enduring love for gardening, something she cultivated till she breathed her last. Before she died, she gave her grandchildren amaryllis bulbs and to this day, many many years after her passing on, we still have the fruits of her labors. This is one of Tootsie’s amaryllis bulbs that is about to burst into bloom, many springs after her death.

  • Spanish City is in Whitley Bay (UK) and was a place where tourist would flock too. It has the most beautiful beaches but unfortunately there has been a decline in the urban side – however, saying that there is apparently a commitment for regeneration. What makes me sad is that we allow things to fall into this kind of disrepair in the first place – beautiful places like this are blighted by closed down hotels, pubs, amusement parks and cafes. This is part of my college project.

  • Another image from my project on urbanisation of our coastlines and the impact upon the next generation.

  • Water is essential to life, especially clear running water. It can purify, regenerate and cleanse. Let the features of the landscape protect us all. Acrylics, inks and pigment.

  • Swallowtail recently shot here in Northern CA….a little different; hope you enjoy. / Best if viewed in large format; Please back away from your screen and look at the whole image; let it take you on a journey….........let me know where this took you…........ / ____ / All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. © 2008Joyce Dickens: Using my images for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action!

  • My husband, youngest son (now, almost 33) and I decided we needed to breath some fresh air for a change so we went for a drive today up to Nora Lake…this is a manmade lake (the size of a large pond) just outside of Shingletown in North Eastern CA…..(just a little above 3,000 foot elevation)....the sky was actually blue! That was a real treat and we could take deep breaths…..it was wonderful…...and to top it off we had fresh Trout for dinner! I hope you enjoy this image…I shot this one just before we left….the later in the day, the better the color and reflections….this is 100% unedited…right out of the camera…..........enjoy! / / / _____ / All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. © 2008Joyce Dickens: Using my images for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action!

  • Sometimes in my journey across the landscapes of the Bubble I find an image or two that I know instantly I want to take off-world. / This one of Geraldine Lefore’s was one such image. So this is a collaboration between Geraldine and myself. I used Geraldine’s image Never Too Old Movie title ” Journey to the Pools of Regeneration” The account of one humanoids trek across the world of “Kronulla Prime” to reach the pools before she faded away. / Based on a true story. On Kronulla Prime lives a humanoid race who after reaching the ripe old age of 99,begin to fade. / Not their life essence, but their bodies,when this begins to happen they must find and immerse themselves in the healing waters of the Sea of Geraldinia. They must do this once every 99 years,but this is part of the life force that lets them attain great age, sometimes spanning many centuries. Here we see one such being about to step into the Pool of Regeneration after her long journey. I could not resist capturing this moment,and with the backdrop of the ringed planet Lefoesholme and the moon Austra set against the beautiful Kembla Mountains, I will treasure this photo.

  • “All things appear and disappear because of the concurrence of causes and conditions. Nothing ever exists entirely alone; everything is in relation to everything else.” Buddha Another version of my all-time favourite place to take infrared. / This is on the Hunter River at a place called Hexam in Newcastle, Australia.

  • Preparing for the searing heat of an Australian outback summer. / A gentle bit of back burning.

  • FE Talis varI Leavings from Summer to Autumn, richness of colour and fineness of form, ready to be plucked from the trees by Winter’s harsh song. Whilst underneath and in the ground, warm and cocooned, slowly growing and swelling, the new Spring forms taking shape. Regeneration, renewal. Mother Nature never fails to astonish and please..

  • Pastel on Colourfix paper – 70cm x 50cm I finished this painting late last year, and thought it was an appropriate RedBubble ‘upload’ given the events of the past week in Australia. It is symbolic of the Aussie spirit and the knowledge that the bush, and the people who dwell in the beauty of the Australian bush, will regenerate! I have entered this painting in a few art shows since I finished it last November, and it has won me four awards! The next art show I have entered it in is at Kilmore, which is a bit spooky, because that is where the intial fire that demolished Kinglake, Flowerdale and the Marysville area commenced. Many Australian eucalypts are dependent on fire to regenerate. This painting depicts the leaves and their ‘gumnut’ seeds from the ‘Ironbark’ species of eucalypt which are prolific on the 40 acre property where I live. The People’s Choice – Ruffy Art Show – Nov. 2008 / The Viewer’s Choice – Art by the Lake at Nagambie – Dec 2008 / The People’s Choice – Strathbogie Art Show – Jan 2009 / Highly Commended – Kilmore Art Expo – March 2009 / Placed in the Top 10 of the Painters in Modern Times ‘Green’ Challenge – May 2009 / Featured in the Painter’s in Modern Times group – May 2009 / Featured in The Best of – August 2009 SOLD from the Old Courthouse Gallery, Seymour – July 2009 It is now August, so quite awhile since I uploaded this image. I received a call yesterday from the person who bought it. They explained that when they saw it in a local gallery they just HAD to have it because it reminded them of how the bush was before the fires, and gave them hope that it will ‘regenerate’ again. On further conversation I discovered that the buyer was from Kinglake, and she had sat in her dam on February 7th and watched her home and everything she owned go up in smoke!!!! She is rebuilding, and has a special spot in her new home for this painting.

  • Ultra Fractal 5 /

  • The entrance to the Mothers Womb. All life begins and ends here. Acrylic on Wood.

  • Kinglake 3 months after the 2009 Victorian bushfires. As you drive through the scorched bush you are graced with this contrast of black and bright green. / In some places it is black with dark to light maroon. It is beautiful. Australia May 2009.

  • The greens fighting back against the black burnt trunks and it’s taking over! Ironic that something that caused so much devastation comes back so beautiful. Kinglake, 3 months after the Victorian bushfires. May 2009 Australia.

  • This is the River Ouseburn as it nears the River Tyne, in the City of Newcastle. Part of the Ouseburn Trust regeneration area as a thriving cultural centre, this was once the heart of Newcastle’s industrial past and the remains of old lead works can be still seen, which leads to the title of the picture. For this is where some of the lead dug from this landscape would ended up to me made into ingots or the final end, be it lead sheeting for the roofs of the growing roof scape of civic and religious buildings, the windows and in the ships that would sail from here into the North sea. Converted into a pinhole black and white Best viewed large Featured by the kind hosts of Black and White Photographers United Group

  • Watercolour pencils, acrylic and art pens on Canson paper Beautiful soul / Breathe / The power of creation / Bringing a vision / of abundant regeneration / Greening our earth / Blessing our neighbours / Our hearts, as one. This one is very special to me.I hope you find something in it too. / A GIFT TO ALL I have placed it into our local Marion Exhibition from Nov-Jan NOTE: Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image in whole or in part, in any form or by any means, without permission from the artist, Danita Clark, is strictly prohibited. Removal of embedded watermarks on any image is strictly prohibited. To request permission to use any material on this page, to link to any image, and for further inquiries, please contact Danita Clark.

  • View other work from this series Untouched photograph. Northern New South Wales, Australia. / Best viewed LARGE

  • Ouseburn in Newcastle, an area of regeneration, hence the name of the image. From an area of heavy industry, hence these wonderful old buildings, to an area of culture and offices. Including an urban farm and heritage center.. The small river is now behind a lock, hence the high water level. Converted into black and white and best viewed large Featured by the kind hosts of The Olympus and Four Thirds Group

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