Root 

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  • Search / Add This Image to Your Cart / This was the first picture I ever shot with my Sigma sd-9, I went out to get the / mail and got to come back with this.

  • An epic looking tree over water. There is no photoshop done to this photo. / www.willpursell.com

  • acrylic on canvas board / texture and border added in Photoshop CS

  • Where I live on Vancouver Island Garry oaks are a part of a very endangered ecosystem that only grows in this part of the world. The Garry oak ecosystem has over 100 species at risk within it. Many of the species in the ecosystem where very important for my tribe in the past with my ancestors using many of the plants and animals for both medicine and food. Only around 5% of these ecosystems still exist with most of them gone from urban development and overgrown with non-native species. Part of my research as an environmental scientist for my tribe T’Sou-ke involves me in a major mapping project finding the locations of the remaining trees and ecosystems and hopefully restoring these damaged lands in the future.

  • Lord Howe Island at dusk. Watercolour / Lots of ultramarine with underpainting of permanent rose, rose madder genuine and raw sienna. / Arches 300gsm – painted to the edges (no taping)

  • This is the second version of “This Little Tree”. /

  • How many of us know anything about our ancestors?

  • Dead tree on the shore of Lower Rivington Reservoir at sunset.

  • Tree Roots. © DApixara.

  • Beautiful root against the wall. Canon EOS 450D Ef-S 18-55mm / Tv 1/25sec / Av f/5.0 / ISO 200 / Converted form RAW / Lightroom 2 + Photoshop CS4 Top10 in One of a Kind Challenge by Mood & Ambience Group / Top10 in Curves abd rounds of nature challenge by Freedom to Shine Group / Finalist in “Unique” Challenge by Shameless Self-Promotion group

  • Male hands holding a small tree. Hands are dirty.

  • Another inspirational figure ink on paper

  • ‘Dub’ has become a term for almost any musical piece that utilizes the remixing of prerecorded sound as a mode of artistic expression. Taking the separate entities of a musical track and remixing them into a completely new selection has become a popular process, and can be found in a variety of genres ranging anywhere from hip-hop remixes and mash-ups to metal. Many listeners do not sense the Jamaican roots, and are unaware that this technique started with Jamaican rocksteady and reggae. “Dubbing” became popular in the late 1960s and early 1970s by the great sound system engineers of Jamaica. The mixing engineers acknowledged their importance in recordings by treating the mixing board as an instrument, and the resulting dub craze that occurred in Jamaica in the mid 1970s further established the mixing engineer as an artist. / For the first time in recorded music, the ‘sound’ of a recording became connected not only with the musicians and the producer, but with the mixing engineer as well. / The amplitude of success that these “versions” and “dubs” received allowed for a completely new style of musical composition that would be shared amongst a wide selection of musical genres that made today’s music. Show your love to the dub process with this dedicated Tee !

  • pen on coloured matte board / hand drawn version of this / /

  • Venerable tree

  • Mom! I have to tell you… I made the strangest dream last night! I was walking the dog in a forest with giant trees surrounded by fireflies. Only our dog was not a dog but a giant frog, and the fireflies were in fact glowing fairies with sexy legs. I wonder what that means ... A young man’s strange dream…   I started whith this picture made last fall. I really loved the point of view, but unfortunately it was a bit dark in the forest, I was shooting hand held and it came out blurry. Made three passes with different Redfield fractalius filters         This is a photo of my son made last summer. He was 16 at the time. Cloned out the design on the t-shirt, flipped horizontally, and played with the colours, curves and levels, plus a little dodging and burning.         I used this photo of a frog that I made last fall to create a strange pet.         Beloved pets are usually kept on a leash for their own safety. I used a length of silver chain slipped on a tube of white paper to make the leash.       The fairies are composed of butterfly wings and human legs, with a glowing ball of light. The photos used are as shown below   The fairies’ wings belong to a photo I made of a monarch which I transformed into the wing below.         Using the photo above, I isolated the wings, duplicated, rotated, scaled, distorted, inverted, applied fractalius filter, modified hue, saturation, levels and curves, and applied a slight inner glow. The hue is different for each fairy.         I made several shots of my legs, which was an awkward and rather undignified process, yelding acceptable results. This is one of the three shots I used. The others are similar with the legs in a slightly different position.         Again, I used one of my favourite texture layer, a puff of clouds made in Photosop with Render Clouds and gradient filter. I used it twice in different orientations for a light halo around the fairies, which also created a slight vignetting effect.         Here is one of the textures that I photographed recently, to which I added a vignette. I used it at a very low opacity with a solid golden color adjustment. Available for free download under a Creative Commons Licence.

  • The Island Of Goreé / situated in Senegal, (African Westcoast) is known as one of the most important “Slavetrade Places” in history. / UNESCO made it a “Heritage of Mankind”. / It became famous when appearing in the movie “Roots”, the story about Kunta Kinte. / Since that time lots of Afro-Americans visit this Island to see the place where their ancestors may have left the African Continent and find their own roots. / I have once visited this place and while I was standing in the room I have digitally painted here, I was able to feel all those lost souls and traumata…......and the tears started running down my face. I could do nothing against being overwhelmed by all the dispair hangin in those old walls! The background of this digital painting shows one of the rooms of the “Maison d’esclaves”, the Slavehouse, where the prisoned Africans had to wait for the ship to come and take them away. / The portraited Mahgrebian Man may have been one of the Slavetraders who caught the black Africans to sell them as slaves….......the door of the house (not the door shown here) was called “Point of no return”, cause it lead directly to the ship and non of the slaves would be able to ever return home. / This door is in his focus…...I placed it dreamy at his eye to show what his focus is on. / This short description explaines my intesion and the title. I dedicate this image to all the slaves deported from their homes and beloved in the old times. May their souls find peace! / _____ / http://webworld.unesco.org/goree/en/index.shtml

  • 2009. India Ink on wood.

  • please visit my online fineart gallery for other products of all kinds, thank you, g. anthony gallo / Arteologist23

  • My Barklay ancestor is not from the Celtic nation of Scotland nor even Ireland but from the amazing land of Cornwall, one of the 7 Celtic Nations of the World. Cornish people are different from the English and they embrace their Celtic heritage, with mythical legends such as King Arthur and his knights galloping into Camelot or Tintagel castle as today it is known…there is no Faeries in Cornwall, the Pixies drove them all out long ago…the magical Celtic land of Cornwall, the land of my great, great grandfather… John Danell Barklay was born in 1842 in Truro, the only city in Cornwall, travelling around he left Great Britain and arrived in America where he joined the Federal Army for a while, moving on to Australia, first settling in South Australia he became manager and inspector of silver and lead mines. He eventually settled in Durham County, Newcastle, NSW, Australia and became a mining shareholder leasing Eaton’s Hotel where he was very well respected as being an excellent host for his guests. / John married Elizabeth Meyn in 1872 and they had 5 children, 1 being my great grandfather Harold Barklay… / My Cornish ancestor died in 1889 leaving us a legacy of Celtic and Cornish roots in the Barklay family and I for one embrace my ancestry and here is a work dedicated to My Celtic Roots… FEATURED in A.D.A.W.G / FEATURED in A Fractal Energy Passion / FEATURED in First Things This is a work made up of 3 layered images, a Celtic Cross from the cemetery, a Celtic Knot fractal creation made in Incendia and then a map of Cornwall superimposed as well with the colours I was seeking, the bright green Celtic colour with the purple of Merlins magical legends and then you can see the stone Celtic Cross has given me a stone castle wall look incorporated in too, many factors to see in here…

  • Dearest Arcadia Tempest amazing poet, storyteller and photographer gave this image a heartbeat with her written work: Old Vein New Blood These eyes search for beginnings / Endings of chapters to close / Old veins know devoted restitution / Born from new seed seeking / And / Old Lineages of ‘Her and Him’ I am the old vein – Unrepentant / I am the new blood – Uncorrupted / I am in ALL / Beginning / Middle / End Weariness does not weary me / for the blood in the vein / surges with the nutrition of love / a life that is / Dreamt for / Called for / Existing in the veins of NOW © K S Hardy 2009 He fed me with his old veins / . / Part of a piece called.. / TAKING NOTES / . / I started the piece out with the first line cause of this shot. The rest followed with a certain speed.. / This image was shot at night the same time I shot / Lucky In Red

  • Started by hand with watercolor put into photoshop / to finish / MUSIC

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