Ruin sky Wall Art

465 creative works found

  • Kellerberrin, WA Watch the Video here In my place, in my place / Were lines that I couldn’t change / I was lost, oh yeah I was lost, I was lost / Crossed lines I shouldn’t have crossed / I was lost, oh yeah Yeah, how long must you wait for it? / Yeah, how long must you pay for it? / Yeah, how long must you wait for it? I was scared, I was scared / Tired and underprepared / But I wait for you If you go, if you go / Leaving me here on my own / Well I wait for you Yeah, how long must you wait for it? / Yeah, how long must you pay for it? / Yeah, how long must you wait for it? Sing it please, please, please / Come back and sing to me / To me, me Come on and sing it out, out, out / Come on and sing it now, now, now / Come on and sing it In my place, in my place / Were lines that I couldn’t change / I was lost, oh yeah / Oh yeah Coldplay

  • What’s left of a castle from the looks of it, again in Chester.

  • Taken with a Minolta 5xi on Fuji film

  • Re-submission of an older work. This “Bow” was caused by the mist…not rain. / There wasn’t a cloud in the sky.

  • This is an 18 X 24 acrylic on canvas painting. It was my first structure and being a ruins with broken out windows, etc., I just didn’t know if it was done or not!! LOL Thank you for looking!! :) God Bless! / / / /

  • Khao Lak, badly hit by a Tsunami. The Earth gives, the Earth reclaims…..

  • The old Hotel lounge area, the fire surround has been removed, but undamaged, it is lying on the floor, you can just see the bottom corner in the picture, i did try to put it back up for the shot but it was too damn heavy for me on my own!

  • Chichen Itza

  • A mix of painting and photographs

  • ... on French riviera.

  • While hiking near Girdwood, AK I found this collection of mining ruins along the Crow Creek Pass Trail that rises 3,500+ feet in under 4 miles.

  • Location: Baalbeck, Lebanon Another touristic site from Lebanon, located at the Bekaa Valley, one of the wonderful Roman Temples in the Region.

  • Young women in a dreamsacape with tiled ground, sitting in a ruin, while there is a meassage in a bottle waiting for her. Original is painted in oil on canvas. The canvas shows its natural structure also in the print. Print on canvas is recommended.

  • Above Port Logan Scotland / / /

  • Pecos National Historic Park, Pecos, New Mexico.

  • Photo Taken From Inside The Ruins Of Sutton Scarsdale Hall. / Derbyshire.UK.

  • Featured in Visions of Italy Group October – 17 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / Featured in A View Somewhere Group October – 11 – 2009 / -—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- Featured in Castle Magic Group July – 06 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- Taken from the Album “Ruins and Restoration along Tyrrhenian Sea” Nikon D100 Sigma 15/30 Fiumefreddo Bruzio Fiumefreddo takes its name after Flumen frigidum, which means river with potable water, called also as frigidum (cold) due to its fresh waters that stream from the rocks a few kilometers away from the sea. The name Bruzio denotes a territory and it was added in 1860 in order to distinguish this village from other ones with the same name. IX-X cen., The Saracens destroyed what was once probably a Roman colony (archaeological traces on Cutura hill) and had borders from its southern side with Byzantine lands. The village was built about year 1000. 1054, The Normans occupied the region and their leader Roberto il Guiscardo constructed a tower for defense in Fiumefreddo in virtue of its overhanging rocks. 1201, Simone de Mamistra, the governor of Calabria and baron in the Swabian period, transformed the Norman tower into a fortified castle and donated the Basilan monastery of Valle Cent’Acque to Gioacchino da Fiore, the monk and exegesist, founder of the florense order. XIII-XV cen., The feudal property of Fiumefreddo passed from baron to baron, first under the Angioini and after the Aragonesi dominance. 1528, The emperor Charles V gave the property to Captain Pietro Gonzales de Mendoza, for victories accomplished in Calabria against French army. By marrying the only daughter of Fernando de Alarcon, one of the most famous Spanish generals during the wars in Italy, captain Mendoza was connected to a powerful noble house. The reconstruction of the castle and the consolidation of surrounding walls were his merit. 1638, a huge earthquake hit the village 1807, Bourbon garrison house established in the castle was forced to surrender to the Napoleon army. A year after, the last of the Alarcon y de Mendoza heirs, Beatrice, sold material values of Fiumefreddo, castle ruined by French artillery included. Castle’s ruins, built on the upper parts of the village on the overhanging rocks of the narrow valley. Napoleon’s army in 1807 destroyed the castle because of the presence of Bourbon rebels. One of the halls is decorated by fresco of Salvatore Fiume, but very often weather-beaten.

  • Ruins of Lady Jane Grey’s house in Bradgate Park, Leicestershire UK. This place is both eerie and beautiful…and this view was mesmerizing.

  • The stark and magnificent ruins of Whitby Abbey are much more than a spectacular clifftop landmark. For hundreds of years the Abbey remained a prominent landmark for sailors, Although the stunning shoreline below the Abbey has claimed hundreds of lives over the centuries. The Abbey is sited on Whitby’s East Cliff in North Yorkshire on the north-east coast of England. It was founded in 657 AD by the Anglo-Saxon King of Northumbria, Oswy. In 867, the abbey fell to Viking attack, and was abandoned. The second monastery lasted until it was destroyed by Henry VIII in 1540 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The abbey buildings fell into ruins, and were mined for stone, but remained a prominent landmark for sailors and helped inspire Bram Stoker’s Dracula. The ruins are now owned and maintained by English Heritage.

  • From the battlements of Chilchurn Castle at the head of Loch Awe. OLYMPUS E500 / ZUIKO 4/3 14-45mm

  • There are moments when you feel like just standing and staring. One such moment captured from Hampi. The vastness of the sky and the minuscule us in this Universe. What is permanent, neither you nor I! Even the rocks are crumbling to dust. My mind was swirling with various thoughts. The stone pillars at Hampi stand mute witness to the flow of time, the ups and downs of the great Vijayanagara Empire. Hampi was the 14th century capital of Vijaynagar Empire which was ravaged, pillaged and plundered in 1565AD by the Mughal rulers. Hampi is in north Karnataka, 363kms from Bangalore. This is a listed monument. In 1986, UNESCO inscribed the group of monuments at Hampi as a World Heritage site.

  • Shot in the village of Tuscania near Viterbo, Italy. —-—-- / Nikon d70 with with Nikkor AF-S DX 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G IF-ED

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 332,500 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…

Ruin Sky T-Shirts

Ruin Sky Journal Entries

Ruin Sky Writing

Ruin Sky Calendars