Skeleton 

692 creative works found

  • The Blues...
    by douglasbot

    US$25.91

  • Desert Forms 7
    by Elena Ray

    US$3.71–US$98.80

    Skeleton of desert plant. Studio still life. Photo based mixed medium image. Extreme image softness, textures, and grain.

  • Smile!
    by KCphoto

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    I got this shot right before Halloween & edited it in Adobe PS. It has become one of my favorite “fun” captures. I know it is Christmas, but this is just for fun! Thanks for looking!! :)Kristi

  • Code Blue
    by Michael J Armijo

    US$5.70–US$152.00

    .................................................................................................This is another version of my previous uploaded pic entitled CODE BLUE. I am posting this one as someone liked this one better and wanted to purchase it. So…you may BUY it now. :) / Hugs, / Michael

  • Skull
    by olechka

    US$24.94

    originally drawn in pen on paper

  • Yes. So this one doesn’t mean anything at all. The title is a Heidegger quote just to make you look for something that isn’t there. If you find it please let me know though. / Recently shot a short film with a friend and it involved getting some people on Thumper bikes in masks riding around. It’s best if I don’t get into it, but this is a still I took of his cousin Craig mid-wheelie. / It has no deep revolutionary aims, but I think it looks very nice. And I might buy one for myself. However I still agree with the title.

  • She Oak Skeletons
    by underdoc

    US$3.79–US$101.08

  • Remains
    by Claire Armistead

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    The remains of a hydrangea petal (H.macrophylla), beautiful in life but stunning in death.

  • Lost Rider
    by Lisa Weber

    US$4.19–US$111.72

    This item will also be made available for T-Shirt soon. / . / . / . / Lisa C. Weber ©2007 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!

  • ESQUELETO
    by mais2

    US$29.93

    MAIS2©

  • Skull T
    by NiFe

    US$23.94

    T design

  • Winged Skull
    by Fred L

    US$24.94

    The ubiquitous winged skull.

  • ME
    by Hoffard

    US$3.85–US$102.60

    Pencil to pen and ink drawing of many moments in my life.

  • This is just a quick reinterpretation of a friend’s scribble. Lord Foppington-Brown the Third of the Boston Foppinton-Browns is Skeletor in another reality and a totally different hat. This isn’t intended to make sense, it’s here for him. :^)

  • Ghost ship
    by Annika Strömgren

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    “Aren´t we there yet? I´m bored to death!”

  • Portrait of Georgia O’Keeffe. Oil on Canvas / American Artist. Georgia O’Keeffe was raised in Wisconsin, educated in Chicago and Virginia, taught, painted, and lived on the east coast until her early sixties when she moved to Abiquiu, & Santa Fe, New Mexico. Close to one hundred when she died in 1986, living alone and painting in scenery that inspired her famous flowers in closeup with strong sexuality, voluptuous lilies and poppies, stark desert landscapes and animal skeletons. She worked in charcoal, water color, and finally oils, and worked large. I’m not sure her story is known well outside the states. She was photographed, courted, and married (1924) by famed 1920’s photographer Alfred Stieglitz who adored her, left his wife and family for her, and made her more famous than he was. She too, was madly in love with him. His black and white photographs of O’Keeffe filled Stieglitz’s famed “291” gallery in New York and caused a sensation with portraits focused on her beautiful bone structure and striking looks, and spectacular nudity. He took over 300 portraits of her from 1918 to 1937. Stieglitz may have been in love, but smart enough of a businessman to cause O’Keeffe’s work to skyrocket in price, averaging $100,000 a painting, monumental for a living artist and a woman in that time. What he did for her career lasted, interest waned some but revived and her work is priceless now. Every girl painter can use a Stieglitz, few get one. Stieglitz died in 1946 and she moved permanently to New Mexico three years later after cataloguing his work and papers. She was 59, began a new life in a landscape she claimed as her own. “God said I may have that mountain,” she’d written, “if I paint it enough.” So she did. / I painted this from one of Alfred Stieglitz’s famous photographs of Georgia O’Keeffe. / When you do portraits, you start to hear conversations from that time, get a sense of the thinking of the subject, smells and impressions wander through you or assault you inescapably. It’s a fascinating and somewhat dangerous occupation because when you put down the brush and turn away you wonder where the hell you’ve been and question your sanity. I’ve come to accept it as just what happens and there it is. One cannot help but see Stieglitz’s fascination with O’Keeffe’s profound physical symmetry. It bothered me. I thought it annoyed Georgia, too, that he was making more of it than in truth was there. Certainly a thoughtfully bright, introspective & solid woman. But he did not capture the O’Keeffe who stood in the desert in thunderstorms alone in the middle of the night to draw the electricity in the air into her being, which she was notorious for doing. Or the O’Keeffe who lived alone on her Ghost Ranch, and drove in her Model A Ford recklessly to plateaus and mountains of New Mexico to soak in the wilderness. DH Lawrence, Ansel Adams, the Lindberghs were visitors. / It’s not the last portrait I’ll do of her, but I wanted to see more in her than Stieglitz’s precision, no matter how beautiful that is to see. / I think he was incredibly kind and thoughtful about this woman’s life, and helped her reach a financial independence undreamt of for an artist of her time and sex. Stieglitz said of the first drawings of Georgia O’Keeffe that he saw: “Finally, a woman on paper!” He admired her, and he loved her. I can’t blame him for thinking her perfect. I’m just not so sure he saw the savage in Georgia. Other US photographers who did some earlier radical work in b/w, nature, and nudes you might want to visit: Ansel Adams. Brett, Edward, and Cole Weston. Edna St Vincent Millay wrote: “My candle burns at both ends; / It will not last the night; / But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends— / It gives a lovely light!” / Which, published in 1918 became an anthem to end constraints on overwatched Victorian girls. A wild, free life… edged with death. / The Hawks Perch

  • Retail Therapy
    by zomboy

    US$25.94

    Skeletons conducting a little bit of retail therapy Johnny Knoxville style

  • Lazy Bones
    by Jeff Burns

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    Taken at Geauga Lake during the Halloween season. Click to View By Category: / - Infrared Photos / - Black and White Photos / - Animal Photos / - Halloween Cards

  • Swallowed by the Tides
    by DawsonImages

    US$6.27–US$167.20

    The shipwreck of the S. S. Dicky on a Sunshine Coast Beach in Australia. A 40 ton steamer ran aground in 1893. The sea has gradually carved away at it after over 110 years of the waves washing over it. A glorious sunrise helped illuminate it as the tides began to come in.

  • Gone Fishing
    by Crockpot

    US$24.94

    Skele-series #9 (We wouldn’t dare have him catching a real, live fish!)

  • Infinite future chaos – “whats that?” i here you say, / its the way we shape our future by how we live today, / the way we live our lives has a knock on effect, / we should give this world of ours some love and respect. Freak weather, wars, global warming,hurricanes and nature dying, / destruction, rainforests dissapearing, children starving, children crying, / riots, warfare, guns, chemical waste, nuclear bombs and anarchy, / extinction of animals, genetics, clones, who is it down to, powers that be?. Just think of our children, how will they survive, what will they see?, / lets all make changes so they can be happy and free, / who knows what the future holds but its down to me and you, / im just thankful i wont be around and bet that you are too.

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