Church in the Taos Pueblo, Taos, NM.
Adobe homes in the Taos Pueblo, home of Native American Indians for centuries. Taos NM USA.
When the blue bonnets and indian paintbrushes are in bloom, the Texas hillsides become a sight to see. The perfum fragrance from the bluebonnets is overwhelmingly sweet. Just riding with the windows open is intoxicating. Farmers plant all their fields in bluebonnets, for a spectacular show once a year for a few weeks in spring. On one of my annual spring rides, I stopped by the roadside and took this picture of bluebonnets, indian paintbrushes, and the hord of bee’s that couldn’t resist the scent too.. Ennis Texas (when the bluebonnets bloom) For a complementary image, try Blue Bonnet Explosion
... an original oil and acrylic painting Thank your for viewing my art. VIEW mygallery / VIEW susan’szazzle /
Inside the Bank of America stairwell in downtown Glendale, AZ FEATURED in the group Stained Glass Art
I liked the texture and colors in the door. Orton effect added.
This is a partial shot of the entrance to the Rattlesnake Museum in Albuquerque’s “Old Town” central plaza, off old Route 66 (AKA Central Avenue). The plaza was established in 1706, when New Mexico was still a part of “old” Mexico and New Spain. Pentax K20D, 1/100 @ F7.1, ISO 200.
The colors of autumn, captured in scenic Zion Canyon, Zion National Park, Utah. All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.
Summer cottonwood trees along the Virgin River, captured in Zion Canyon at Zion National Park, Utah. All content & images © Stephen Vecchiotti. You may not use any images in any way without written consent from artist. All Rights Reserved.
Oil Pastel & Ink
Ink
Ink
Uniball Micro – Recycled Sketch – 9×12
Image of the Barrier Canyon Style Pictographs at the Courthouse Wash site near Moab Utah. (5500 B.C.. to 100 A.D.)
Original digital painting, not an altered or manipulated photograph. Hand painted using Microsoft Paint and a mouse. Pink prickly pear cactus, Medina, Texas.
Digitally altered photos combined in Photoshop to create a new image.
Pots in the Sun
This Southwestern style painting is a back street in Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. This rendering offered on a 9 X 12 oil painting on stretched canvas created in my Grants Pass, Oregon Studio
Cow skull Photoshop manipulated to look like turquoise stone settings on skull. / This art work is registered copyright© 2007-2009 and any copyright infringement will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law in the USA and International.
An 11 X 14 stretched canvas oil painting by Barbara Anne Applegate was created in my Grants Pass,Oregon Studio. / It depicts Two pieces of the Pottery of the old ones, some call Anasazi is originally a Navajo word that archaeologists have applied to people who farmed the Four Corners area of New Mexico, Arizona, Utah & Colorado before 1300 AD. At the top There is an image of the homes of the old ones. They are gone but not Forgotten. They were the predecessor of the modern Pueblo Indian of the South Western USA. Featured in / The First People of America
SNAKE Snake depicts shrewdness, transformation, invisibility, ability to see the true person, power, life force, and capability to use Earth energies. Snake is guardian of sacred places. Used in many healing and fertility rituals, Snake is connected with lightening, thunderstorms, the male organ, speed, violent and sudden change, and being able to move undetected. However, among the Apache, Snake is a creature to be avoided as are Owl and Bear. Snake is believed to be associated with crisis. Additionally, it was considered to have the power to make people sick or cause their skin to peel if handled, and have supernatural influence that was very bad and powerful. For example: Many times, flashy Texans sporting fancy snakeskin boots arrive at the casinos run by the Mescalero Apache tribe in southern New Mexico. These people are refused admittance to the reservation if wearing anything made from Snake. The same rule applies for anything pertaining to Owl and Bear.
Hopi Nativity Scene was purchased in the gift shop of the El Rancho Hotel in Gallup, NM just after Christmas 2008.
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