Sun traveller Wall Art

968 creative works found

  • Sunset at Hervey Bay, Queensland, Australia.

  • Sunset over Tianjin China

  • Sunrise over Port Phillip Bay in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

  • / these kids ran around playing football on this dirt, rocks and sometimes rubble all afternoon many of them without shoes on, it was great to see and a testament to the ability of children to find the fun in anything…... and no matter what the circumstances, to make the best of a bad situation….. marrakech, morocco

  • A tourist using binoculars to look out over Manhattan, NYC

  • Dusk at one of the many bays in Nouméa, New Caledonia. Glimpses of a rainbow over a dirt dirt road in Dumbea, just outside Noumea, New Caledonia. Other works from New Caledonia Dumbea / Sunset on the Isle / Rainbow road /

  • sunset and palm tree

  • a beautiful night at the beach ( slow shutter speed)

  • Boreas Pass, Colorado…..one of my favorite places on the face of the Earth to shoot at….the fact that there is hardly anyone ever up here and the fields of Wildflowers go on forever really make this quite an extraordinary place. Located on the Continental Divide, it reaches an altitude of 11,481 feet high. The pass was formerly known as Breckenridge Pass in the 1860s, when it served as an early route for thousands of prospectors during the Colorado Gold Rush who crossed from South Park to look for gold in the valley of the Blue around Breckenridge. In 1866, it was widened to a wagon road that accommodated stagecoaches. In 1882, under the direction of Sidney Dillon of the Union Pacific Railroad , the Denver, South Park and Pacific Railroad (by then controlled by the Union Pacific) begun laying narrow gauge tracks up the pass, which Dillon renamed in honor of Boreas, the Ancient Greek god of the North Wind.

  • DETAIL: “The Studio & Spirits Dream” Oil on Canvas. / I spent the last decade uprooted and on the road. I landed in a barn for awhile on a millionaire’s horse ranch, eventually turning the tack room into a studio that was liveable, enabling me to move out of the ranch’s bunkhouse (12 X 12 foot room with sink) and take up barn residence. It was a wonderful place for 4 years with horse pasture – about 200 occupants – out the door. Goats, sheep, mule named Corizon and Rambo the Ram in stalls and paddock on the other side, the Santa Lucia range all misty , mooned, sunned, gusted, and Milky Wayed before me. And it was the first functional studio I’d had in years. I wrote. And I painted. / This dream, this studio I painted there, is crowded with things I loved and hadn’t seen in ages, stored on the other side of America. Over filled with people I’d loved who’d died. With animals alive and not, who still owned my heart. With a chair from my twenties that no longer existed and the dream of my own bed again where such dreams could populate my nights. The cats who survived the move from Brooklyn then to Virginia’s wilderness then across country are on my bed, and some who departed before we got there, here too. My wonderful chocolate Lab – Rodin – is on alert at the bed’s end. A woodstove I’d seen once that would restore life to this heatless barn (I eventually got a kerosene heater). Some of my many thousands of books I carry with me that prop up my life are here, and all the intimate angels swinging through the undone work, the ready easel, the heart’s workplace.

  • Coorong – South Australia Had a great time wandering over various salt flats!

  • Strange oval shaped window above a door on a pastel color wall in the early morning light.

  • Fallen leaves on a sunset beach.

  • A picture perfect day on the tropical island Zanzibar in the Indian Ocean approx 2 hours from the Tanzanian coast. January 2008.

  • Traditional Bishnoi man Jodhpur area

  • Sometimes, you can just be in the right place at the right time and get that after burst of light from the setting sun. Taken at Koh Samui, Thailand.

  • Sunrise over Fes, Morocco. Adhan (Athaan) is the Islamic call to prayer, recited by the muezzin. The root of the word is ʼḏn “to permit”, and another derivative of this word is uḏun, meaning “ear.” This is the minaret of Kairouyine mosque in Fes. The university which is attached, was founded in 859AD and ‘is considered the oldest continuously operating institution of higher learning in the world by the Guinness Book of World Records.’ (Care of Wikipedia) / Adhan II

  • Got back from the last tour with not much to show…but this horn-bill was perfectly positioned against the setting sun. Kruger Nat. Park / South Africa

  • This is one of the last painting I will do while living in Broken Hill. It is a commissioned work and I am very pleased with it. Broken Hill – well I thought it was extremely ugly when we first arrived. But now I see the heritage, the blood sweat and tears of hard labour, the tough men and women of the outback and the outrageous courage of the people who live there now. The colours and textures are fascinating and the sky is magic. I have fallen in love this pile of rubble the locals affectionately call “The Line of Lode” and the Silver City – Broken Hill.

  • Buddha temple in Thailand. From my book Sights for the Senses

  • My other works: / Featured in the group Photography 101 EXIF: / Taken with a Canon EOS 400D Digital. Exposure: 0.006 sec (1/160) ISO Speed: 100 Aperture: f/10 Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows Metering Mode: Pattern Focal Length: 28 mm Exposure Program: Shutter priority Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV Flash: Flash did not fire White Balance: Manual A LARGER view to see more in detail… / (Long side is only 1024 here) On The Calender Page / / Temple of Athena, Assos History / The city was founded from 900-1000 BC by Aeolian colonists from Lesbos, who specifically are said to have come from Methymna.The settlers built a Doric Temple to Athena on top of the crag in 530 BC. From this temple Hermias of Atarneus, a student of Plato, ruled Assos, the Troad and Lesbos for a period of time, under which the city experienced its greatest prosperity. (Strangely, Hermias was actually the slave of the ruler of Atarneus*.) Under his rule, he encouraged philosophers to move to the city. As part of this, in 348 BC Aristotle came here and married King Hermeias’s niece, Pythia, before leaving to Lesbos three years later in 345 BC. This ‘golden period’ of Assos ended several years later when the Persians arrived, and subsequently tortured Hermias to death. The Persians were driven out by Alexander the Great in 334 BCE. Between 241 and 133 BC, the city was ruled by the Kings of Pergamon. However, in 133 BC, the Pergamons lost control of the city as it was absorbed by the Roman empire. St. Paul also visited the city during his third missionary journey through Asia Minor, which was between 53-57 AD, on his way to Lesbos. From this period onwards, Assos shrunk to a small village, as it has remained ever since. Ruins around Assos continue to be excavated.

  • Really my dream is to live here all my life… Summers is just not enough…... My other works: / A LARGER view to see more in detail… / (Long side is only 1024 here) Strait from the camera… EXIF: / Taken with a Canon EOS 400D Digital. Exposure: 1/2500 sec ISO Speed: 100 Aperture: f/3.5 Software: Photoshop CS 2 / (Used only for signature) Metering Mode: Pattern Focal Length: 28 mm Exposure Program: Shutter priority Exposure Bias: 0 EV Flash: Flash did not fire White Balance: Manual On The Calender Page / / Assos History:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assos The city was founded from 900-1000 BC by Aeolian colonists from Lesbos, who specifically are said to have come from Methymna. The settlers built a Doric Temple to Athena on top of the crag in 530 BC. From this temple Hermias of Atarneus, a student of Plato, ruled Assos, the Troad and Lesbos for a period of time, under which the city experienced its greatest prosperity. (Strangely, Hermias was actually the slave of the ruler of Atarneus.) Under his rule, he encouraged philosophers to move to the city. As part of this, in 348 BC Aristotle came here and married King Hermeias’s niece, Pythia, before leaving to Lesbos three years later in 345 BC. This ‘golden period’ of Assos ended several years later when the Persians arrived, and subsequently tortured Hermias to death. The Persians were driven out by Alexander the Great in 334 BCE. Between 241 and 133 BC, the city was ruled by the Kings of Pergamon. However, in 133 BC, the Pergamons lost control of the city as it was absorbed by the Roman empire. St. Paul also visited the city during his third missionary journey through Asia Minor, which was between 53-57 AD, on his way to Lesbos. From this period onwards, Assos shrunk to a small village, as it has remained ever since. Ruins around Assos continue to be excavated.

  • Featured in the group SEA My other works: / A LARGER view to see more in detail… / (Long side is only 1024 here) Strait from camera. EXIF: / Taken with a Canon EOS 400D Digital. Exposure: 30 sec (30) ISO Speed: 100 Aperture: f/5.6 Software: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Windows Metering Mode: Pattern Focal Length: 40 mm Exposure Program: Shutter priority Exposure Bias: 0/3 EV Flash: Flash did not fire White Balance: Manual On The Calender Page /

  • ...this was an amazing view at the outskirts of Nainital, Uttrakhand,India…July 28, 2008. A travel photograph, as is Selected as the 1st featured cover image for the / Solo Exhibition Group.

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