Uluru 

554 creative works found

  • A lone tree blends against the red, textured wall of Uluru in Central Australia.

  • Another shot from Central Australia, this time of part of The Olgas.

  • you never expect to find water in Uluru..and yet there are a few places with water even in the dry! Such a powerful place

  • Very early morning at Uluru, with the sun still well below the horizon. A setting full moon provided enough light on the rock to give it some detail, rather than it just being a silhouette. Exposure was approximately 2 minutes on Fuji Provia (rated ISO100), 24mm lens, Olympus OM-2n. With the benefit of hindsight, and if I’d at least had a coffee, I may have walked the extra 60m towards the Rock to remove the foregroung tree… Next time maybe…

  • I had difficulty getting the colour balance right with this – I think this is about right!

  • © C J Lewis. Art work in oils 12” x 16”. Painted from a vision I had of flying over Uluru in spirit. JANUARY 2009 FEATURED IN All Things Poetic, Artistic, Philosophical group ORIGINAL ART WORK (Framed) IS FOR SALE. If interested please Contact Me You can see the video Great Southern Land here – A Journey With Art In Oils with music in a storyline. Or you can preview 2009 calendars of my Australian Scenes in Oils Here Australia as named by Pedro Fernandez de Quiros (1565-1615) – Portugese born explorer in the service of Spain who made important discoveries in the Pacific. Quiros gave the name ‘Australia Del Espiritu Santo (Australia of the Spiritual Saint) to the Great Southern Continent…the nation of Australia today. / MCN:CC63C-08D75-08F61

  • Traveling in a Helichopter I was taken with the Door removed so I could take these shots to Ayers Rock and the Olgas

  • Uluru – NT – Australia

  • Pure Magic On the Rock !! ! *I recieved a phone call from a friend at Uluru who told me that it was / “Raining on The Rock” I had only ever seen it with solid blue skies after numerous visits. I said to my wife “put on your lippy, were heading for Uluru! We left Melbourne a few hours later, the distance from Melbourne to Uluru/Ayers Rock is 1170 miles / 2000 kilometres, we stayed one night in Burra an old copper mining town and one night in Coober Pedy where most of the worlds Opals are mined. Coober Pedy is like the wild west ! We arrived at the Uluru / Kata Tjuta National Park around 3pm after driving through wonderful torrential rain with low visibility for hours. I was happy with the shots I took over the next five days. / / ! / ! / !!Pastel red to burgundy and spinifex to gold, / We’ve just come out of the Mulga where the plains forever roll. / And Albert Namatjira has painted all the scenes, / And a shower has changed the lustre of our land. And it’s raining on the Rock, / In a beautiful country, / And I’m proud to travel this big land, / As an Aborigine. / And it’s raining on the Rock What an almighty sight to see, / And I’m wishing and I’m dreaming that you were here with me. Everlasting daisies and a beautiful desert rose / Where does their beauty come from heaven knows. / I could ask the wedge-tail but he’s away too high, / I wonder if he understands it’s wonderful to fly. / It cannot be described with a picture, / The mesmerising colours of the Olgas. / Or the grandeur of the Rock / Uluru has power! And it’s raining on the Rock, / In a beautiful country, / And I’m proud to travel this big land, / As an Aborigine. / And it’s raining on the Rock / What an almighty sight to see, / And I’m wishing and I’m dreaming that you were here with me. John Williamson Raining On The Rock SHOULD DEFINITELY BE VIEWED LARGE! / THIS PIECE IS AVAILABLE TO PURCHASE AS A: / • Card / • Canvas Print / • Framed Print / • Laminated Print / • Matted Print / • Mounted Print

  • One of a series painted and exhibited of Uluru, Alice Springs. Inspired from a trip to Central Australia. French Paint on Silk. There’s more beauty and simply awe inpsiring things to see along with aboriginal sacred sites when you walk around the rock. The local Uluru indigenous community request that visitors respect the sacred status of Uluru by not climbing the rock, with signs posted to this effect. In 1983 the former Prime Minister of Australia, Bob Hawke, promised to respect the request from the community that climbing Uluru be prohibited, but broke his promise when title was handed to the traditional owners in 1985 because access for tourists to climb Uluru was made a condition before they could receive the title. The climb crosses an important dreaming track, which has been a cause of sadness and distress among traditional owners.

  • Mt Conner, the unknown wonder on the highway to Uluru it is barely given a glance by most motorists on their way to the Uluru – Kata Tjuta National Park. Here a dense layer of low level cloud gives an ominous feeling to this Central Australian wonder. Mt. Conner, Central Deserts of Australia / Northern Territory / Australia

  • This has to be the best sunset at Uluru I’ve seen so far. Uluru is lit perfectly at the very last moments of full sunlight for the day and a cloudless sky is broken up by the faint whispers of smoke sent up by distant fires. Uluru, Uluru – Kata Tjuta National Park / Northern Territory / Australia

  • The spiritual heart of Australia… this image was donated by Wendy Slee Proceeds from sales of this image will go to the wildlife appeal to support the silent bushfire victims of australia…..

  • Australian landscapes and wildlife

  • Ayers Rock. Uluru National Park. Australia. / Uluru is Australia’s most recognisable natural icon. The world-renowned sandstone inselberg stands 348 metres high with most of its bulk below the ground. The aboriginals believe that the spirit that turned into ayers rock was a turtlespirit. / In 1987, Uluru National Park was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage natural property. In 1993 the official name of the Park changed to Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park and the following year it was listed as a World Heritage cultural landscape. /

  • From Wikipedia: The Pitjantjajara name Kata Tjuta means ‘many heads’. The site is as sacred to the Indigenous people as Uluru.There are many Pitjantjatjara Dreamtime legends associated with this place and indeed everything in the vicinity including, of course, Uluru. A number of legends surround the great snake Wanambi who is said to live on the summit of Mount Olga and only comes down during the dry season. The majority of mythology surrounding the site is not disclosed to outsiders. Details: / Camera: Canon EOS 5D Mk II / Lens: Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM / Exposure: 5 exposures (-2,-1,0,+1,+2 EV) x 8 / Aperture: f/18 / Focal Length: 70mm / ISO Speed: 100 / Accessories: Manfrotto 190XB Tripod, Manfrotto 322RC2 Heavy Duty Grip Ball Head, Canon RC1 Wireless Remote / Date and Time: 09 September 2009 06.07pm Post Processing: / Imported into Lightroom / Exported 5 exposures to Photomatix (x8) / Tonemap generated HDR using detail enhancer option / Re-imported back into Lightroom / Exported 8 HDRs to CS3 and stitched together to create panorama / Cropped using crop tool / Curves layer for contrast / Noise reduction in sky area / Unsharp mask to foreground area / Re-imported back to Lightroom / Added keyword metadata / Exported as JPEG

  • We had not booked accommodation at Uluru, because it was not school holidays in Victoria. To our surprise it was school holiday time in Northern Territory, and all hotels, caravan parks and camp sites were booked out at any price. For idiots like us they had a small charge and would allow us to sleep in our car in the car park beside the toilets of the camp ground which was patrolled all night. We had no sleeping bag, and our car seats did not go flat. The night was COLD. We woke, if that describes what happened, about 1.5 hrs before dawn, and so decided we may as well go and see the sun rise on Uluru. This was only then allowed from a specific place on the road near Uluru as tourists could not drive except as specified. We got there early andgot a good spot, and watched the moon go down over Uluru, and the rock blushed as the sun approached. Unforgettable. Taken with a Pentax Z1p and igma 28 – 80 mm zoom lens on Kodachrome 200 film

  • Taken at Uluru

  • Taken at a viewing area at Uluru early morning

  • Taken from Kata Tjuta, watching the sun rise beside Uluru. The flares and the ‘aura’ are untouched; however, I have altered the colour (as pointing the camera towards the sun made the yellows a dirty colour and the blues likewise). I’m sure there’s a scientific way of explaining the ‘aura’ but I’m not really interested – to me, it’s fitting that this photo seems to have captured the strong sense of ‘presence’ I felt as I walked around the base of Uluru the day before.

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