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Digital manipulation of a photographs (my own image) with filters and photoshop actions for a painterly/illustration look.
chester, uk, march 11, 2023The old 'Art Gallery' building in Bridge Street in chester displays a statue of a king with an inscription which reads To God, my King and my Country
Travel and landmark photography.
The Palace of Westminster meeting place of the Parliament of the United Kingdom located in London, England. Commonly called the Houses of Parliament after the House of Commons and the House of Lords. \n\nBig Ben, Elizabeth Tower in distance River Thames with bares in foreground
Millisle, UK - February 22nd, 2022: Information remembering local missionary Amy Carmichael outside Millisle and Ballycopeland Presbyterian Church along the Co. Down coast. Amy Carmichael was a Christian missionary and author, best known for her work in India.
Thames river and City of Westminster
Big Ben, Westminster Bridge on River Thames in London, England, UK at sunset
Vintage photograph of Trocadero from under the Eiffel Tower, Exposition Universelle, 1889, 19th Century
Glasgow, Scotland, UK - 9th April, 2011: A young woman leans against the equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington at the front of Glasgow's Museum of Modern Art (GOMA). The statue famously almost always has a traffic cone on its head.
This tranquil sculpture by Augustus Lukeman (1872-1935) is the centerpiece of a memorial to Isador and Ida Straus, who both perished during the sinking of the Titanic in 1912. \n\nMr. Straus and his wife Ida were returning home on the Titanic when it struck the iceberg. Straus, a gentleman of that time, stayed on board and helped his wife into a lifeboat. But, according to testimony before congress,  she turned back to him and said, “We have been together a number of years …Where you will go I will go.”\n\nIsador Straus was a co-owner, with his brothers, of R.H. Macy & Company (“Macy’s”.) He was an exceedingly decent and generous person.  The New York Times would call him “a supporter of almost every philanthropic and charitable institution in New York, \nregardless of creed.” \n\nThe outpouring of mourning in New York City led to the creation of a small park at Broadway and 106th Street on a triangular lot. The statue faces north near the south end of the park.\n\nLukeman used Audrey Munson as his model. Munson posed for more than a dozen important statues, sculptures, and friezes, most of which still stand to this day across Manhattan and Brooklyn. She is now often called “America’s First Supermodel.”
Black and white photography, Eiffel Tower in Paris, France
Plaque in Boston Common on the side of the Old North Church.
Vintage image of the Houses of Parliament in London, UK
Façade of the Birmingham City Council Office Town Hall
Fleet Street is a major street in the City of London. The \
Historical plaque on the front lawn of Herman Melville's house in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, which he called Arrowhead. He lived here in the mid-1800s, writing \
manipulated conceptual image of the city of london flooded due to global warming and rising sea levels
Dublin, Ireland - July 16, 1986: 1980s old Positive Film scanned, St Stephen's Green public park, Dublin, Ireland.
Watercolor drawing, illustration. Image of arch of arches inside the building, sunny afternoon, Lisbon, Portugal.
Fairfax Gallery on The Pantiles at Royal Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England, with paintings visible.
Paris, France-02 07 2023: Elevated metro train passing the Bir-Hakeim bridge above the Seine river and a bronze equestrian statue by Danish sculptor H. Wederkinch ( 1886-1959), created in 1930 and titled \
The ten commandments etched into marble tablets. These are near the entryway to a church.
London skyline with St Pauls Cathedral looking over houses and other buildings.
Vintage photograph of Ernst Schweninger, a German physician and naturopath who developed the Schweninger method, a reduction of obesity by the restriction of fluids in the diet. 19th Century
Plaque attached to the base of a bronze statute which was erected in memory of Thomas Sutcliffe Mort in 1883 at Macquarie Place, Sydney.  He was a significant figure in the development of wool industry and exporting agricultural products to the United Kingdom.  This image was taken on a sunny afternoon in summer.
The Palace of Westminster or Houses of Parliament in London.
Sydney, NSW, Australia - October 31, 2017: Unidentified people at Art Gallery of New South Wales, includes contemporary, modern and indigenous art
Aerial view of the Obelisk on Killiney Hill in Wicklow-Ireland, Killiney Obelisk, popular tourist destinations in ireland, people enjoy the view next to the monument on the hill, view hill, The woman watching the view on the pyramids\n\nThe Killiney Obelisk was built in 1742 to commemorate what is described as ‘the Year of the Slaughter’ or Ireland’s forgotten famine. In 1740 there was an incredibly cold winter which was followed by a severe summer of rain and floods. This wiped out the crops and killed off livestock. The following winter was again BALTIC with temperatures not getting above minus 10 for a month. It was so cold that small vessels were destroyed by icebergs on the River Liffey, street lamps could not be lit plunging towns and villages into darkness and food riots were common throughout the land. Many of the oldest trees were also felled for fuel and sickness was common all over. Reports suggest that up to 480,000 may have people died during this forgotten famine.  A small number of rich landlords like John Malpas of Killiney Hill and Kathryn Connolly of Castletown House commissioned famine relief projects like this one to provide employment to destitute families. Ironically this monument now overlooks the wealthiest part of Ireland.
Colorful painting of Church of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, Veneto, Itlaly
Dublin, Ireland - July 16, 1986: 1980s old Positive Film scanned, Inscription next to kilKenny shop at Nassau Street, Dublin, Ireland.    “I who have copied down this story, or more accurately fantasy, do not credit the details of the story, or fantasy. Some things in it are devilish lies, and some are poetical figments; some seem possible and others not; some are for the enjoyment of idiots.”\n\n― Thomas Cahill
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