Saturday, November 30, 2013
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Man In A Bubble
- SOMETHING REAL
Personal project - 2010 - http://www.behance.net/gallery/SOMETHING-REAL/560043
Alligators in New York City Sewers
Are Alligators living under New York City (Documentary)
Published on Jun 10, 2013
A look back at a story from the
1930s that a swarm of alligators was found living in the sewers under
New York City, and a new delve into the sewer system to see if the
creatures could still be lurking there.
Sewer alligator stories date back to the late 1920s and early 1930s; in most instances they are part of contemporary legend. They are based upon reports of alligator sightings in rather unorthodox locations, in particular New York City.
Following the reports of sewer alligators in the 1930s, the story has built up over the decades and become more of a contemporary legend. Many have even questioned the extent of truth in the original stories, some even suggesting it to be fiction and that Teddy May's creative mind may have contributed to the tales. However, the story of the 'Sewer Gator' in New York City is well known and various versions have been told.
Some versions go further to suggest that, after the alligator was disposed of at such a young age, it would live the majority of its life in an environment not exposed to sunlight, and thus it would apparently in time lose its eyesight and the pigment in its hide and that the reptile would grow to be completely albino, pure white in color with red eyes. Another reason why an albino alligator would retreat to an underground sewer is because of its vulnerability to the sun in the wild, as there is no dark pigment in the creature's skin, it has no protection from the sun, which makes it very hard for it to survive in the wild.
There are numerous recent media accounts of alligators occupying storm drains and sewer pipes:
However, herpetologists believe that a sewer is not a fit environment for any alligator, and they would be unlikely to be able to reproduce. The animals need warm temperatures all year round, as opposed to the frigid cold of the Sewer Systems
Sewer alligator stories date back to the late 1920s and early 1930s; in most instances they are part of contemporary legend. They are based upon reports of alligator sightings in rather unorthodox locations, in particular New York City.
Following the reports of sewer alligators in the 1930s, the story has built up over the decades and become more of a contemporary legend. Many have even questioned the extent of truth in the original stories, some even suggesting it to be fiction and that Teddy May's creative mind may have contributed to the tales. However, the story of the 'Sewer Gator' in New York City is well known and various versions have been told.
Some versions go further to suggest that, after the alligator was disposed of at such a young age, it would live the majority of its life in an environment not exposed to sunlight, and thus it would apparently in time lose its eyesight and the pigment in its hide and that the reptile would grow to be completely albino, pure white in color with red eyes. Another reason why an albino alligator would retreat to an underground sewer is because of its vulnerability to the sun in the wild, as there is no dark pigment in the creature's skin, it has no protection from the sun, which makes it very hard for it to survive in the wild.
There are numerous recent media accounts of alligators occupying storm drains and sewer pipes:
However, herpetologists believe that a sewer is not a fit environment for any alligator, and they would be unlikely to be able to reproduce. The animals need warm temperatures all year round, as opposed to the frigid cold of the Sewer Systems
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LicenseStandard YouTube License
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Amazing Insects by Igor Siwanowicz
Igor Siwanowicz is a photographer, who is very close to nature.
Usually he used macro photography techniques for taking different shots.
This type of technique allow photographers to take a very close-up shot
of subject. Macro photography is different from other types of
photography because it often requires the specialty of equipment and
special consideration from photographer when planning their shots. here
you can see and imagine the beauty of these shots.
Friday, November 15, 2013
Hanging Naked Men Flower
There’s this meme going around that claims there is a flower called Hanging Naked Men. This is the photo:
Of course I laughed like a school boy. And of course I wanted to know if it was real.
So, I Google imaged it. Bad idea. DO NOT Google Image search “Hanging Naked Men.” Take my word for it.
And after some research, I have found that it is called Orchis Italica, or The Naked Man Orchid. So funny. They come in all sorts of shapes and, umm… sizes.
Of course I laughed like a school boy. And of course I wanted to know if it was real.
So, I Google imaged it. Bad idea. DO NOT Google Image search “Hanging Naked Men.” Take my word for it.
And after some research, I have found that it is called Orchis Italica, or The Naked Man Orchid. So funny. They come in all sorts of shapes and, umm… sizes.
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Quotes
"What is to give light must first endure burning." ~Viktor Frankl
An ounce of practice is worth more than tons of preaching." ~Gandhi
"If you built castles in the air, your #work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them." ~Thoreau
"Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at #work worth doing." ~Theodore Roosevelt
"The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are." ~Joseph Campbell
"Happiness is when what you think, what you say, and what you do are in harmony." ~ Gandhi
"The more I think about It, the more I realize there is nothing more artistic than to love others." ~Vincent Van Gogh
"The aim of life is to live, and to live means to be aware, joyously, drunkenly, serenely, divinely aware." ~Henry Miller
If you wish to be understood, seek first to understand." ~Steven R. Covey
In this world / We walk on the roof of hell / Gazing at flowers // haiku by Kobayashi Issa.
Carl Jung’s 1957 Letter on the Fascinating “Modern Myth” of UFOs
Deities, conspiracies, politics, space aliens: you don’t actually have to believe in these to find them interesting. Just focus your attention not on the things themselves, but in how other people regard them, what they say when they talk about them, and why they think about them the way they do.
Psychotherapist and onetime Freud protégé Carl Gustav Jung treated UFOs this way when he wrote his book Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Skies, which examines “not the reality or unreality” of the titular phenomena, but their “psychic aspect,” and “what it may signify that these phenomena, whether real or imagined, are seen in such numbers just at a time” — the Cold War — “when humankind is menaced as never before in history.” As what Jung called a “modern myth,” UFOs qualify as real indeed.
In 1957, with Flying Saucers to appear the following year, New Republic editor Gilbert A. Harrison wanted to get this Jungian perspective on UFOs in his magazine. At the top of this post, you can see (via The Awl) a scan of Jung’s response to Harrison’s query, the text of which follows:
the problem of the Ufos is, as you rightly say, a very fascinating one, but it is as puzzling as it is fascinating; since, in spite of all observations I know of, there is no certainty about their very nature. On the other side, there is an overwhelming material pointing to their legendary or mythological aspect. As a matter of fact the psychological aspect is so impressive, that one almost must regret that the Ufos seem to be real after all. I have followed up the literature as much as possible and it looks to me as if something were seen and even confirmed by radar, but nobody knows exactly what is seen. In consideration of the psychological aspect of the phenomenon I have written a booklet about it, which is soon to appear. It is also in the process of being translated into English. Unfortunately being occupied with other tasks I am unable to meet your proposition. Being rather old, I have to economize my energies.
Jung, as you can see, doubled his own interest in the subject by not only considering flying saucers a social phenomenon, but as a real physical phenomenon as well. Serious enthusiasts of both Jung and UFOs might consider bidding on the original letter, now up for auction. Estimated sale price: $2,000 to 3,000.
Related Content:
Face to Face with Carl Jung: ‘Man Cannot Stand a Meaningless Life’
Carl Gustav Jung Explains His Groundbreaking Theories About Psychology in Rare Interview (1957)
Carl Gustav Jung Ponders Death
Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on literature, film, cities, Asia, and aesthetics.
He’s at work on a book about Los Angeles, A Los Angeles Primer.
Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.
Source:
Carl Jung’s 1957 Letter on the Fascinating “Modern Myth” of UFOs
in Psychology | May 31st, 2013
Prints - Walter Crane
Friday, 13 September 2013
Walter Crane – part 8
Walter Crane (1845–1915) was an English artist and book illustrator. He
is considered to be the most prolific and influential children’s book creator
of his generation and, along with Randolph Caldecott and Kate
Greenaway. His work featured some of the more colourful and detailed beginnings
of the child-in-the-garden motifs that would characterise many nursery rhymes
and children's stories for decades to come. He was part of the Arts and Crafts
movement and produced an array of paintings, illustrations, children's books,
ceramic tiles and other decorative arts.
For full biographical notes on Walter Crane see part 1.
For earlier works see parts 1 - 7 also. This is part 8 of a 12-part post on the
children’s books of Walter Crane:
1887 The Baby's Own Aesop
1887 The Baby's Own Aesop
Dust cover |
Front cover |
Inside front cover |
End-paper |
End-paper |
Title page |
Preface |
Dedication |
Contents page |
The Fox And The Grapes |
The Cock And The Pearl / The Wolf And The Lamb |
The Wind And The Sun |
King Log And King Stork |
The Frightened Lion |
The Mouse And The Lion / The Married Mouse |
Hercules And The Waggoner |
The Lazy Housemaids |
The Snake And The File / The Fox And The Crow |
The Dog In The Manger / The Frog And The Bull |
The Fox And The Crane |
Horse And Man / The ass And The Enemy |
The Fox And The Mosquitoes / The Fox And The Lion |
The Miser And His Gold / The Golden Eggs |
The Man That Pleased None |
The Oak And The Reeds / The Fir And The Bramble |
The Trees And The Woodman |
The Hart And The Vine |
The Man And The Snake |
The Fox And The Mask |
The Ass In The Lion's Skin |
The Lion And The Statue |
The Boaster |
The Vain Jackdaw |
The Peacock's Complaint |
The Two Jars / The Two Crabs |
Brother And Sister |
The Fox Without A Tail |
The Dog and The Shadow |
The Crow And The Pitcher / The Eagle And The Crow |
The Blind Doe |
The Geese And The Cranes |
The Trumpeter Taken Prisoner |
Hot And Cold |
Neither Beast Nor Bird |
The Stag In The Ox Stall / The Deer And The Lion |
The Lion In Love |
The Cat And Venus / Mice In Council |
The Hen And The Fox / The Cat And The Fox |
The Hare And The Tortoise / The Hares And The Frogs |
Porcupine, Snake, And Company / The Bear And The Bees |
The Bundle Of Sticks |
The Farmer's Treasure |
The Cock, The Ass And The Lion |
Fortune And The Boy |
The Ungrateful Wolf / The Fisherman And The Fish |
The Herdsman's Vows / The Horse And The Ass |
The Ass And The Sick Lion |
Back cover |
About me
- Poul Webb
- Francis Kyle Gallery:
"Educated at the Cambridge School of Art. Soon after he graduated his
work was exhibited at the John Moores Liverpool Exhibition and in 1973
in the British International Drawing Biennale at Bradford. In the mid
1970s he showed twice in major International Exhibitions of Original
Drawings at the Museum of Modern Art in Rijeka and work of his was
acquired at this time by H.M. Government Art Collection. In 1987 he was
one of Ten British Watercolourists shown at the Museum of Fine Arts,
Bilbao. Since 1990 Webb has worked largely in oils on canvas."
Brian Sewell, Art Critic:
"Poul Webb's art is the focus on the familiar, on things so commonplace that they are not noticed - and here they suddenly are, edged by the eye of a painter into a heightened reality that stops well short of hallucination, yet has the quality of a waking dream."
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