This for some reason reminded me of the Statue of Liberty coming out of the sand on the beach at the end of the movie. I know....I'm gonna get help someday. :) LOL Thanks for the views and comments. J
Beautiful. Gorgeous colours and great depth. I really like the windowed effect. It makes me think of a children's television programme they used to run where they went "through a window" to find out about the world. They had different shapes, though, but I like your arrays of rectangular ones here - it makes a nice contrast with the curves of the spiralling colours.
I am honoured to be listed as a friend or to see an image of mine as a favourite, but I keep lists of neither. This helps me appreciate images uploaded by strangers as well as friends. Please understand that a failure to reciprocate in kind indicates a lack of appreciation for neither gesture nor work.
THE CAMERA'S ONLY JOB is to get out of the way of making photographs. It's entirely an artist's eye, patience, and skill that makes an image. ~Ken Rockwell VISIT MY GALLERY
Statue of Liberty??? Boy, you are a bit weird sometimes, you old hippie. LOL It looks to me like a very colourful spiral caught behind a fence. Gorgeous work. :)
"The artist is a receptacle for emotions that come from all over the place; from the sky, from the earth, from a scrap of paper, from a passing shape, from a spider’s web." Pablo Picasso
?? really?
To each his own lol
I have not seen the Planet of The Apes so that is my excuse :)
I do not see cfr's reference to the windows in Playschool either.
I am beginning to worry about myself here :)
I see embroidery threads woven together - ok, yes I need help too :)
lol....statue of liberty... mmm....which planet are you living on?? ohhhh its the planet of the apes you told us already :-)
this is nice, mysterious even!! best you get that help mr lion! hehehe.
Several of my photos are available for purchase in larger format at Shutterpoint, and some are also available in high quality framed prints at http://djholmes.imagekind.com/
You will be led to the knowledge of the internal things which are invisible to you, by the external things which you see before you. . . . Even so then, we can represent to ourselves in thought the Author of all that is, by contemplating and admiring the (visible) things which He has made, and ever brings into being.
- Hermes
Ian :)