where water meets earth
burial cairns in california desert
flower remedies 1 & 2
a victorian boy, growing up
exuberant nature
...fireworks birthday YB...
angel on the prowl
...waterworld...
...delimited - giant wave...
...flying...the lightness of being...
I had a dream of fire
...if you could read...
fab
splatter pop
eight nipples
...chippings...
...inspiration...
gulf coast landscape
dancing for dionysus
home stomping ground
...der Himmel weint...
...memories of blue...
...let your thoughts...
the primal raw energy of dada
climax of the masque
...eyes...
...Friendly Colors...
this alone warrants their doom
orange squiggles
big white K
wegman and more
...girls, girls, girls...
three kings
every thing in its own basket
...barred...
Arômemarin
...hope for all people...
...cracked continents...
...purple rose...
...come in...
...blue dreams...
Offerte
Obsolescencia en la Ría-II
...lonely way...
...purple in motion...
See also...
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
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muy interesante
Cut-paper collage postcard created for Kollage Kit theme: "The Americas."
Mexico! a large and diverse country the culture of which permeates my home state of Texas.
Map in background: part of central and southern portions, with red rectangles around two of my favorite places, Cuernavaca and Oaxaca.
Colorful frame: border of 19th century serape, the red dye of which is cochineal.
Upper left: painting of Our Lady of Guadalupe by Pedro Ramirez.
Upper right: from a Huichol man's ceremonial costume
Middle right: from a turn-of-the-century engraving by José Guadalupe Posada for a newspaper broadsheet (its banner headline is below: "Muy Interesante"), depicting a true crime. (The full scene includes the baby's mother lying dead at the crazy man's feet.)
Hand-carved rubber stamps: (top to bottom) acrobats, figures w/ scissors, gentleman w/ top hat & cane, man in traditional attire drinking cervesa (beer), and man reading newspaper—by a French artist. These are based on Posada's popular skull-n-skeleton images, now widely known and associated with the Day of the Dead..
Lower right: vendor of copal (tree resin used as incense and in varnish) with his burro.
Lower left: wood carving of coyote-skeleton-mermaid by Antonio Xuana.
Mexico! a large and diverse country the culture of which permeates my home state of Texas.
Map in background: part of central and southern portions, with red rectangles around two of my favorite places, Cuernavaca and Oaxaca.
Colorful frame: border of 19th century serape, the red dye of which is cochineal.
Upper left: painting of Our Lady of Guadalupe by Pedro Ramirez.
Upper right: from a Huichol man's ceremonial costume
Middle right: from a turn-of-the-century engraving by José Guadalupe Posada for a newspaper broadsheet (its banner headline is below: "Muy Interesante"), depicting a true crime. (The full scene includes the baby's mother lying dead at the crazy man's feet.)
Hand-carved rubber stamps: (top to bottom) acrobats, figures w/ scissors, gentleman w/ top hat & cane, man in traditional attire drinking cervesa (beer), and man reading newspaper—by a French artist. These are based on Posada's popular skull-n-skeleton images, now widely known and associated with the Day of the Dead..
Lower right: vendor of copal (tree resin used as incense and in varnish) with his burro.
Lower left: wood carving of coyote-skeleton-mermaid by Antonio Xuana.
Spo, Stan Askew, Tim Lukeman have particularly liked this photo
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