Content

Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beach. Show all posts

Amazing Sculpture By The Sea !

0 comments
The Sculpture by the Sea coastal exhibition at Cottesloe Beach in Perth, Australia. The annual exhibition features 62 sculptures on the beach this year...

A Crab In The Works by Gordan Mitchell.

Unplugged by Robin Yakinthou.

Some sculptures incorporate the natural features of Cottesloe beach.

Up close view of Cube Stack by Jennifer Cochrane.

A young girl runs up to the Lifesavers sculpture by Denis Pepper.

Lifesavers by Denis Pepper.

Two swimmers swim past Spheres by Sophie Hoppe.

Parabola by Philip Spelman.

A young child is photographed with Line In The Sand by John Hutchinson.

Bathers sit around Balancing The Books by Stephen King

Development by Daniel Clemmett.

Bathers sit amongst Hollow Promise - Cottesloe by Gary Deirmendjian

Hollow Promise - Cottesloe stands out against the horizon.

Hollow Promise - Cottesloe as seen from above.

Antipodean recruits by Len Zuks.

Members of the public admire Impact - Cubes (300) by Mauris Raudzins and Together Series by Ron Gomboc ..


Check out some more weird sculpture HERE where I have posted few days before .....


Visit 13above For More Fun

Read more »

Sexiest Victoria's Secret Angels At Beach

0 comments














Sexiest Victoria's Secret Angels heats up Miami Beach.... Woow ! This is really hot !
But Miami wasn't hot enough already, Victoria's Secret will be steaming up South Beach this weekend with their annual fashion show Saturday night.


Visit 13above For More Fun
Read more »

Amazing Sculpture By The Sea

0 comments


White fright ... taking place from October 16 until November 2, Sculpture by the Sea is Australia's largest annual outdoor exhibition of sculpture.

The free outdoor exhibition, now in its 12th year, stretches for two kilometres along the Bondi coastline.

The display features over 100 sculptures from seven different countries, including this marble sculpture titled New Man.



Gone to the dogs ... six-month-old Maltese puppy Mylo investigates a sculpture titled Mongrel Country-Nil Tenure.



Colourful charatcer ... a jogger passes the rendered polymer plaster work The Drifter by Australian artist Stephen Marr.



Give him a hand ... Stephen King's sculpture Carbon Trading.



Colourful sea view ... Will They See Us? by Ngardarb Francine Riches.



Reflective ... Form of Scenery by Japanese artist Koichi Ishino.



Slip, slop, slap ... Tim Kyle's On The Beach shows us the importance of sun screen.



Strange forces ... Soldier Scale 1:1 by Ruth Belotti & Steve Rosewell.



Pet portrait ... Lisa Charleston and son Huxley admire the sculpture Every Dog Has its Day.



Walk on by ... Phenotype by Tim Wetherell.



Scrabble scramble ... a jogger passes the timber and aluminium work by Australian artist Emma Anna.



Lock it up ... a boy and his dog enjoy the mild steel and bronze work She Thought, by Australian artist Mark McClelland.



High tree ... a woman admires the forged steel and concrete work Fragment, by Australian artist Kevin Draper.



Worth the wait ... Waiting by Andy Townsend and Suzie Bleach.



Spiral attraction ... a woman inspects a work by Japanese artist Keizo Ushio.

Source
Visit 13above For More Fun
Read more »

The Most Alien Looking Place In The World

0 comments
Socotra Island: you have to see it to believe it
We covered some otherwordly places before (see, for example, Bolivian Salt Lake, or The Richat Structure), but this island simply blows away any notion about what is considered "normal" for a landscape on Earth.

Imagine waking up on the Socotra Island and taking a good look around you (let's say your buddies pulled a prank on you and delivered you there, and lets also assume that you don't have any hangover from abuse of any substances). After a yelp of disbelief, you'd be inclined to think you were transported to another planet - or traveled to another era of Earth's history. 

The second would be closer to the truth for this island, which is part of a group of 4 islands, has been geographically isolated from mainland Africa for the last 6 or 7 million years. Like the Galapagos Islands, this island is teeming with 700 extremely rare species of flora and fauna, a full 1/3 of which are endemic, i.e. found nowhere else on Earth.

The climate is harsh, hot and dry, and yet - the most amazing plant life thrives there. Situated in the Indian Ocean 250 km from Somalia and 340 km from Yemen, the wide sandy beaches rise to limestone plateaus full of caves (some 7 kilometers in length) and mountains up to 1525 meters high.

The name Socotra is derived from a Sanscrit name, meaning "The Island of Bliss"... Is it the beaches? The isolation and quiet? or the strange and crazy botanical allure?

Alien-looking plants: H. P. Lovecraft's secret inspiration?
Was the famous Chtulhu myths creator aware of these forbidding mountains with their hauntingly weird flora (think of plant mutations from his "The Color out of Space") ? We almost tempted to call Socotra the other "Mountains of Madness" - the trees and plants of this island were preserved thru the long geological isolation, some varieties being 20 million years old... 

We begin with the dracena cinnibaris or Dragon's Blood Tree, the source of valuable resin for varnishes, dyes, and "cure-all" medicine; also (predictably) used in medieval ritual magic and alchemy -


The branches spread out into the sky and from below appear to hover over the landscape like so many flying saucers... and from above they have a distinct mushroom look:

There is also the Desert Rose (adenium obesium) which looks like nothing so much as a blooming elephant leg. Dorstenia gigas - apparently does not require any soil and sinks roots straight into the bare rock.

Somewhat similar to the weird Dorstenia gigas, is this "bucha" vegetable, found as far north as Croatia. I hope it's not pregnant with anything malignant inside this sack. John Wyndham (with his "The Day of the Triffids") would've loved it. Also found in Socotra's landscape is the ever-strange and extremely rare Cucumber Tree (dendrosicyos socotranum) - and yes, it's related to what's sitting in a pickle jar in your fridge.

Want to see some fairy-tale (and possibly haunted) shipwrecks? There are diving tours available... Hopefully some IMAX crew would film it in all its glory one day.

Al Hajarah, Yemen - Walled city in the mist.
Computer game designers take note - this mysterious city in the foggy Yemen's Haraz Mountains can surely fire up imagination of anybody who decides to explore it.

Dune? Clark Ashton Smith's Zothique? Pack your bags, for this is on our good old planet Earth, no interstellar visa required.

Visit 13above For More Fun

Read more »
My Ping in TotalPing.com My Zimbio