Saturday, May 4, 2013

Nice Pictures Frames Online photos

K Play Experiment
pictures frames online
Image by Simply Shar♥n ~ Fun and Challenges
found this tutorial online yesterday. I thought I would do it with this picture first. It did show a scenic shot, and I think that would have been better. I will have to find one of my faves now and do it again.

Original (and source photo): www.flickr.com/photos/gx9/4526771254/
See this and other entries here: www.flickr.com/groups/kaleidoscope_players/discuss/721576...
Come Join the FUN!


One of my tulip pictures won the Albany Times Union Annual Tulip Contest First Place Prize!!!
pictures frames online
Image by Montreal Photo Chick
www.flickr.com/photos/jaxphotography/113585279/?#comment7...

will take you to the picture.


vinay-the great - finding one more frame!
pictures frames online
Image by UrvishJ
refraining to start that selective colouring thing again with that red cap!



The Cup of Death, Elihu Vedder
pictures frames online
Image by Universal Pops
All views and comments are always appreciated.

“The Cup of Death”, 1885 (oil on canvas) is part of the collection of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond. Elihu Vedder (1836-1923) was a painter, illustrator of books, and a poet. He studied art in New York, France and Italy. He designed glassware and other items for Tiffany and did murals at the Library of Congress in Washington, D. C. His most famous output, however, was the 55 or 56 illustrations for Edward FitzGerald’s translation of Omar Khayyam’s Rubaiyat. Many influences may be detected in his artwork: symbolist, mystic. Pre-Raphaelite, Orientalism—and yet his style is his own. The source of the “The Cup of Death” is in the following quatrain from the Rubaiyat:

“So when the Angel of the darker Drink
At last shall find you by the river-brink,
And, offering his Cup, invite your Soul
Forth to your Lips to quaff--you shall not shrink.”

Vedder’s other version of this subject is darker in tone and is in the Smithsonian American Art Museum. The frame (which I inadvertently marred in the image) is attributed to Vedder and Charles Caryl Coleman; it’s a wood frame, carved and gilded.

For biographical information:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elihu_Vedder
www.artmagick.com/pictures/artist.aspx?artist=elihu-vedder

For online works:
118 paintings—http://www.elihuvedder.org/
36 images— www.artmagick.com/pictures/artist.aspx?artist=elihu-vedder

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. If you use this image on your web site, you need to provide a link to this photo.

No comments:

Post a Comment