| Предыдущая тема :: Следующая тема
|
Автор |
Сообщение |
tri_tabuna принцесса цирка
Зарегистрирован: Jan 21, 2004 Сообщения: 7489
|
Добавлено: 26.11.07, 15:20 +0000 |
|
|
просто рисунки на асфальте. правда, не мелом.
я сразу и не поняла, что они плоские
1
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
_________________ мой сайт |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
Добавлено: 26.11.07, 18:35 +0000 |
|
|
старая тема ))) там единственные недостаток таких работ, что только с одной точки можно этот самый объем увидеть. с других сторон когда смотришь, ничего не понятно |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
tri_tabuna принцесса цирка
Зарегистрирован: Jan 21, 2004 Сообщения: 7489
|
Добавлено: 27.11.07, 11:18 +0000 |
|
|
вот так вот
_________________ мой сайт |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
adm dma
Зарегистрирован: Nov 19, 2003 Сообщения: 14584
|
Добавлено: 27.11.07, 11:35 +0000 |
|
|
:shock: :shock: :shock:
))))
Офигеть картинка. |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
orun мүнхэ
Зарегистрирован: Oct 22, 2003 Сообщения: 3925 Откуда: mosсow-city |
Добавлено: 01.12.07, 22:01 +0000 |
|
|
фух.. я уже было испугался :)))
эржена, где ты это берешь??? :lol: :lol: _________________ UNDER PERMANENT CONSTRUCTION.
|
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
BlaZe мүнхэ
Зарегистрирован: Nov 11, 2004 Сообщения: 3065
|
Добавлено: 02.12.07, 04:06 +0000 |
|
|
ну вы и пошляки, я че та сразу не понял даже )))) |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
Добавлено: 02.12.07, 10:28 +0000 |
|
|
глазастенькая обложка ))))
а если серьезно, очень хорошо выражена главная идея - КИНО и ЭРОТИКА. Глаз, напоминающий не только глаз, этот смысл, считывающийся практически всеми людьми - любой дизайнер может позавидовать такой находке. )) |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
adm dma
Зарегистрирован: Nov 19, 2003 Сообщения: 14584
|
Добавлено: 02.12.07, 10:35 +0000 |
|
|
Вот что значит "Сексуальные глаза" :lol: |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
adm dma
Зарегистрирован: Nov 19, 2003 Сообщения: 14584
|
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
Добавлено: 01.11.08, 07:30 +0000 |
|
|
известный фотограф-универсал Aaron Huey -
http://www.aaronhuey.com/main.php
особенно интересен цикл Hitchhiking Siberia (в разделе Adventures) - где этот фотограф совместно с журналистом автостопили вдоль транссиба по заказу от National Geographic (с перегонщиками машин). жалко, что сайт сделан на флэше, и нельзя показать здесь фотки.
текст, возможно, не менее увлекательный, чем фотографии (в очередной раз жалею, что плохо знаю английский):
http://adventure.nationalgeographic.com/2008/06/trans-siberian-highway/mckenzie-funk-text
вот про Республику и 22-летнюю Дариму Номоеву: )))
http://adventure.nationalgeographic.com/2008/06/trans-siberian-highway/mckenzie-funk-text/10
Цитата: | Ulan Ude, the capital of Buryatia and gateway to Lake Baikal, our first civilization in days, is a city famous for its vacuum cleaners. It also has the world's largest Lenin head—12 tons of cement in the main square—and a factory that once made the strongest locomotives on the Trans-Siberian Railroad. According to our de facto guide, Darima Nomoeva, a 22-year-old manager of a tour company whose office was in the lobby of our shabby but expensive hotel, the locally built vacuums worked for decades (her mother's had lasted 30 years). But now the factory, along with the locomotive plant, was closed. Like the Lenin head, they were relics, and Buryats were embracing another identity.
Tibetan Buddhism has been here since well before 1741, when it was recognized as one of Russia's official religions, and lately, like their Mongolian cousins, locals are reconnecting with the old beliefs. On our first day, Darima took Aaron and me to a monastery, the Ivolginsky Datsan. We wound out of town through rust-colored fields—this was still big-sky country—and she admitted that she didn't speak the local language. Though a full-blooded Buryat, mistaken for Japanese when in Moscow, she'd spoken Russian growing up—part of the confusion of being a young Siberian raised by old communists. She was finding her way. Her previous job, at a TV station owned by the mayor, had been "boring": They reported the mayor's successes while their rival station, owned by a political opponent, reported failures. In her new position with tourism pioneer Svetlana Timofeyevna, one of the first to bring foreigners through Buryatia in the early '90s, she'd gotten in trouble for quadrupling the office Internet bill. Darima had a picture of Che Guevara on her $400 Nokia phone, and she liked Hubba Bubba gum. She was a fan of Mongolian alternative rock and Chinese hip-hop. But she was also religious, or at least newly traditional. When we passed a set of prayer flags, she borrowed a few coins from me and tossed them out the window as an offering.
The datsan was observing one of six annual holy days: the celebration that marked autumn and the Buddha of the Future. The grounds were swarming with novices in maroon robes and local worshippers in jeans and leather jackets. In the main temple, two dozen senior lamas were praying; loudspeakers carried their chants throughout the complex. Everywhere were Dalai Lama photos, along with prayer wheels, stupas, and Buddha statues. There were visiting monks from India, Tuva, and Mongolia. In a room in the datsan's brick schoolhouse, novices made thangkas (paintings) for three new temples now under construction.
In the 1930s, Darima told us, Buryatia had 37 major datsans and a hundred country temples, and all were razed by Communist authorities. She said 400 lamas, Orthodox priests, and Old Believers were put on a boat and sunk to the bottom of the Selenga River, and 10,000 monks were killed or sent to the gulags. A nearby factory turned religious icons into furniture. In 1945, after an appeal to Stalin by a delegation of Buryats, this datsan was reopened as the only legal Buddhist site in the Soviet Union. For the last five years, it had been in the midst of a tremendous rebuilding.
In an incense-filled cabin, we met with the leader of Siberia's one million Buddhists, Damba Ayusheyev, the 25th Pandito Hambo Lama. He told us of the miracles Buryatia was witnessing. Chief among them was the exhumation of the 12th Pandito Hambo Lama, who before his death in 1927 directed students to check on his body someday. When disinterred in 2002, Ayusheyev said, the body was perfectly intact, muscles and skin showing no signs of decay. More recently, images of a bodhisattva had been discovered on a rock in the Barguzin Valley near Lake Baikal: the fulfillment of a prophecy. "We were told that Buddhism would move north," Ayusheyev said. "Look at India, it is no longer so Buddhist. Look at Nepal, it is the same. Look even at Tibet, it has been taken over by China. But up here in Buryatia, it is coming back." Along with pipelines, roads, and foreign-built cars, religion is creeping into Siberia. "I am not saying that Buryatia is the center of Buddhism," he continued. "But in 20 or 30 years, it might be."
We spent the next four days at Baikal, the deepest and largest lake in the world, home to a fifth of the planet's surface fresh water, ocean blue and so vast as to seem immune to change. Once a winding, six-hour drive away from Ulan Ude, it was soon to become hours closer on a new spur highway. On our way there, we saw scenes reminiscent of the Amur: trees ripped out at their roots, wide corridors of stumps destined to be highway, meandering former roads now cut off and unused, laborers in orange vests warming themselves by campfires. The special tourist zone slated for major construction, though, was still undeveloped but for a new datsan. For now, our destination, Zabaikalsky National Park, famous for its mountainous Holy Nose Peninsula and freshwater Baikal seals, was equally quiet. With Darima and another local guide, Sasha Beketov, we overnighted on a 79-foot Yaroslavets-style fishing boat—the classic Baikal tourist experience, complete with vodka, hot springs, a fish cookout, and more vodka—before driving up the beautiful Barguzin Valley, a Tetons-like landscape of pine forest and broad grasslands fronting a wall of toothy peaks.
We had come to the valley, the birthplace of Genghis Khan's mother, to see the bodhisattva described by Lama Ayusheyev. It had been discovered in 2005, and already the holy site had three gleaming new temples and a path choked with pilgrims. We joined them and ascended into a forest. After 15 minutes, we came to a stand of pines whose trunks were wrapped in cloth and prayer flags. Families of Buryats circled clockwise around a Cube-size boulder, and I glimpsed a dark, oddly shaped smudge about the size of my hand: a prophecy realized, something that may or may not have been a goddess on a rock.
If Siberia is Russia's frontier, the frontier of the frontier is Tuva, a place most famous for being remote. In its brief time as an independent nation in the early 1900s, it produced stamps prized by collectors, and later its nomadic Turkic people's throat singing earned global renown. But Tuva is probably best known for being the obsession of physicist Richard Feynman, who famously and failingly tried to visit its endless steppe and its capital, Kyzyl, in the 1980s, as described in the book Tuva or Bust! Today people visit Tuva partly so they can say, "I visited Tuva," and Aaron and I were no better. We learned that Kyzyl even had an obelisk proclaiming it the geographic center of Asia—which in fact it is, provided you use a certain 1855 map projection by Scottish clergyman James Gall, which nobody ever does.
From Buryatia, Tuva was about a thousand miles to the west and 500 miles to the south. Aaron and I needed a good ride, and we found one with the unlikeliest of hitchhiking aids: the police. At a checkpoint at the edge of Ulan Ude, aided by fast-talking Darima, we convinced the officers to flag down some peregonchiks. In ten minutes we had our guys. Our unwitting hosts were slightly older and more tattooed than previous drivers—a tougher, gruffer sort of peregonchik. The three men warmed up once we said we really would pay for gas: For once, a police checkpoint yielded money rather than took it away. Soon the boss, a gold-toothed man named Volodya who wore slippers and a full tracksuit, was handing me his cell phone so I could surprise his wife: "Hello, I'm a foreigner driving with your husband!"
We crossed between the more populated western shores of Baikal and the beautiful Khamar-Daban mountains—snowy and treeless, with sharp ridges that climbed to 6,500-foot peaks—then entered the grimy metropolis of Irkutsk at rush hour.
|
пс - еще у Аарона меня впечатлил цикл снимков из резервации Pine Ridge американских индейцев . жесть конечно полная, похожая на жизнь наших коренных народов севера. |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
Tohuchar мүнхэ
Зарегистрирован: Jul 23, 2003 Сообщения: 3200 Откуда: Москва |
Добавлено: 27.11.08, 15:52 +0000 |
|
|
пейзажный фотограф Жахонгир из Узбекистана
http://clancyloox.livejournal.com/ _________________ тот, кто ошибается предпоследним - выигрывает |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
dGalsan тэнгэри
Зарегистрирован: Feb 12, 2004 Сообщения: 10453 Откуда: mw |
Добавлено: 06.03.10, 11:09 +0000 |
|
|
Манай залуу басагадууд - Оля и Ирина Ертахановы - закончили рисовальную часть к одному книжному проекту. Получилось не просто хорошо, получилось просто супер!
остальное здесь:
http://www.behance.net/Gallery/Zarhai/437618
PS - пожалуйста, ниже под картинками по ссылке не забывайте нажать на кнопку
CLICK TO APPRECIATE IT!
Конечно, если Вам действительно понравятся эти рисунки также, как мне ))) |
|
Вернуться к началу |
|
|
|