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Worried~~
Do you know where this is or the time period??
Boston Common~~Look familiar???At all?????? 1848.......
lindajoy wrote:
Worried~~
Do you know where this is or the time period??
I have no clue where, I can't see any street names, very cool pic, I'd guess the 20's.... You know bikes better than me, if that's an Indian we could probably narrow it down.
lindajoy wrote:
Boston Common~~Look familiar???At all?????? 1848.......
Not at all...aside from landscape, that looks like the view from Beacon Street, in between the State House and Cheers. Where'd you find these pics if you don't mind me asking?
Worried for our children wrote:
I have no clue where, I can't see any street names, very cool pic, I'd guess the 20's.... You know bikes better than me, if that's an Indian we could probably narrow it down.
Old photos of Boston police Lt. Lutz is ready with men and machine guns if any May Day riots occur, 1923. (Photo by Leslie Jones) Capt...
It's why I took it I immediately thought of you and your family...Can ya just see them with machine gun ready to blow em away~~~~lolol
Worried for our children wrote:
Not at all...aside from landscape, that looks like the view from Beacon Street, in between the State House and Cheers. Where'd you find these pics if you don't mind me asking?
Did you know its the oldest city Park Dating to 1634 in the US and is or was some 50 acres at one point?? I did not until reading about it..Pretty cool if you ask me..
I found them on the net while looking at different things...
"A visitors' center for all of Boston is located on the Tremont Street side of the park.
The Central Burying Ground is located on the Boylston Street side of Boston Common and contains the burial sites of the artist Gilbert Stuart and the composer William Billings. Also buried there are Samuel Sprague and his son, Charles Sprague, one of America's earliest poets. Samuel Sprague was a participant in the Boston Tea Party and fought in the Revolutionary War~~~~" Pretty cool too~~
[quote=lindajoy]Eva Lagnim art~[/quote
THIS ONE IS GREAT!!!
[quote=no propaganda please][quote=lindajoy]Eva Lagnim art~[/quote
THIS ONE IS GREAT!!![/quote]
Thank You NPP..I do love her work~~~Have a couple of them, replicas of course..I couldn't afford it otherwise...
Celtic woman, Songs from the Heart
I love her imagination..I also hope this is not found offensive.It is meant as art, not nudity..Then again if you see through the eyes of an artist, you see the octopus is a cephalopod mollusc of the order Octopoda. It has two eyes and four pairs of arms and, like other cephalopods, it is bilaterally symmetric, unique for its appearance alone, with its massive strength...It'ss 'message" Sophisticated Inner Life'..........
This footnote accompanied the original shown in New York years ago..
THE OCTOPUS IS weird: eerily malleable body, sucker-studded arms, skin that can transform into a convincing facsimile of seaweed—or sand—in a flash. It can solve mazes, open jars, use tools. It even has what seems to be a sophisticated inner life. What’s confusing about all this is that the octopus has a brain unlike that of almost any creature we might think of as intelligent. In fact, the octopus brain is so different from ours—from most of the animals we’re accustomed to studying—that it holds a rare promise: If we can figure out how the octopus manages its complex feats of cognition, we might be closer to discovering some of the fundamental elements of thought—and to developing new ideas about how mental capacity evolved.
DAVID DOUBILET
lindajoy wrote:
I love her imagination..I also hope this is not found offensive.It is meant as art, not nudity..Then again if you see through the eyes of an artist, you see the octopus is a cephalopod mollusc of the order Octopoda. It has two eyes and four pairs of arms and, like other cephalopods, it is bilaterally symmetric, unique for its appearance alone, with its massive strength...It'ss 'message" Sophisticated Inner Life'..........
This footnote accompanied the original shown in New York years ago..
THE OCTOPUS IS weird: eerily malleable body, sucker-studded arms, skin that can transform into a convincing facsimile of seaweed—or sand—in a flash. It can solve mazes, open jars, use tools. It even has what seems to be a sophisticated inner life. What’s confusing about all this is that the octopus has a brain unlike that of almost any creature we might think of as intelligent. In fact, the octopus brain is so different from ours—from most of the animals we’re accustomed to studying—that it holds a rare promise: If we can figure out how the octopus manages its complex feats of cognition, we might be closer to discovering some of the fundamental elements of thought—and to developing new ideas about how mental capacity evolved.
DAVID DOUBILET
I love her imagination..I also hope this is not fo... (
show quote)
While this is highly erotic, I do not consider it obscene. Beautiful in a frightening sort of way.
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