Posts Tagged ‘Photos’

Nice Website Hosting photos

Saturday, December 31st, 2011

A few nice website hosting images I found:

Yoga4Kids RawCanvas RonSombilonGallery-HiRes (1)
website hosting
Image by Ron Sombilon Gallery
Paint for Peace is Raw Canvas’s dedicated contribution to charitable causes and organizations.

On Wednesday, October 28th, owner Steve Merkley and his team hosted a live painting event and art auction on site, with proceeds going toward the Yoga4 Kids Society.

www.Raw-Canvas.ca
www.Yoga4Kidz.ca
www.LisaPenz.com
DanielPoisson.com
www.RonSombilonGallery.com

invitation
website hosting
Image by pschmutz
this is the official invitation to the art & network night featuring my photographs!
Thursday September 20 @Adecco IT&Engineering, Basel, Switzerland starting 6PM

I’d be happy if you’d come and join us!
Please drop me a line peter@getting-close.ch if you intend to come so I’ll have an overview about how many people will attend..

visit my website

Ninja iga
website hosting
Image by Liqueur Felix
Ninja traning camp in Second Life.
The sim is hosted by a ninja museum in Mie pref.

What is ninja? (official website link)

Posted by Second Life Resident Liqueur Felix. Visit Ninja Iga.

Nice Goals & Motivation photos

Saturday, December 24th, 2011

Some cool goals & motivation images:


goals & motivation
Image by Joost J. Bakker IJmuiden
Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music, literature, film, photography, sculpture, and paintings. The meaning of art is explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics, and even disciplines such as history and psychology analyze its relationship with humans and generations.

Traditionally, the term art was used to refer to any skill or mastery. This conception changed during the Romantic period, when art came to be seen as "a special faculty of the human mind to be classified with religion and science". Generally, art is made with the intention of stimulating thoughts and emotions.

Evaluation

Philosopher Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches to assessing the aesthetic value of art: the realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans. An object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used as a container, may be considered art if intended solely as an ornament, while a painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.

The nature of art has been described by Wollheim as "one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of human culture". It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or communication of emotions and ideas, a means for exploring and appreciating formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. Leo Tolstoy identified art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person to another. Benedetto Croce and R.G. Collingwood advanced the idealist view that art expresses emotions, and that the work of art therefore essentially exists in the mind of the creator. The theory of art as form has its roots in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and was developed in the early twentieth century by Roger Fry and Clive Bell. Art as mimesis or representation has deep roots in the philosophy of Aristotle. More recently, thinkers influenced by Martin Heidegger have interpreted art as the means by which a community develops for itself a medium for self-expression and interpretation.

Definition

Britannica Online defines art as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others." By this definition of the word, artistic works have existed for almost as long as humankind: from early pre-historic art to contemporary art; however, some theories restrict the concept to modern Western societies. Adorno said in 1970, "It is now taken for granted that nothing which concerns art can be taken for granted any more: neither art itself, nor art in relationship to the whole, nor even the right of art to exist." The first and broadest sense of art is the one that has remained closest to the older Latin meaning, which roughly translates to "skill" or "craft." A few examples where this meaning proves very broad include artifact, artificial, artifice, medical arts, and military arts. However, there are many other colloquial uses of the word, all with some relation to its etymology.

20th-century Rwandan bottle. Artistic works may serve practical functions, in addition to their decorative value.The second and more recent sense of the word art is as an abbreviation for creative art or fine art. Fine art means that a skill is being used to express the artist’s creativity, or to engage the audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the finer things. Often, if the skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a craft instead of art. Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or industrial way, it will be considered commercial art instead of fine art. On the other hand, crafts and design are sometimes considered applied art. Some art followers have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has more to do with value judgments made about the art than any clear definitional difference. However, even fine art often has goals beyond pure creativity and self-expression. The purpose of works of art may be to communicate ideas, such as in politically, spiritually, or philosophically motivated art; to create a sense of beauty (see aesthetics); to explore the nature of perception; for pleasure; or to generate strong emotions. The purpose may also be seemingly nonexistent.

Art can describe several things: a study of creative skill, a process of using the creative skill, a product of the creative skill, or the audience’s experience with the creative skill. The creative arts (art as discipline) are a collection of disciplines (arts) that produce artworks (art as objects) that are compelled by a personal drive (art as activity) and echo or reflect a message, mood, or symbolism for the viewer to interpret (art as experience). Artworks can be defined by purposeful, creative interpretations of limitless concepts or ideas in order to communicate something to another person. Artworks can be explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted on the basis of images or objects. Art is something that stimulates an individual’s thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or ideas through the senses. It is also an expression of an idea and it can take many different forms and serve many different purposes. Although the application of scientific knowledge to derive a new scientific theory involves skill and results in the "creation" of something new, this represents science only and is not categorized as art.

History

Sculptures, cave paintings, rock paintings, and petroglyphs from the Upper Paleolithic dating to roughly 40,000 years ago have been found, but the precise meaning of such art is often disputed because so little is known about the cultures that produced them. The oldest art objects in the world—a series of tiny, drilled snail shells about 75,000 years old—were discovered in a South African cave.

Cave painting of a horse from the Lascaux caves, c. 16,000 BP.Many great traditions in art have a foundation in the art of one of the great ancient civilizations: Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, India, China, Ancient Greece, Rome, as well as Inca, Maya, and Olmec. Each of these centers of early civilization developed a unique and characteristic style in its art. Because of the size and duration of these civilizations, more of their art works have survived and more of their influence has been transmitted to other cultures and later times. Some also have provided the first records of how artists worked. For example, this period of Greek art saw a veneration of the human physical form and the development of equivalent skills to show musculature, poise, beauty, and anatomically correct proportions.

In Byzantine and Medieval art of the Western Middle Ages, much art focused on the expression of Biblical and nonmaterial truths, and used styles that showed the higher unseen glory of a heavenly world, such as the use of gold in the background of paintings, or glass in mosaics or windows, which also presented figures in idealized, patterned (flat) forms. Nevertheless a classical realist tradition persisted in small Byzantine works, and realism steadily grew in the art of Catholic Europe.

Renaissance art had a greatly increased emphasis on the realistic depiction of the material world, and the place of humans in it, reflected in the corporeality of the human body, and development of a systematic method of graphical perspective to depict recession in a three-dimensional picture space.

The stylized signature of Sultan Mahmud II of the Ottoman Empire was written in Arabic calligraphy. It reads Mahmud Khan son of Abdulhamid is forever victorious.In the east, Islamic art’s rejection of iconography led to emphasis on geometric patterns, calligraphy, and architecture. Further east, religion dominated artistic styles and forms too. India and Tibet saw emphasis on painted sculptures and dance, while religious painting borrowed many conventions from sculpture and tended to bright contrasting colors with emphasis on outlines. China saw the flourishing of many art forms: jade carving, bronzework, pottery (including the stunning terracotta army of Emperor Qin), poetry, calligraphy, music, painting, drama, fiction, etc. Chinese styles vary greatly from era to era and each one is traditionally named after the ruling dynasty. So, for example, Tang Dynasty paintings are monochromatic and sparse, emphasizing idealized landscapes, but Ming Dynasty paintings are busy and colorful, and focus on telling stories via setting and composition. Japan names its styles after imperial dynasties too, and also saw much interplay between the styles of calligraphy and painting. Woodblock printing became important in Japan after the 17th century.

Painting by Song Dynasty artist Ma Lin, c. 1250. 24,8 × 25,2 cm.The western Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century saw artistic depictions of physical and rational certainties of the clockwork universe, as well as politically revolutionary visions of a post-monarchist world, such as Blake’s portrayal of Newton as a divine geometer, or David’s propagandistic paintings. This led to Romantic rejections of this in favor of pictures of the emotional side and individuality of humans, exemplified in the novels of Goethe. The late 19th century then saw a host of artistic movements, such as academic art, Symbolism, impressionism and fauvism among others.

The history of twentieth century art is a narrative of endless possibilities and the search for new standards, each being torn down in succession by the next. Thus the parameters of Impressionism, Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc. cannot be maintained very much beyond the time of their invention. Increasing global interaction during this time saw an equivalent influence of other cultures into Western art, such as Pablo Picasso being influenced by African sculpture. Japanese woodblock prints (which had themselves been influenced by Western Renaissance draftsmanship) had an immense influence on Impressionism and subsequent development. Later, African sculptures were taken up by Picasso and to some extent by Matisse. Similarly, the west has had huge impacts on Eastern art in the 19th and 20th centuries, with originally western ideas like Communism and Post-Modernism exerting a powerful influence on artistic styles.

Modernism, the idealistic search for truth, gave way in the latter half of the 20th century to a realization of its unattainability. Relativism was accepted as an unavoidable truth, which led to the period of contemporary art and postmodern criticism, where cultures of the world and of history are seen as changing forms, which can be appreciated and drawn from only with irony. Furthermore the separation of cultures is increasingly blurred and some argue it is now more appropriate to think in terms of a global culture, rather than regional cultures.

Characteristics

Art tends to facilitate intuitive rather than rational understanding, and is usually consciously created with this intention.[citation needed] Fine art intentionally serves no other purpose.[dubious – discuss] As a result of this impetus, works of art are elusive, refractive to attempts at classification, because they can be appreciated in more than one way, and are often susceptible to many different interpretations. In the case of Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa, special knowledge concerning the shipwreck that the painting depicts is not a prerequisite to appreciating it, but allows the appreciation of Géricault’s political intentions in the piece. Even art that superficially depicts a mundane event or object, may invite reflection upon elevated themes.

Traditionally, the highest achievements of art demonstrate a high level of ability or fluency within a medium. This characteristic might be considered a point of contention, since many modern artists (most notably, conceptual artists) do not themselves create the works they conceive, or do not even create the work in a conventional, demonstrative sense. Art has a transformative capacity: it confers particularly appealing or aesthetically satisfying structures or forms upon an original set of unrelated, passive constituents.

Forms, genres, media, and styles

The creative arts are often divided into more specific categories, each related to its technique, or medium, such as decorative arts, plastic arts, performing arts, or literature. Unlike scientific fields, art is one of the few subjects that are academically organized according to technique [1]. An artistic medium is the substance or material the artistic work is made from, and may also refer to the technique used. For example, paint is a medium used in painting, and paper is a medium used in drawing.

An art form is the specific shape, or quality an artistic expression takes. The media used often influence the form. For example, the form of a sculpture must exist in space in three dimensions, and respond to gravity. The constraints and limitations of a particular medium are thus called its formal qualities. To give another example, the formal qualities of painting are the canvas texture, color, and brush texture. The formal qualities of video games are non-linearity, interactivity and virtual presence. The form of a particular work of art is determined by both the formal qualities of the media, and the intentions of the artist.

A genre is a set of conventions and styles within a particular medium. For instance, well recognized genres in film are western, horror and romantic comedy. Genres in music include death metal and trip hop. Genres in painting include still life and pastoral landscape. A particular work of art may bend or combine genres but each genre has a recognizable group of conventions, clichés and tropes. (One note: the word genre has a second older meaning within painting; genre painting was a phrase used in the 17th to 19th centuries to refer specifically to paintings of scenes of everyday life and can still be used in this way.)

The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai (Japanese, 1760–1849), colored woodcut print.The style of an artwork, artist, or movement is the distinctive method and form followed by the respective art. Any loose brushy, dripped or poured abstract painting is called expressionistic. Often a style is linked with a particular historical period, set of ideas, and particular artistic movement. So Jackson Pollock is called an Abstract Expressionist.

Because a particular style may have specific cultural meanings, it is important to be sensitive to differences in technique. Roy Lichtenstein’s (1923–1997) paintings are not pointillist, despite his uses of dots, because they are not aligned with the original proponents of Pointillism. Lichtenstein used Ben-Day dots: they are evenly spaced and create flat areas of color. Dots of this type, used in halftone printing, were originally used in comic strips and newspapers to reproduce color. Lichtenstein thus uses the dots as a style to question the "high" art of painting with the "low" art of comics – to comment on class distinctions in culture. Lichtenstein is thus associated with the American Pop art movement (1960s). Pointillism is a technique in late Impressionism (1880s), developed especially by the artist Georges Seurat, that employs dots that are spaced in a way to create variation in color and depth in an attempt to paint images that were closer to the way people really see color. Both artists use dots, but the particular style and technique relate to the artistic movement adopted by each artist.

These are all ways of beginning to define a work of art, to narrow it down. "Imagine you are an art critic whose mission is to compare the meanings you find in a wide range of individual artworks. How would you proceed with your task? One way to begin is to examine the materials each artist selected in making an object, image video, or event. The decision to cast a sculpture in bronze, for instance, inevitably effects its meaning; the work becomes something different from how it might be if it had been cast in gold or plastic or chocolate, even if everything else about the artwork remains the same. Next, you might examine how the materials in each artwork have become an arrangement of shapes, colors, textures, and lines. These, in turn, are organized into various patterns and compositional structures. In your interpretation, you would comment on how salient features of the form contribute to the overall meaning of the finished artwork. [But in the end] the meaning of most artworks… is not exhausted by a discussion of materials, techniques, and form. Most interpretations also include a discussion of the ideas and feelings the artwork engenders."

Skill and craft

Art can connote a sense of trained ability or mastery of a medium. Art can also simply refer to the developed and efficient use of a language to convey meaning with immediacy and or depth. Art is an act of expressing feelings, thoughts, and observations. There is an understanding that is reached with the material as a result of handling it, which facilitates one’s thought processes. A common view is that the epithet "art", particular in its elevated sense, requires a certain level of creative expertise by the artist, whether this be a demonstration of technical ability or an originality in stylistic approach such as in the plays of Shakespeare, or a combination of these two. Traditionally skill of execution was viewed as a quality inseparable from art and thus necessary for its success; for Leonardo da Vinci, art, neither more nor less than his other endeavors, was a manifestation of skill. Rembrandt’s work, now praised for its ephemeral virtues, was most admired by his contemporaries for its virtuosity. At the turn of the 20th century, the adroit performances of John Singer Sargent were alternately admired and viewed with skepticism for their manual fluency, yet at nearly the same time the artist who would become the era’s most recognized and peripatetic iconoclast, Pablo Picasso, was completing a traditional academic training at which he excelled.

A common contemporary criticism of some modern art occurs along the lines of objecting to the apparent lack of skill or ability required in the production of the artistic object. In conceptual art, Marcel Duchamp’s "Fountain" is among the first examples of pieces wherein the artist used found objects ("ready-made") and exercised no traditionally recognised set of skills. Tracey Emin’s My Bed, or Damien Hirst’s The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living follow this example and also manipulate the mass media. Emin slept (and engaged in other activities) in her bed before placing the result in a gallery as work of art. Hirst came up with the conceptual design for the artwork but has left most of the eventual creation of many works to employed artisans. Hirst’s celebrity is founded entirely on his ability to produce shocking concepts. The actual production in many conceptual and contemporary works of art is a matter of assembly of found objects. However there are many modernist and contemporary artists who continue to excel in the skills of drawing and painting and in creating hands-on works of art.

Value judgment

Somewhat in relation to the above, the word art is also used to apply judgments of value, as in such expressions as "that meal was a work of art" (the cook is an artist), or "the art of deception", (the highly attained level of skill of the deceiver is praised). It is this use of the word as a measure of high quality and high value that gives the term its flavor of subjectivity.

Making judgments of value requires a basis for criticism. At the simplest level, a way to determine whether the impact of the object on the senses meets the criteria to be considered art is whether it is perceived to be attractive or repulsive. Though perception is always colored by experience, and is necessarily subjective, it is commonly understood that what is not somehow aesthetically satisfying cannot be art. However, "good" art is not always or even regularly aesthetically appealing to a majority of viewers. In other words, an artist’s prime motivation need not be the pursuit of the aesthetic. Also, art often depicts terrible images made for social, moral, or thought-provoking reasons. For example, Francisco Goya’s painting depicting the Spanish shootings of 3rd of May 1808 is a graphic depiction of a firing squad executing several pleading civilians. Yet at the same time, the horrific imagery demonstrates Goya’s keen artistic ability in composition and execution and produces fitting social and political outrage. Thus, the debate continues as to what mode of aesthetic satisfaction, if any, is required to define ‘art’.

The assumption of new values or the rebellion against accepted notions of what is aesthetically superior need not occur concurrently with a complete abandonment of the pursuit of what is aesthetically appealing. Indeed, the reverse is often true, that the revision of what is popularly conceived of as being aesthetically appealing allows for a re-invigoration of aesthetic sensibility, and a new appreciation for the standards of art itself. Countless schools have proposed their own ways to define quality, yet they all seem to agree in at least one point: once their aesthetic choices are accepted, the value of the work of art is determined by its capacity to transcend the limits of its chosen medium to strike some universal chord by the rarity of the skill of the artist or in its accurate reflection in what is termed the zeitgeist.

Communication

Art is often intended to appeal to and connect with human emotion. It can arouse aesthetic or moral feelings, and can be understood as a way of communicating these feelings. Artists express something so that their audience is aroused to some extent, but they do not have to do so consciously. Art explores what is commonly termed as the human condition; that is, essentially what it is to be human. Effective art often brings about some new insight concerning the human condition either singly or en masse, which is not necessarily always positive, or necessarily widens the boundaries of collective human ability. The degree of skill possessed by an artist will affect his or her ability to trigger an emotional response and thereby provide new insights, the ability to manipulate them at will shows exemplary skill and determination.

Purpose of art

Art has had a great number of different functions throughout its history, making its purpose difficult to abstract or quantify to any single concept. This does not imply that the purpose of Art is "vague", but that it has had many unique, different reasons for being created. Some of these functions of Art are provided in the following outline. The different purposes of art may be grouped according to those that are non-motivated, and those that are motivated (Levi-Strauss).

Non-motivated functions of art

The non-motivated purposes of art are those that are integral to being human, transcend the individual, or do not fulfill a specific external purpose. Aristotle said, "Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature." [14] In this sense, Art, as creativity, is something humans must do by their very nature (i.e., no other species creates art), and is therefore beyond utility.

1.Basic human instinct for harmony, balance, rhythm. Art at this level is not an action or an object, but an internal appreciation of balance and harmony (beauty), and therefore an aspect of being human beyond utility.
"Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature. Next, there is the instinct for ‘harmony’ and rhythm, meters being manifestly sections of rhythm. Persons, therefore, starting with this natural gift developed by degrees their special aptitudes, till their rude improvisations gave birth to Poetry." -Aristotle

2.Experience of the mysterious. Art provides a way to experience one’s self in relation to the universe. This experience may often come unmotivated, as one appreciates art, music or poetry.
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science." -Albert Einstein

3.Expression of the imagination. Art provide a means to express the imagination in non-grammatic ways that are not tied to the formality of spoken or written language. Unlike words, which come in sequences and each of which have a definite meaning, art provides a range of forms, symbols and ideas with meanings that are maleable.
"Jupiter’s eagle [as an example of art] is not, like logical (aesthetic) attributes of an object, the concept of the sublimity and majesty of creation, but rather something else – something that gives the imagination an incentive to spread its flight over a whole host of kindred representations that provoke more thought than admits of expression in a concept determined by words. They furnish an aesthetic idea, which serves the above rational idea as a substitute for logical presentation, but with the proper function, however, of animating the mind by opening out for it a prospect into a field of kindred representations stretching beyond its ken." -Immanuel Kant

4.Universal communication. Art allows the individual to express things toward the world as a whole.[according to whom?] Earth artists often create art in remote locations that will never be experienced by another person. The practice of placing a cairn, or pile of stones at the top of a mountain, is an example. (Note: This need not suggest a particular view of God, or religion.) Art created in this way is a form of communication between the individual and the world as a whole.[citation needed]
5.Ritualistic and symbolic functions. In many cultures, art is used in rituals, performances and dances as a decoration or symbol. While these often have no specific utilitarian (motivated) purpose, anthropologists know that they often serve a purpose at the level of meaning within a particular culture. This meaning is not furnished by any one individual, but is often the result of many generations of change, and of a cosmological relationship within the culture.
"Most scholars who deal with rock paintings or objects recovered from prehistoric contexts that cannot be explained in utilitarian terms and are thus categorized as decorative, ritual or symbolic, are aware of the trap posed by the term ‘art’." -Silva Tomaskova

Motivated functions of art

Motivated purposes of art refer to intentional, conscious actions on the part of the artists or creator. These may be to bring about political change, to comment on an aspect of society, to convey a specific emotion or mood, to address personal psychology, to illustrate another discipline, to (with commercial arts) to sell a product, or simply as a form of communication.

1.Communication. Art, at its simplest, is a form of communication. As most forms of communication have an intent or goal directed toward another individual, this is a motivated purpose. Illustrative arts, such as scientific illustration, are a form of art as communication. Maps are another example. However, the content need not be scientific. Emotions, moods and feelings are also communicated through art.
"[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen

2.Art as entertainment. Art may seek to bring about a particular emotion or mood, for the purpose of relaxing or entertaining the viewer. This is often the function of the art industries of Motion Pictures and Video Games.
3.The Avante-Garde. Art for political change. One of the defining functions of early twentieth century art has been to use visual images to bring about political change. Art movements that had this goal—Dadaism, Surrealism, Russian Constructivism, and Abstract Expressionism, among others—are collectively referred to as the avante-garde arts.
"By contrast, the realistic attitude, inspired by positivism, from Saint Thomas Aquinas to Anatole France, clearly seems to me to be hostile to any intellectual or moral advancement. I loathe it, for it is made up of mediocrity, hate, and dull conceit. It is this attitude which today gives birth to these ridiculous books, these insulting plays. It constantly feeds on and derives strength from the newspapers and stultifies both science and art by assiduously flattering the lowest of tastes; clarity bordering on stupidity, a dog’s life." -André Breton (Surrealism)

4.Art for psychological and healing purposes. Art is also used by art therapists, psychotherapists and clinical psychologists as art therapy. The Diagnostic Drawing Series, for example, is used to determine the personality and emotional functioning of a patient. The end product is not the principal goal in this case, but rather a process of healing, through creative acts, is sought. The resultant piece of artwork may also offer insight into the troubles experienced by the subject and may suggest suitable approaches to be used in more conventional forms of psychiatric therapy.
5.Art for social inquiry, subversion and/or anarchy. While similar to art for political change, subversive or deconstructivist art may seek to question aspects of society without any specific political goal. In this case, the function of art may be simply to criticize some aspect of society.

Spray-paint graffiti on a wall in Rome.Graffiti art and other types of street art are graphics and images that are spray-painted or stencilled on publicly viewable walls, buildings, buses, trains, and bridges, usually without permission. Certain art forms, such as graffiti, may also be illegal when they break laws (in this case vandalism).
6.Art for propaganda, or commercialism. Art is often utilized as a form of propaganda, and thus can be used to subtly influence popular conceptions or mood. In a similar way, art that tries to sell a product also influences mood and emotion. In both cases, the purpose of art here is to subtly manipulate the viewer into a particular emotional or psychological response toward a particular idea or object.
The functions of art described above are not mutually exclusive, as many of them may overlap. For example, art for the purpose of entertainment may also seek to sell a product, i.e. the movie or video game.

Controversial art

Théodore Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa (c. 1820), was a social commentary on a current event, unprecedented at the time. Édouard Manet’s Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbe (1863), was considered scandalous not because of the nude woman, but because she is seated next to men fully dressed in the clothing of the time, rather than in robes of the antique world. John Singer Sargent’s Madame Pierre Gautreau (Madam X) (1884), caused a huge uproar over the reddish pink used to color the woman’s ear lobe, considered far too suggestive and supposedly ruining the high-society model’s reputation.

In the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937) used arresting cubist techniques and stark monochromatic oils, to depict the harrowing consequences of a contemporary bombing of a small, ancient Basque town. Leon Golub’s Interrogation III (1981), depicts a female nude, hooded detainee strapped to a chair, her legs open to reveal her sexual organs, surrounded by two tormentors dressed in everyday clothing. Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ (1989) is a photograph of a crucifix, sacred to the Christian religion and representing Christ’s sacrifice and final suffering, submerged in a glass of the artist’s own urine. The resulting uproar led to comments in the United States Senate about public funding of the arts.

Art theories

In the nineteenth century, artists were primarily concerned with ideas of truth and beauty. The aesthetic theorist John Ruskin, who championed what he saw as the naturalism of J. M. W. Turner, saw art’s role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature.

The definition and evaluation of art has become especially problematic since the 20th century. Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans.

The arrival of Modernism in the late nineteenth century lead to a radical break in the conception of the function of art, and then again in the late twentieth century with the advent of postmodernism. Clement Greenberg’s 1960 article "Modernist Painting" defines modern art as "the use of characteristic methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself".Greenberg originally applied this idea to the Abstract Expressionist movement and used it as a way to understand and justify flat (non-illusionistic) abstract painting:

Realistic, naturalistic art had dissembled the medium, using art to conceal art; modernism used art to call attention to art. The limitations that constitute the medium of
painting – the flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties of the pigment — were treated by the Old Masters as negative factors that could be acknowledged only implicitly or indirectly. Under Modernism these same limitations came to be regarded as positive factors, and were acknowledged openly.

After Greenberg, several important art theorists emerged, such as Michael Fried, T. J. Clark, Rosalind Krauss, Linda Nochlin and Griselda Pollock among others. Though only originally intended as a way of understanding a specific set of artists, Greenberg’s definition of modern art is important to many of the ideas of art within the various art movements of the 20th century and early 21st century.

Pop artists like Andy Warhol became both noteworthy and influential through work including and possibly critiquing popular culture, as well as the art world. Artists of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s expanded this technique of self-criticism beyond high art to all cultural image-making, including fashion images, comics, billboards and pornography.

Classification disputes

Disputes as to whether or not to classify something as a work of art are referred to as classificatory disputes about art.

Classificatory disputes in the 20th century have included cubist and impressionist paintings, Duchamp’s Fountain, the movies, superlative imitations of banknotes, conceptual art, and video games.

Philosopher David Novitz has argued that disagreement about the definition of art are rarely the heart of the problem. Rather, "the passionate concerns and interests that humans vest in their social life" are "so much a part of all classificatory disputes about art" (Novitz, 1996). According to Novitz, classificatory disputes are more often disputes about societal values and where society is trying to go than they are about theory proper. For example, when the Daily Mail criticized Hirst’s and Emin’s work by arguing "For 1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all" they are not advancing a definition or theory about art, but questioning the value of Hirst’s and Emin’s work. In 1998, Arthur Danto, suggested a thought experiment showing that "the status of an artifact as work of art results from the ideas a culture applies to it, rather than its inherent physical or perceptible qualities. Cultural interpretation (an art theory of some kind) is therefore constitutive of an object’s arthood."

Anti-art is a label for art that intentionally challenges the established parameters and values of art; it is term associated with Dadaism and attributed to Marcel Duchamp just before World War I, when he was making art from found objects. One of these, Fountain (1917), an ordinary urinal, has achieved considerable prominence and influence on art. Anti-art is a feature of work by Situationist International,[31] the lo-fi Mail art movement, and the Young British Artists, though it is a form still rejected by the Stuckists, who describe themselves as anti-anti-art.

Art, class, and value

Art has been perceived by some as belonging to some social classes and often excluding others. In this context, art is seen as an upper-class activity associated with wealth, the ability to purchase art, and the leisure required to pursue or enjoy it. For example, the palaces of Versailles or the Hermitage in St. Petersburg with their vast collections of art, amassed by the fabulously wealthy royalty of Europe exemplify this view. Collecting such art is the preserve of the rich, or of governments and institutions.

Fine and expensive goods have been popular markers of status in many cultures, and they continue to be so today. There has been a cultural push in the other direction since at least 1793, when the Louvre, which had been a private palace of the Kings of France, was opened to the public as an art museum during the French Revolution. Most modern public museums and art education programs for children in schools can be traced back to this impulse to have art available to everyone. Museums in the United States tend to be gifts from the very rich to the masses (The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, for example, was created by John Taylor Johnston, a railroad executive whose personal art collection seeded the museum.) But despite all this, at least one of the important functions of art in the 21st century remains as a marker of wealth and social status.

Performance by Joseph Beuys, 1978 : Everyone an artist — On the way to the libertarian form of the social organism.There have been attempts by artists to create art that can not be bought by the wealthy as a status object. One of the prime original motivators of much of the art of the late 1960s and 1970s was to create art that could not be bought and sold. It is "necessary to present something more than mere objects" said the major post war German artist Joseph Beuys. This time period saw the rise of such things as performance art, video art, and conceptual art. The idea was that if the artwork was a performance that would leave nothing behind, or was simply an idea, it could not be bought and sold. "Democratic precepts revolving around the idea that a work of art is a commodity impelled the aesthetic innovation which germinated in the mid-1960s and was reaped throughout the 1970s. Artists broadly identified under the heading of Conceptual art… substituting performance and publishing activities for engagement with both the material and materialistic concerns of painted or sculptural form… [have] endeavored to undermine the art object qua object."

In the decades since, these ideas have been somewhat lost as the art market has learned to sell limited edition DVDs of video works, invitations to exclusive performance art pieces, and the objects left over from conceptual pieces. Many of these performances create works that are only understood by the elite who have been educated as to why an idea or video or piece of apparent garbage may be considered art. The marker of status becomes understanding the work instead of necessarily owning it, and the artwork remains an upper-class activity. "With the widespread use of DVD recording technology in the early 2000s, artists, and the gallery system that derives its profits from the sale of artworks, gained an important means of controlling the sale of video and computer artworks in limited editions to collectors."


goals & motivation
Image by Joost J. Bakker IJmuiden
Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music, literature, film, photography, sculpture, and paintings. The meaning of art is explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics, and even disciplines such as history and psychology analyze its relationship with humans and generations.

Traditionally, the term art was used to refer to any skill or mastery. This conception changed during the Romantic period, when art came to be seen as "a special faculty of the human mind to be classified with religion and science". Generally, art is made with the intention of stimulating thoughts and emotions.

Evaluation

Philosopher Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches to assessing the aesthetic value of art: the realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans. An object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used as a container, may be considered art if intended solely as an ornament, while a painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.

The nature of art has been described by Wollheim as "one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of human culture". It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or communication of emotions and ideas, a means for exploring and appreciating formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. Leo Tolstoy identified art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person to another. Benedetto Croce and R.G. Collingwood advanced the idealist view that art expresses emotions, and that the work of art therefore essentially exists in the mind of the creator. The theory of art as form has its roots in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and was developed in the early twentieth century by Roger Fry and Clive Bell. Art as mimesis or representation has deep roots in the philosophy of Aristotle. More recently, thinkers influenced by Martin Heidegger have interpreted art as the means by which a community develops for itself a medium for self-expression and interpretation.

Definition

Britannica Online defines art as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others." By this definition of the word, artistic works have existed for almost as long as humankind: from early pre-historic art to contemporary art; however, some theories restrict the concept to modern Western societies. Adorno said in 1970, "It is now taken for granted that nothing which concerns art can be taken for granted any more: neither art itself, nor art in relationship to the whole, nor even the right of art to exist." The first and broadest sense of art is the one that has remained closest to the older Latin meaning, which roughly translates to "skill" or "craft." A few examples where this meaning proves very broad include artifact, artificial, artifice, medical arts, and military arts. However, there are many other colloquial uses of the word, all with some relation to its etymology.

20th-century Rwandan bottle. Artistic works may serve practical functions, in addition to their decorative value.The second and more recent sense of the word art is as an abbreviation for creative art or fine art. Fine art means that a skill is being used to express the artist’s creativity, or to engage the audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the finer things. Often, if the skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a craft instead of art. Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or industrial way, it will be considered commercial art instead of fine art. On the other hand, crafts and design are sometimes considered applied art. Some art followers have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has more to do with value judgments made about the art than any clear definitional difference. However, even fine art often has goals beyond pure creativity and self-expression. The purpose of works of art may be to communicate ideas, such as in politically, spiritually, or philosophically motivated art; to create a sense of beauty (see aesthetics); to explore the nature of perception; for pleasure; or to generate strong emotions. The purpose may also be seemingly nonexistent.

Art can describe several things: a study of creative skill, a process of using the creative skill, a product of the creative skill, or the audience’s experience with the creative skill. The creative arts (art as discipline) are a collection of disciplines (arts) that produce artworks (art as objects) that are compelled by a personal drive (art as activity) and echo or reflect a message, mood, or symbolism for the viewer to interpret (art as experience). Artworks can be defined by purposeful, creative interpretations of limitless concepts or ideas in order to communicate something to another person. Artworks can be explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted on the basis of images or objects. Art is something that stimulates an individual’s thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or ideas through the senses. It is also an expression of an idea and it can take many different forms and serve many different purposes. Although the application of scientific knowledge to derive a new scientific theory involves skill and results in the "creation" of something new, this represents science only and is not categorized as art.

History

Sculptures, cave paintings, rock paintings, and petroglyphs from the Upper Paleolithic dating to roughly 40,000 years ago have been found, but the precise meaning of such art is often disputed because so little is known about the cultures that produced them. The oldest art objects in the world—a series of tiny, drilled snail shells about 75,000 years old—were discovered in a South African cave.

Cave painting of a horse from the Lascaux caves, c. 16,000 BP.Many great traditions in art have a foundation in the art of one of the great ancient civilizations: Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, India, China, Ancient Greece, Rome, as well as Inca, Maya, and Olmec. Each of these centers of early civilization developed a unique and characteristic style in its art. Because of the size and duration of these civilizations, more of their art works have survived and more of their influence has been transmitted to other cultures and later times. Some also have provided the first records of how artists worked. For example, this period of Greek art saw a veneration of the human physical form and the development of equivalent skills to show musculature, poise, beauty, and anatomically correct proportions.

In Byzantine and Medieval art of the Western Middle Ages, much art focused on the expression of Biblical and nonmaterial truths, and used styles that showed the higher unseen glory of a heavenly world, such as the use of gold in the background of paintings, or glass in mosaics or windows, which also presented figures in idealized, patterned (flat) forms. Nevertheless a classical realist tradition persisted in small Byzantine works, and realism steadily grew in the art of Catholic Europe.

Renaissance art had a greatly increased emphasis on the realistic depiction of the material world, and the place of humans in it, reflected in the corporeality of the human body, and development of a systematic method of graphical perspective to depict recession in a three-dimensional picture space.

The stylized signature of Sultan Mahmud II of the Ottoman Empire was written in Arabic calligraphy. It reads Mahmud Khan son of Abdulhamid is forever victorious.In the east, Islamic art’s rejection of iconography led to emphasis on geometric patterns, calligraphy, and architecture. Further east, religion dominated artistic styles and forms too. India and Tibet saw emphasis on painted sculptures and dance, while religious painting borrowed many conventions from sculpture and tended to bright contrasting colors with emphasis on outlines. China saw the flourishing of many art forms: jade carving, bronzework, pottery (including the stunning terracotta army of Emperor Qin), poetry, calligraphy, music, painting, drama, fiction, etc. Chinese styles vary greatly from era to era and each one is traditionally named after the ruling dynasty. So, for example, Tang Dynasty paintings are monochromatic and sparse, emphasizing idealized landscapes, but Ming Dynasty paintings are busy and colorful, and focus on telling stories via setting and composition. Japan names its styles after imperial dynasties too, and also saw much interplay between the styles of calligraphy and painting. Woodblock printing became important in Japan after the 17th century.

Painting by Song Dynasty artist Ma Lin, c. 1250. 24,8 × 25,2 cm.The western Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century saw artistic depictions of physical and rational certainties of the clockwork universe, as well as politically revolutionary visions of a post-monarchist world, such as Blake’s portrayal of Newton as a divine geometer, or David’s propagandistic paintings. This led to Romantic rejections of this in favor of pictures of the emotional side and individuality of humans, exemplified in the novels of Goethe. The late 19th century then saw a host of artistic movements, such as academic art, Symbolism, impressionism and fauvism among others.

The history of twentieth century art is a narrative of endless possibilities and the search for new standards, each being torn down in succession by the next. Thus the parameters of Impressionism, Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc. cannot be maintained very much beyond the time of their invention. Increasing global interaction during this time saw an equivalent influence of other cultures into Western art, such as Pablo Picasso being influenced by African sculpture. Japanese woodblock prints (which had themselves been influenced by Western Renaissance draftsmanship) had an immense influence on Impressionism and subsequent development. Later, African sculptures were taken up by Picasso and to some extent by Matisse. Similarly, the west has had huge impacts on Eastern art in the 19th and 20th centuries, with originally western ideas like Communism and Post-Modernism exerting a powerful influence on artistic styles.

Modernism, the idealistic search for truth, gave way in the latter half of the 20th century to a realization of its unattainability. Relativism was accepted as an unavoidable truth, which led to the period of contemporary art and postmodern criticism, where cultures of the world and of history are seen as changing forms, which can be appreciated and drawn from only with irony. Furthermore the separation of cultures is increasingly blurred and some argue it is now more appropriate to think in terms of a global culture, rather than regional cultures.

Characteristics

Art tends to facilitate intuitive rather than rational understanding, and is usually consciously created with this intention.[citation needed] Fine art intentionally serves no other purpose.[dubious – discuss] As a result of this impetus, works of art are elusive, refractive to attempts at classification, because they can be appreciated in more than one way, and are often susceptible to many different interpretations. In the case of Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa, special knowledge concerning the shipwreck that the painting depicts is not a prerequisite to appreciating it, but allows the appreciation of Géricault’s political intentions in the piece. Even art that superficially depicts a mundane event or object, may invite reflection upon elevated themes.

Traditionally, the highest achievements of art demonstrate a high level of ability or fluency within a medium. This characteristic might be considered a point of contention, since many modern artists (most notably, conceptual artists) do not themselves create the works they conceive, or do not even create the work in a conventional, demonstrative sense. Art has a transformative capacity: it confers particularly appealing or aesthetically satisfying structures or forms upon an original set of unrelated, passive constituents.

Forms, genres, media, and styles

The creative arts are often divided into more specific categories, each related to its technique, or medium, such as decorative arts, plastic arts, performing arts, or literature. Unlike scientific fields, art is one of the few subjects that are academically organized according to technique [1]. An artistic medium is the substance or material the artistic work is made from, and may also refer to the technique used. For example, paint is a medium used in painting, and paper is a medium used in drawing.

An art form is the specific shape, or quality an artistic expression takes. The media used often influence the form. For example, the form of a sculpture must exist in space in three dimensions, and respond to gravity. The constraints and limitations of a particular medium are thus called its formal qualities. To give another example, the formal qualities of painting are the canvas texture, color, and brush texture. The formal qualities of video games are non-linearity, interactivity and virtual presence. The form of a particular work of art is determined by both the formal qualities of the media, and the intentions of the artist.

A genre is a set of conventions and styles within a particular medium. For instance, well recognized genres in film are western, horror and romantic comedy. Genres in music include death metal and trip hop. Genres in painting include still life and pastoral landscape. A particular work of art may bend or combine genres but each genre has a recognizable group of conventions, clichés and tropes. (One note: the word genre has a second older meaning within painting; genre painting was a phrase used in the 17th to 19th centuries to refer specifically to paintings of scenes of everyday life and can still be used in this way.)

The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai (Japanese, 1760–1849), colored woodcut print.The style of an artwork, artist, or movement is the distinctive method and form followed by the respective art. Any loose brushy, dripped or poured abstract painting is called expressionistic. Often a style is linked with a particular historical period, set of ideas, and particular artistic movement. So Jackson Pollock is called an Abstract Expressionist.

Because a particular style may have specific cultural meanings, it is important to be sensitive to differences in technique. Roy Lichtenstein’s (1923–1997) paintings are not pointillist, despite his uses of dots, because they are not aligned with the original proponents of Pointillism. Lichtenstein used Ben-Day dots: they are evenly spaced and create flat areas of color. Dots of this type, used in halftone printing, were originally used in comic strips and newspapers to reproduce color. Lichtenstein thus uses the dots as a style to question the "high" art of painting with the "low" art of comics – to comment on class distinctions in culture. Lichtenstein is thus associated with the American Pop art movement (1960s). Pointillism is a technique in late Impressionism (1880s), developed especially by the artist Georges Seurat, that employs dots that are spaced in a way to create variation in color and depth in an attempt to paint images that were closer to the way people really see color. Both artists use dots, but the particular style and technique relate to the artistic movement adopted by each artist.

These are all ways of beginning to define a work of art, to narrow it down. "Imagine you are an art critic whose mission is to compare the meanings you find in a wide range of individual artworks. How would you proceed with your task? One way to begin is to examine the materials each artist selected in making an object, image video, or event. The decision to cast a sculpture in bronze, for instance, inevitably effects its meaning; the work becomes something different from how it might be if it had been cast in gold or plastic or chocolate, even if everything else about the artwork remains the same. Next, you might examine how the materials in each artwork have become an arrangement of shapes, colors, textures, and lines. These, in turn, are organized into various patterns and compositional structures. In your interpretation, you would comment on how salient features of the form contribute to the overall meaning of the finished artwork. [But in the end] the meaning of most artworks… is not exhausted by a discussion of materials, techniques, and form. Most interpretations also include a discussion of the ideas and feelings the artwork engenders."

Skill and craft

Art can connote a sense of trained ability or mastery of a medium. Art can also simply refer to the developed and efficient use of a language to convey meaning with immediacy and or depth. Art is an act of expressing feelings, thoughts, and observations. There is an understanding that is reached with the material as a result of handling it, which facilitates one’s thought processes. A common view is that the epithet "art", particular in its elevated sense, requires a certain level of creative expertise by the artist, whether this be a demonstration of technical ability or an originality in stylistic approach such as in the plays of Shakespeare, or a combination of these two. Traditionally skill of execution was viewed as a quality inseparable from art and thus necessary for its success; for Leonardo da Vinci, art, neither more nor less than his other endeavors, was a manifestation of skill. Rembrandt’s work, now praised for its ephemeral virtues, was most admired by his contemporaries for its virtuosity. At the turn of the 20th century, the adroit performances of John Singer Sargent were alternately admired and viewed with skepticism for their manual fluency, yet at nearly the same time the artist who would become the era’s most recognized and peripatetic iconoclast, Pablo Picasso, was completing a traditional academic training at which he excelled.

A common contemporary criticism of some modern art occurs along the lines of objecting to the apparent lack of skill or ability required in the production of the artistic object. In conceptual art, Marcel Duchamp’s "Fountain" is among the first examples of pieces wherein the artist used found objects ("ready-made") and exercised no traditionally recognised set of skills. Tracey Emin’s My Bed, or Damien Hirst’s The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living follow this example and also manipulate the mass media. Emin slept (and engaged in other activities) in her bed before placing the result in a gallery as work of art. Hirst came up with the conceptual design for the artwork but has left most of the eventual creation of many works to employed artisans. Hirst’s celebrity is founded entirely on his ability to produce shocking concepts. The actual production in many conceptual and contemporary works of art is a matter of assembly of found objects. However there are many modernist and contemporary artists who continue to excel in the skills of drawing and painting and in creating hands-on works of art.

Value judgment

Somewhat in relation to the above, the word art is also used to apply judgments of value, as in such expressions as "that meal was a work of art" (the cook is an artist), or "the art of deception", (the highly attained level of skill of the deceiver is praised). It is this use of the word as a measure of high quality and high value that gives the term its flavor of subjectivity.

Making judgments of value requires a basis for criticism. At the simplest level, a way to determine whether the impact of the object on the senses meets the criteria to be considered art is whether it is perceived to be attractive or repulsive. Though perception is always colored by experience, and is necessarily subjective, it is commonly understood that what is not somehow aesthetically satisfying cannot be art. However, "good" art is not always or even regularly aesthetically appealing to a majority of viewers. In other words, an artist’s prime motivation need not be the pursuit of the aesthetic. Also, art often depicts terrible images made for social, moral, or thought-provoking reasons. For example, Francisco Goya’s painting depicting the Spanish shootings of 3rd of May 1808 is a graphic depiction of a firing squad executing several pleading civilians. Yet at the same time, the horrific imagery demonstrates Goya’s keen artistic ability in composition and execution and produces fitting social and political outrage. Thus, the debate continues as to what mode of aesthetic satisfaction, if any, is required to define ‘art’.

The assumption of new values or the rebellion against accepted notions of what is aesthetically superior need not occur concurrently with a complete abandonment of the pursuit of what is aesthetically appealing. Indeed, the reverse is often true, that the revision of what is popularly conceived of as being aesthetically appealing allows for a re-invigoration of aesthetic sensibility, and a new appreciation for the standards of art itself. Countless schools have proposed their own ways to define quality, yet they all seem to agree in at least one point: once their aesthetic choices are accepted, the value of the work of art is determined by its capacity to transcend the limits of its chosen medium to strike some universal chord by the rarity of the skill of the artist or in its accurate reflection in what is termed the zeitgeist.

Communication

Art is often intended to appeal to and connect with human emotion. It can arouse aesthetic or moral feelings, and can be understood as a way of communicating these feelings. Artists express something so that their audience is aroused to some extent, but they do not have to do so consciously. Art explores what is commonly termed as the human condition; that is, essentially what it is to be human. Effective art often brings about some new insight concerning the human condition either singly or en masse, which is not necessarily always positive, or necessarily widens the boundaries of collective human ability. The degree of skill possessed by an artist will affect his or her ability to trigger an emotional response and thereby provide new insights, the ability to manipulate them at will shows exemplary skill and determination.

Purpose of art

Art has had a great number of different functions throughout its history, making its purpose difficult to abstract or quantify to any single concept. This does not imply that the purpose of Art is "vague", but that it has had many unique, different reasons for being created. Some of these functions of Art are provided in the following outline. The different purposes of art may be grouped according to those that are non-motivated, and those that are motivated (Levi-Strauss).

Non-motivated functions of art

The non-motivated purposes of art are those that are integral to being human, transcend the individual, or do not fulfill a specific external purpose. Aristotle said, "Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature." [14] In this sense, Art, as creativity, is something humans must do by their very nature (i.e., no other species creates art), and is therefore beyond utility.

1.Basic human instinct for harmony, balance, rhythm. Art at this level is not an action or an object, but an internal appreciation of balance and harmony (beauty), and therefore an aspect of being human beyond utility.
"Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature. Next, there is the instinct for ‘harmony’ and rhythm, meters being manifestly sections of rhythm. Persons, therefore, starting with this natural gift developed by degrees their special aptitudes, till their rude improvisations gave birth to Poetry." -Aristotle

2.Experience of the mysterious. Art provides a way to experience one’s self in relation to the universe. This experience may often come unmotivated, as one appreciates art, music or poetry.
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science." -Albert Einstein

3.Expression of the imagination. Art provide a means to express the imagination in non-grammatic ways that are not tied to the formality of spoken or written language. Unlike words, which come in sequences and each of which have a definite meaning, art provides a range of forms, symbols and ideas with meanings that are maleable.
"Jupiter’s eagle [as an example of art] is not, like logical (aesthetic) attributes of an object, the concept of the sublimity and majesty of creation, but rather something else – something that gives the imagination an incentive to spread its flight over a whole host of kindred representations that provoke more thought than admits of expression in a concept determined by words. They furnish an aesthetic idea, which serves the above rational idea as a substitute for logical presentation, but with the proper function, however, of animating the mind by opening out for it a prospect into a field of kindred representations stretching beyond its ken." -Immanuel Kant

4.Universal communication. Art allows the individual to express things toward the world as a whole.[according to whom?] Earth artists often create art in remote locations that will never be experienced by another person. The practice of placing a cairn, or pile of stones at the top of a mountain, is an example. (Note: This need not suggest a particular view of God, or religion.) Art created in this way is a form of communication between the individual and the world as a whole.[citation needed]
5.Ritualistic and symbolic functions. In many cultures, art is used in rituals, performances and dances as a decoration or symbol. While these often have no specific utilitarian (motivated) purpose, anthropologists know that they often serve a purpose at the level of meaning within a particular culture. This meaning is not furnished by any one individual, but is often the result of many generations of change, and of a cosmological relationship within the culture.
"Most scholars who deal with rock paintings or objects recovered from prehistoric contexts that cannot be explained in utilitarian terms and are thus categorized as decorative, ritual or symbolic, are aware of the trap posed by the term ‘art’." -Silva Tomaskova

Motivated functions of art

Motivated purposes of art refer to intentional, conscious actions on the part of the artists or creator. These may be to bring about political change, to comment on an aspect of society, to convey a specific emotion or mood, to address personal psychology, to illustrate another discipline, to (with commercial arts) to sell a product, or simply as a form of communication.

1.Communication. Art, at its simplest, is a form of communication. As most forms of communication have an intent or goal directed toward another individual, this is a motivated purpose. Illustrative arts, such as scientific illustration, are a form of art as communication. Maps are another example. However, the content need not be scientific. Emotions, moods and feelings are also communicated through art.
"[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen

2.Art as entertainment. Art may seek to bring about a particular emotion or mood, for the purpose of relaxing or entertaining the viewer. This is often the function of the art industries of Motion Pictures and Video Games.
3.The Avante-Garde. Art for political change. One of the defining functions of early twentieth century art has been to use visual images to bring about political change. Art movements that had this goal—Dadaism, Surrealism, Russian Constructivism, and Abstract Expressionism, among others—are collectively referred to as the avante-garde arts.
"By contrast, the realistic attitude, inspired by positivism, from Saint Thomas Aquinas to Anatole France, clearly seems to me to be hostile to any intellectual or moral advancement. I loathe it, for it is made up of mediocrity, hate, and dull conceit. It is this attitude which today gives birth to these ridiculous books, these insulting plays. It constantly feeds on and derives strength from the newspapers and stultifies both science and art by assiduously flattering the lowest of tastes; clarity bordering on stupidity, a dog’s life." -André Breton (Surrealism)

4.Art for psychological and healing purposes. Art is also used by art therapists, psychotherapists and clinical psychologists as art therapy. The Diagnostic Drawing Series, for example, is used to determine the personality and emotional functioning of a patient. The end product is not the principal goal in this case, but rather a process of healing, through creative acts, is sought. The resultant piece of artwork may also offer insight into the troubles experienced by the subject and may suggest suitable approaches to be used in more conventional forms of psychiatric therapy.
5.Art for social inquiry, subversion and/or anarchy. While similar to art for political change, subversive or deconstructivist art may seek to question aspects of society without any specific political goal. In this case, the function of art may be simply to criticize some aspect of society.

Spray-paint graffiti on a wall in Rome.Graffiti art and other types of street art are graphics and images that are spray-painted or stencilled on publicly viewable walls, buildings, buses, trains, and bridges, usually without permission. Certain art forms, such as graffiti, may also be illegal when they break laws (in this case vandalism).
6.Art for propaganda, or commercialism. Art is often utilized as a form of propaganda, and thus can be used to subtly influence popular conceptions or mood. In a similar way, art that tries to sell a product also influences mood and emotion. In both cases, the purpose of art here is to subtly manipulate the viewer into a particular emotional or psychological response toward a particular idea or object.
The functions of art described above are not mutually exclusive, as many of them may overlap. For example, art for the purpose of entertainment may also seek to sell a product, i.e. the movie or video game.

Controversial art

Théodore Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa (c. 1820), was a social commentary on a current event, unprecedented at the time. Édouard Manet’s Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbe (1863), was considered scandalous not because of the nude woman, but because she is seated next to men fully dressed in the clothing of the time, rather than in robes of the antique world. John Singer Sargent’s Madame Pierre Gautreau (Madam X) (1884), caused a huge uproar over the reddish pink used to color the woman’s ear lobe, considered far too suggestive and supposedly ruining the high-society model’s reputation.

In the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937) used arresting cubist techniques and stark monochromatic oils, to depict the harrowing consequences of a contemporary bombing of a small, ancient Basque town. Leon Golub’s Interrogation III (1981), depicts a female nude, hooded detainee strapped to a chair, her legs open to reveal her sexual organs, surrounded by two tormentors dressed in everyday clothing. Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ (1989) is a photograph of a crucifix, sacred to the Christian religion and representing Christ’s sacrifice and final suffering, submerged in a glass of the artist’s own urine. The resulting uproar led to comments in the United States Senate about public funding of the arts.

Art theories

In the nineteenth century, artists were primarily concerned with ideas of truth and beauty. The aesthetic theorist John Ruskin, who championed what he saw as the naturalism of J. M. W. Turner, saw art’s role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature.

The definition and evaluation of art has become especially problematic since the 20th century. Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans.

The arrival of Modernism in the late nineteenth century lead to a radical break in the conception of the function of art, and then again in the late twentieth century with the advent of postmodernism. Clement Greenberg’s 1960 article "Modernist Painting" defines modern art as "the use of characteristic methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself".Greenberg originally applied this idea to the Abstract Expressionist movement and used it as a way to understand and justify flat (non-illusionistic) abstract painting:

Realistic, naturalistic art had dissembled the medium, using art to conceal art; modernism used art to call attention to art. The limitations that constitute the medium of
painting – the flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties of the pigment — were treated by the Old Masters as negative factors that could be acknowledged only implicitly or indirectly. Under Modernism these same limitations came to be regarded as positive factors, and were acknowledged openly.

After Greenberg, several important art theorists emerged, such as Michael Fried, T. J. Clark, Rosalind Krauss, Linda Nochlin and Griselda Pollock among others. Though only originally intended as a way of understanding a specific set of artists, Greenberg’s definition of modern art is important to many of the ideas of art within the various art movements of the 20th century and early 21st century.

Pop artists like Andy Warhol became both noteworthy and influential through work including and possibly critiquing popular culture, as well as the art world. Artists of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s expanded this technique of self-criticism beyond high art to all cultural image-making, including fashion images, comics, billboards and pornography.

Classification disputes

Disputes as to whether or not to classify something as a work of art are referred to as classificatory disputes about art.

Classificatory disputes in the 20th century have included cubist and impressionist paintings, Duchamp’s Fountain, the movies, superlative imitations of banknotes, conceptual art, and video games.

Philosopher David Novitz has argued that disagreement about the definition of art are rarely the heart of the problem. Rather, "the passionate concerns and interests that humans vest in their social life" are "so much a part of all classificatory disputes about art" (Novitz, 1996). According to Novitz, classificatory disputes are more often disputes about societal values and where society is trying to go than they are about theory proper. For example, when the Daily Mail criticized Hirst’s and Emin’s work by arguing "For 1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all" they are not advancing a definition or theory about art, but questioning the value of Hirst’s and Emin’s work. In 1998, Arthur Danto, suggested a thought experiment showing that "the status of an artifact as work of art results from the ideas a culture applies to it, rather than its inherent physical or perceptible qualities. Cultural interpretation (an art theory of some kind) is therefore constitutive of an object’s arthood."

Anti-art is a label for art that intentionally challenges the established parameters and values of art; it is term associated with Dadaism and attributed to Marcel Duchamp just before World War I, when he was making art from found objects. One of these, Fountain (1917), an ordinary urinal, has achieved considerable prominence and influence on art. Anti-art is a feature of work by Situationist International,[31] the lo-fi Mail art movement, and the Young British Artists, though it is a form still rejected by the Stuckists, who describe themselves as anti-anti-art.

Art, class, and value

Art has been perceived by some as belonging to some social classes and often excluding others. In this context, art is seen as an upper-class activity associated with wealth, the ability to purchase art, and the leisure required to pursue or enjoy it. For example, the palaces of Versailles or the Hermitage in St. Petersburg with their vast collections of art, amassed by the fabulously wealthy royalty of Europe exemplify this view. Collecting such art is the preserve of the rich, or of governments and institutions.

Fine and expensive goods have been popular markers of status in many cultures, and they continue to be so today. There has been a cultural push in the other direction since at least 1793, when the Louvre, which had been a private palace of the Kings of France, was opened to the public as an art museum during the French Revolution. Most modern public museums and art education programs for children in schools can be traced back to this impulse to have art available to everyone. Museums in the United States tend to be gifts from the very rich to the masses (The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, for example, was created by John Taylor Johnston, a railroad executive whose personal art collection seeded the museum.) But despite all this, at least one of the important functions of art in the 21st century remains as a marker of wealth and social status.

Performance by Joseph Beuys, 1978 : Everyone an artist — On the way to the libertarian form of the social organism.There have been attempts by artists to create art that can not be bought by the wealthy as a status object. One of the prime original motivators of much of the art of the late 1960s and 1970s was to create art that could not be bought and sold. It is "necessary to present something more than mere objects" said the major post war German artist Joseph Beuys. This time period saw the rise of such things as performance art, video art, and conceptual art. The idea was that if the artwork was a performance that would leave nothing behind, or was simply an idea, it could not be bought and sold. "Democratic precepts revolving around the idea that a work of art is a commodity impelled the aesthetic innovation which germinated in the mid-1960s and was reaped throughout the 1970s. Artists broadly identified under the heading of Conceptual art… substituting performance and publishing activities for engagement with both the material and materialistic concerns of painted or sculptural form… [have] endeavored to undermine the art object qua object."

In the decades since, these ideas have been somewhat lost as the art market has learned to sell limited edition DVDs of video works, invitations to exclusive performance art pieces, and the objects left over from conceptual pieces. Many of these performances create works that are only understood by the elite who have been educated as to why an idea or video or piece of apparent garbage may be considered art. The marker of status becomes understanding the work instead of necessarily owning it, and the artwork remains an upper-class activity. "With the widespread use of DVD recording technology in the early 2000s, artists, and the gallery system that derives its profits from the sale of artworks, gained an important means of controlling the sale of video and computer artworks in limited editions to collectors."


goals & motivation
Image by Joost J. Bakker IJmuiden
Art is the product or process of deliberately arranging items (often with symbolic significance) in a way that influences and affects one or more of the senses, emotions, and intellect. It encompasses a diverse range of human activities, creations, and modes of expression, including music, literature, film, photography, sculpture, and paintings. The meaning of art is explored in a branch of philosophy known as aesthetics, and even disciplines such as history and psychology analyze its relationship with humans and generations.

Traditionally, the term art was used to refer to any skill or mastery. This conception changed during the Romantic period, when art came to be seen as "a special faculty of the human mind to be classified with religion and science". Generally, art is made with the intention of stimulating thoughts and emotions.

Evaluation

Philosopher Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches to assessing the aesthetic value of art: the realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans. An object may be characterized by the intentions, or lack thereof, of its creator, regardless of its apparent purpose. A cup, which ostensibly can be used as a container, may be considered art if intended solely as an ornament, while a painting may be deemed craft if mass-produced.

The nature of art has been described by Wollheim as "one of the most elusive of the traditional problems of human culture". It has been defined as a vehicle for the expression or communication of emotions and ideas, a means for exploring and appreciating formal elements for their own sake, and as mimesis or representation. Leo Tolstoy identified art as a use of indirect means to communicate from one person to another. Benedetto Croce and R.G. Collingwood advanced the idealist view that art expresses emotions, and that the work of art therefore essentially exists in the mind of the creator. The theory of art as form has its roots in the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and was developed in the early twentieth century by Roger Fry and Clive Bell. Art as mimesis or representation has deep roots in the philosophy of Aristotle. More recently, thinkers influenced by Martin Heidegger have interpreted art as the means by which a community develops for itself a medium for self-expression and interpretation.

Definition

Britannica Online defines art as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others." By this definition of the word, artistic works have existed for almost as long as humankind: from early pre-historic art to contemporary art; however, some theories restrict the concept to modern Western societies. Adorno said in 1970, "It is now taken for granted that nothing which concerns art can be taken for granted any more: neither art itself, nor art in relationship to the whole, nor even the right of art to exist." The first and broadest sense of art is the one that has remained closest to the older Latin meaning, which roughly translates to "skill" or "craft." A few examples where this meaning proves very broad include artifact, artificial, artifice, medical arts, and military arts. However, there are many other colloquial uses of the word, all with some relation to its etymology.

20th-century Rwandan bottle. Artistic works may serve practical functions, in addition to their decorative value.The second and more recent sense of the word art is as an abbreviation for creative art or fine art. Fine art means that a skill is being used to express the artist’s creativity, or to engage the audience’s aesthetic sensibilities, or to draw the audience towards consideration of the finer things. Often, if the skill is being used in a common or practical way, people will consider it a craft instead of art. Likewise, if the skill is being used in a commercial or industrial way, it will be considered commercial art instead of fine art. On the other hand, crafts and design are sometimes considered applied art. Some art followers have argued that the difference between fine art and applied art has more to do with value judgments made about the art than any clear definitional difference. However, even fine art often has goals beyond pure creativity and self-expression. The purpose of works of art may be to communicate ideas, such as in politically, spiritually, or philosophically motivated art; to create a sense of beauty (see aesthetics); to explore the nature of perception; for pleasure; or to generate strong emotions. The purpose may also be seemingly nonexistent.

Art can describe several things: a study of creative skill, a process of using the creative skill, a product of the creative skill, or the audience’s experience with the creative skill. The creative arts (art as discipline) are a collection of disciplines (arts) that produce artworks (art as objects) that are compelled by a personal drive (art as activity) and echo or reflect a message, mood, or symbolism for the viewer to interpret (art as experience). Artworks can be defined by purposeful, creative interpretations of limitless concepts or ideas in order to communicate something to another person. Artworks can be explicitly made for this purpose or interpreted on the basis of images or objects. Art is something that stimulates an individual’s thoughts, emotions, beliefs, or ideas through the senses. It is also an expression of an idea and it can take many different forms and serve many different purposes. Although the application of scientific knowledge to derive a new scientific theory involves skill and results in the "creation" of something new, this represents science only and is not categorized as art.

History

Sculptures, cave paintings, rock paintings, and petroglyphs from the Upper Paleolithic dating to roughly 40,000 years ago have been found, but the precise meaning of such art is often disputed because so little is known about the cultures that produced them. The oldest art objects in the world—a series of tiny, drilled snail shells about 75,000 years old—were discovered in a South African cave.

Cave painting of a horse from the Lascaux caves, c. 16,000 BP.Many great traditions in art have a foundation in the art of one of the great ancient civilizations: Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, India, China, Ancient Greece, Rome, as well as Inca, Maya, and Olmec. Each of these centers of early civilization developed a unique and characteristic style in its art. Because of the size and duration of these civilizations, more of their art works have survived and more of their influence has been transmitted to other cultures and later times. Some also have provided the first records of how artists worked. For example, this period of Greek art saw a veneration of the human physical form and the development of equivalent skills to show musculature, poise, beauty, and anatomically correct proportions.

In Byzantine and Medieval art of the Western Middle Ages, much art focused on the expression of Biblical and nonmaterial truths, and used styles that showed the higher unseen glory of a heavenly world, such as the use of gold in the background of paintings, or glass in mosaics or windows, which also presented figures in idealized, patterned (flat) forms. Nevertheless a classical realist tradition persisted in small Byzantine works, and realism steadily grew in the art of Catholic Europe.

Renaissance art had a greatly increased emphasis on the realistic depiction of the material world, and the place of humans in it, reflected in the corporeality of the human body, and development of a systematic method of graphical perspective to depict recession in a three-dimensional picture space.

The stylized signature of Sultan Mahmud II of the Ottoman Empire was written in Arabic calligraphy. It reads Mahmud Khan son of Abdulhamid is forever victorious.In the east, Islamic art’s rejection of iconography led to emphasis on geometric patterns, calligraphy, and architecture. Further east, religion dominated artistic styles and forms too. India and Tibet saw emphasis on painted sculptures and dance, while religious painting borrowed many conventions from sculpture and tended to bright contrasting colors with emphasis on outlines. China saw the flourishing of many art forms: jade carving, bronzework, pottery (including the stunning terracotta army of Emperor Qin), poetry, calligraphy, music, painting, drama, fiction, etc. Chinese styles vary greatly from era to era and each one is traditionally named after the ruling dynasty. So, for example, Tang Dynasty paintings are monochromatic and sparse, emphasizing idealized landscapes, but Ming Dynasty paintings are busy and colorful, and focus on telling stories via setting and composition. Japan names its styles after imperial dynasties too, and also saw much interplay between the styles of calligraphy and painting. Woodblock printing became important in Japan after the 17th century.

Painting by Song Dynasty artist Ma Lin, c. 1250. 24,8 × 25,2 cm.The western Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century saw artistic depictions of physical and rational certainties of the clockwork universe, as well as politically revolutionary visions of a post-monarchist world, such as Blake’s portrayal of Newton as a divine geometer, or David’s propagandistic paintings. This led to Romantic rejections of this in favor of pictures of the emotional side and individuality of humans, exemplified in the novels of Goethe. The late 19th century then saw a host of artistic movements, such as academic art, Symbolism, impressionism and fauvism among others.

The history of twentieth century art is a narrative of endless possibilities and the search for new standards, each being torn down in succession by the next. Thus the parameters of Impressionism, Expressionism, Fauvism, Cubism, Dadaism, Surrealism, etc. cannot be maintained very much beyond the time of their invention. Increasing global interaction during this time saw an equivalent influence of other cultures into Western art, such as Pablo Picasso being influenced by African sculpture. Japanese woodblock prints (which had themselves been influenced by Western Renaissance draftsmanship) had an immense influence on Impressionism and subsequent development. Later, African sculptures were taken up by Picasso and to some extent by Matisse. Similarly, the west has had huge impacts on Eastern art in the 19th and 20th centuries, with originally western ideas like Communism and Post-Modernism exerting a powerful influence on artistic styles.

Modernism, the idealistic search for truth, gave way in the latter half of the 20th century to a realization of its unattainability. Relativism was accepted as an unavoidable truth, which led to the period of contemporary art and postmodern criticism, where cultures of the world and of history are seen as changing forms, which can be appreciated and drawn from only with irony. Furthermore the separation of cultures is increasingly blurred and some argue it is now more appropriate to think in terms of a global culture, rather than regional cultures.

Characteristics

Art tends to facilitate intuitive rather than rational understanding, and is usually consciously created with this intention.[citation needed] Fine art intentionally serves no other purpose.[dubious – discuss] As a result of this impetus, works of art are elusive, refractive to attempts at classification, because they can be appreciated in more than one way, and are often susceptible to many different interpretations. In the case of Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa, special knowledge concerning the shipwreck that the painting depicts is not a prerequisite to appreciating it, but allows the appreciation of Géricault’s political intentions in the piece. Even art that superficially depicts a mundane event or object, may invite reflection upon elevated themes.

Traditionally, the highest achievements of art demonstrate a high level of ability or fluency within a medium. This characteristic might be considered a point of contention, since many modern artists (most notably, conceptual artists) do not themselves create the works they conceive, or do not even create the work in a conventional, demonstrative sense. Art has a transformative capacity: it confers particularly appealing or aesthetically satisfying structures or forms upon an original set of unrelated, passive constituents.

Forms, genres, media, and styles

The creative arts are often divided into more specific categories, each related to its technique, or medium, such as decorative arts, plastic arts, performing arts, or literature. Unlike scientific fields, art is one of the few subjects that are academically organized according to technique [1]. An artistic medium is the substance or material the artistic work is made from, and may also refer to the technique used. For example, paint is a medium used in painting, and paper is a medium used in drawing.

An art form is the specific shape, or quality an artistic expression takes. The media used often influence the form. For example, the form of a sculpture must exist in space in three dimensions, and respond to gravity. The constraints and limitations of a particular medium are thus called its formal qualities. To give another example, the formal qualities of painting are the canvas texture, color, and brush texture. The formal qualities of video games are non-linearity, interactivity and virtual presence. The form of a particular work of art is determined by both the formal qualities of the media, and the intentions of the artist.

A genre is a set of conventions and styles within a particular medium. For instance, well recognized genres in film are western, horror and romantic comedy. Genres in music include death metal and trip hop. Genres in painting include still life and pastoral landscape. A particular work of art may bend or combine genres but each genre has a recognizable group of conventions, clichés and tropes. (One note: the word genre has a second older meaning within painting; genre painting was a phrase used in the 17th to 19th centuries to refer specifically to paintings of scenes of everyday life and can still be used in this way.)

The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai (Japanese, 1760–1849), colored woodcut print.The style of an artwork, artist, or movement is the distinctive method and form followed by the respective art. Any loose brushy, dripped or poured abstract painting is called expressionistic. Often a style is linked with a particular historical period, set of ideas, and particular artistic movement. So Jackson Pollock is called an Abstract Expressionist.

Because a particular style may have specific cultural meanings, it is important to be sensitive to differences in technique. Roy Lichtenstein’s (1923–1997) paintings are not pointillist, despite his uses of dots, because they are not aligned with the original proponents of Pointillism. Lichtenstein used Ben-Day dots: they are evenly spaced and create flat areas of color. Dots of this type, used in halftone printing, were originally used in comic strips and newspapers to reproduce color. Lichtenstein thus uses the dots as a style to question the "high" art of painting with the "low" art of comics – to comment on class distinctions in culture. Lichtenstein is thus associated with the American Pop art movement (1960s). Pointillism is a technique in late Impressionism (1880s), developed especially by the artist Georges Seurat, that employs dots that are spaced in a way to create variation in color and depth in an attempt to paint images that were closer to the way people really see color. Both artists use dots, but the particular style and technique relate to the artistic movement adopted by each artist.

These are all ways of beginning to define a work of art, to narrow it down. "Imagine you are an art critic whose mission is to compare the meanings you find in a wide range of individual artworks. How would you proceed with your task? One way to begin is to examine the materials each artist selected in making an object, image video, or event. The decision to cast a sculpture in bronze, for instance, inevitably effects its meaning; the work becomes something different from how it might be if it had been cast in gold or plastic or chocolate, even if everything else about the artwork remains the same. Next, you might examine how the materials in each artwork have become an arrangement of shapes, colors, textures, and lines. These, in turn, are organized into various patterns and compositional structures. In your interpretation, you would comment on how salient features of the form contribute to the overall meaning of the finished artwork. [But in the end] the meaning of most artworks… is not exhausted by a discussion of materials, techniques, and form. Most interpretations also include a discussion of the ideas and feelings the artwork engenders."

Skill and craft

Art can connote a sense of trained ability or mastery of a medium. Art can also simply refer to the developed and efficient use of a language to convey meaning with immediacy and or depth. Art is an act of expressing feelings, thoughts, and observations. There is an understanding that is reached with the material as a result of handling it, which facilitates one’s thought processes. A common view is that the epithet "art", particular in its elevated sense, requires a certain level of creative expertise by the artist, whether this be a demonstration of technical ability or an originality in stylistic approach such as in the plays of Shakespeare, or a combination of these two. Traditionally skill of execution was viewed as a quality inseparable from art and thus necessary for its success; for Leonardo da Vinci, art, neither more nor less than his other endeavors, was a manifestation of skill. Rembrandt’s work, now praised for its ephemeral virtues, was most admired by his contemporaries for its virtuosity. At the turn of the 20th century, the adroit performances of John Singer Sargent were alternately admired and viewed with skepticism for their manual fluency, yet at nearly the same time the artist who would become the era’s most recognized and peripatetic iconoclast, Pablo Picasso, was completing a traditional academic training at which he excelled.

A common contemporary criticism of some modern art occurs along the lines of objecting to the apparent lack of skill or ability required in the production of the artistic object. In conceptual art, Marcel Duchamp’s "Fountain" is among the first examples of pieces wherein the artist used found objects ("ready-made") and exercised no traditionally recognised set of skills. Tracey Emin’s My Bed, or Damien Hirst’s The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living follow this example and also manipulate the mass media. Emin slept (and engaged in other activities) in her bed before placing the result in a gallery as work of art. Hirst came up with the conceptual design for the artwork but has left most of the eventual creation of many works to employed artisans. Hirst’s celebrity is founded entirely on his ability to produce shocking concepts. The actual production in many conceptual and contemporary works of art is a matter of assembly of found objects. However there are many modernist and contemporary artists who continue to excel in the skills of drawing and painting and in creating hands-on works of art.

Value judgment

Somewhat in relation to the above, the word art is also used to apply judgments of value, as in such expressions as "that meal was a work of art" (the cook is an artist), or "the art of deception", (the highly attained level of skill of the deceiver is praised). It is this use of the word as a measure of high quality and high value that gives the term its flavor of subjectivity.

Making judgments of value requires a basis for criticism. At the simplest level, a way to determine whether the impact of the object on the senses meets the criteria to be considered art is whether it is perceived to be attractive or repulsive. Though perception is always colored by experience, and is necessarily subjective, it is commonly understood that what is not somehow aesthetically satisfying cannot be art. However, "good" art is not always or even regularly aesthetically appealing to a majority of viewers. In other words, an artist’s prime motivation need not be the pursuit of the aesthetic. Also, art often depicts terrible images made for social, moral, or thought-provoking reasons. For example, Francisco Goya’s painting depicting the Spanish shootings of 3rd of May 1808 is a graphic depiction of a firing squad executing several pleading civilians. Yet at the same time, the horrific imagery demonstrates Goya’s keen artistic ability in composition and execution and produces fitting social and political outrage. Thus, the debate continues as to what mode of aesthetic satisfaction, if any, is required to define ‘art’.

The assumption of new values or the rebellion against accepted notions of what is aesthetically superior need not occur concurrently with a complete abandonment of the pursuit of what is aesthetically appealing. Indeed, the reverse is often true, that the revision of what is popularly conceived of as being aesthetically appealing allows for a re-invigoration of aesthetic sensibility, and a new appreciation for the standards of art itself. Countless schools have proposed their own ways to define quality, yet they all seem to agree in at least one point: once their aesthetic choices are accepted, the value of the work of art is determined by its capacity to transcend the limits of its chosen medium to strike some universal chord by the rarity of the skill of the artist or in its accurate reflection in what is termed the zeitgeist.

Communication

Art is often intended to appeal to and connect with human emotion. It can arouse aesthetic or moral feelings, and can be understood as a way of communicating these feelings. Artists express something so that their audience is aroused to some extent, but they do not have to do so consciously. Art explores what is commonly termed as the human condition; that is, essentially what it is to be human. Effective art often brings about some new insight concerning the human condition either singly or en masse, which is not necessarily always positive, or necessarily widens the boundaries of collective human ability. The degree of skill possessed by an artist will affect his or her ability to trigger an emotional response and thereby provide new insights, the ability to manipulate them at will shows exemplary skill and determination.

Purpose of art

Art has had a great number of different functions throughout its history, making its purpose difficult to abstract or quantify to any single concept. This does not imply that the purpose of Art is "vague", but that it has had many unique, different reasons for being created. Some of these functions of Art are provided in the following outline. The different purposes of art may be grouped according to those that are non-motivated, and those that are motivated (Levi-Strauss).

Non-motivated functions of art

The non-motivated purposes of art are those that are integral to being human, transcend the individual, or do not fulfill a specific external purpose. Aristotle said, "Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature." [14] In this sense, Art, as creativity, is something humans must do by their very nature (i.e., no other species creates art), and is therefore beyond utility.

1.Basic human instinct for harmony, balance, rhythm. Art at this level is not an action or an object, but an internal appreciation of balance and harmony (beauty), and therefore an aspect of being human beyond utility.
"Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature. Next, there is the instinct for ‘harmony’ and rhythm, meters being manifestly sections of rhythm. Persons, therefore, starting with this natural gift developed by degrees their special aptitudes, till their rude improvisations gave birth to Poetry." -Aristotle

2.Experience of the mysterious. Art provides a way to experience one’s self in relation to the universe. This experience may often come unmotivated, as one appreciates art, music or poetry.
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and science." -Albert Einstein

3.Expression of the imagination. Art provide a means to express the imagination in non-grammatic ways that are not tied to the formality of spoken or written language. Unlike words, which come in sequences and each of which have a definite meaning, art provides a range of forms, symbols and ideas with meanings that are maleable.
"Jupiter’s eagle [as an example of art] is not, like logical (aesthetic) attributes of an object, the concept of the sublimity and majesty of creation, but rather something else – something that gives the imagination an incentive to spread its flight over a whole host of kindred representations that provoke more thought than admits of expression in a concept determined by words. They furnish an aesthetic idea, which serves the above rational idea as a substitute for logical presentation, but with the proper function, however, of animating the mind by opening out for it a prospect into a field of kindred representations stretching beyond its ken." -Immanuel Kant

4.Universal communication. Art allows the individual to express things toward the world as a whole.[according to whom?] Earth artists often create art in remote locations that will never be experienced by another person. The practice of placing a cairn, or pile of stones at the top of a mountain, is an example. (Note: This need not suggest a particular view of God, or religion.) Art created in this way is a form of communication between the individual and the world as a whole.[citation needed]
5.Ritualistic and symbolic functions. In many cultures, art is used in rituals, performances and dances as a decoration or symbol. While these often have no specific utilitarian (motivated) purpose, anthropologists know that they often serve a purpose at the level of meaning within a particular culture. This meaning is not furnished by any one individual, but is often the result of many generations of change, and of a cosmological relationship within the culture.
"Most scholars who deal with rock paintings or objects recovered from prehistoric contexts that cannot be explained in utilitarian terms and are thus categorized as decorative, ritual or symbolic, are aware of the trap posed by the term ‘art’." -Silva Tomaskova

Motivated functions of art

Motivated purposes of art refer to intentional, conscious actions on the part of the artists or creator. These may be to bring about political change, to comment on an aspect of society, to convey a specific emotion or mood, to address personal psychology, to illustrate another discipline, to (with commercial arts) to sell a product, or simply as a form of communication.

1.Communication. Art, at its simplest, is a form of communication. As most forms of communication have an intent or goal directed toward another individual, this is a motivated purpose. Illustrative arts, such as scientific illustration, are a form of art as communication. Maps are another example. However, the content need not be scientific. Emotions, moods and feelings are also communicated through art.
"[Art is a set of] artefacts or images with symbolic meanings as a means of communication." -Steve Mithen

2.Art as entertainment. Art may seek to bring about a particular emotion or mood, for the purpose of relaxing or entertaining the viewer. This is often the function of the art industries of Motion Pictures and Video Games.
3.The Avante-Garde. Art for political change. One of the defining functions of early twentieth century art has been to use visual images to bring about political change. Art movements that had this goal—Dadaism, Surrealism, Russian Constructivism, and Abstract Expressionism, among others—are collectively referred to as the avante-garde arts.
"By contrast, the realistic attitude, inspired by positivism, from Saint Thomas Aquinas to Anatole France, clearly seems to me to be hostile to any intellectual or moral advancement. I loathe it, for it is made up of mediocrity, hate, and dull conceit. It is this attitude which today gives birth to these ridiculous books, these insulting plays. It constantly feeds on and derives strength from the newspapers and stultifies both science and art by assiduously flattering the lowest of tastes; clarity bordering on stupidity, a dog’s life." -André Breton (Surrealism)

4.Art for psychological and healing purposes. Art is also used by art therapists, psychotherapists and clinical psychologists as art therapy. The Diagnostic Drawing Series, for example, is used to determine the personality and emotional functioning of a patient. The end product is not the principal goal in this case, but rather a process of healing, through creative acts, is sought. The resultant piece of artwork may also offer insight into the troubles experienced by the subject and may suggest suitable approaches to be used in more conventional forms of psychiatric therapy.
5.Art for social inquiry, subversion and/or anarchy. While similar to art for political change, subversive or deconstructivist art may seek to question aspects of society without any specific political goal. In this case, the function of art may be simply to criticize some aspect of society.

Spray-paint graffiti on a wall in Rome.Graffiti art and other types of street art are graphics and images that are spray-painted or stencilled on publicly viewable walls, buildings, buses, trains, and bridges, usually without permission. Certain art forms, such as graffiti, may also be illegal when they break laws (in this case vandalism).
6.Art for propaganda, or commercialism. Art is often utilized as a form of propaganda, and thus can be used to subtly influence popular conceptions or mood. In a similar way, art that tries to sell a product also influences mood and emotion. In both cases, the purpose of art here is to subtly manipulate the viewer into a particular emotional or psychological response toward a particular idea or object.
The functions of art described above are not mutually exclusive, as many of them may overlap. For example, art for the purpose of entertainment may also seek to sell a product, i.e. the movie or video game.

Controversial art

Théodore Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa (c. 1820), was a social commentary on a current event, unprecedented at the time. Édouard Manet’s Le Déjeuner sur l’Herbe (1863), was considered scandalous not because of the nude woman, but because she is seated next to men fully dressed in the clothing of the time, rather than in robes of the antique world. John Singer Sargent’s Madame Pierre Gautreau (Madam X) (1884), caused a huge uproar over the reddish pink used to color the woman’s ear lobe, considered far too suggestive and supposedly ruining the high-society model’s reputation.

In the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937) used arresting cubist techniques and stark monochromatic oils, to depict the harrowing consequences of a contemporary bombing of a small, ancient Basque town. Leon Golub’s Interrogation III (1981), depicts a female nude, hooded detainee strapped to a chair, her legs open to reveal her sexual organs, surrounded by two tormentors dressed in everyday clothing. Andres Serrano’s Piss Christ (1989) is a photograph of a crucifix, sacred to the Christian religion and representing Christ’s sacrifice and final suffering, submerged in a glass of the artist’s own urine. The resulting uproar led to comments in the United States Senate about public funding of the arts.

Art theories

In the nineteenth century, artists were primarily concerned with ideas of truth and beauty. The aesthetic theorist John Ruskin, who championed what he saw as the naturalism of J. M. W. Turner, saw art’s role as the communication by artifice of an essential truth that could only be found in nature.

The definition and evaluation of art has become especially problematic since the 20th century. Richard Wollheim distinguishes three approaches: the Realist, whereby aesthetic quality is an absolute value independent of any human view; the Objectivist, whereby it is also an absolute value, but is dependent on general human experience; and the Relativist position, whereby it is not an absolute value, but depends on, and varies with, the human experience of different humans.

The arrival of Modernism in the late nineteenth century lead to a radical break in the conception of the function of art, and then again in the late twentieth century with the advent of postmodernism. Clement Greenberg’s 1960 article "Modernist Painting" defines modern art as "the use of characteristic methods of a discipline to criticize the discipline itself".Greenberg originally applied this idea to the Abstract Expressionist movement and used it as a way to understand and justify flat (non-illusionistic) abstract painting:

Realistic, naturalistic art had dissembled the medium, using art to conceal art; modernism used art to call attention to art. The limitations that constitute the medium of
painting – the flat surface, the shape of the support, the properties of the pigment — were treated by the Old Masters as negative factors that could be acknowledged only implicitly or indirectly. Under Modernism these same limitations came to be regarded as positive factors, and were acknowledged openly.

After Greenberg, several important art theorists emerged, such as Michael Fried, T. J. Clark, Rosalind Krauss, Linda Nochlin and Griselda Pollock among others. Though only originally intended as a way of understanding a specific set of artists, Greenberg’s definition of modern art is important to many of the ideas of art within the various art movements of the 20th century and early 21st century.

Pop artists like Andy Warhol became both noteworthy and influential through work including and possibly critiquing popular culture, as well as the art world. Artists of the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s expanded this technique of self-criticism beyond high art to all cultural image-making, including fashion images, comics, billboards and pornography.

Classification disputes

Disputes as to whether or not to classify something as a work of art are referred to as classificatory disputes about art.

Classificatory disputes in the 20th century have included cubist and impressionist paintings, Duchamp’s Fountain, the movies, superlative imitations of banknotes, conceptual art, and video games.

Philosopher David Novitz has argued that disagreement about the definition of art are rarely the heart of the problem. Rather, "the passionate concerns and interests that humans vest in their social life" are "so much a part of all classificatory disputes about art" (Novitz, 1996). According to Novitz, classificatory disputes are more often disputes about societal values and where society is trying to go than they are about theory proper. For example, when the Daily Mail criticized Hirst’s and Emin’s work by arguing "For 1,000 years art has been one of our great civilising forces. Today, pickled sheep and soiled beds threaten to make barbarians of us all" they are not advancing a definition or theory about art, but questioning the value of Hirst’s and Emin’s work. In 1998, Arthur Danto, suggested a thought experiment showing that "the status of an artifact as work of art results from the ideas a culture applies to it, rather than its inherent physical or perceptible qualities. Cultural interpretation (an art theory of some kind) is therefore constitutive of an object’s arthood."

Anti-art is a label for art that intentionally challenges the established parameters and values of art; it is term associated with Dadaism and attributed to Marcel Duchamp just before World War I, when he was making art from found objects. One of these, Fountain (1917), an ordinary urinal, has achieved considerable prominence and influence on art. Anti-art is a feature of work by Situationist International,[31] the lo-fi Mail art movement, and the Young British Artists, though it is a form still rejected by the Stuckists, who describe themselves as anti-anti-art.

Art, class, and value

Art has been perceived by some as belonging to some social classes and often excluding others. In this context, art is seen as an upper-class activity associated with wealth, the ability to purchase art, and the leisure required to pursue or enjoy it. For example, the palaces of Versailles or the Hermitage in St. Petersburg with their vast collections of art, amassed by the fabulously wealthy royalty of Europe exemplify this view. Collecting such art is the preserve of the rich, or of governments and institutions.

Fine and expensive goods have been popular markers of status in many cultures, and they continue to be so today. There has been a cultural push in the other direction since at least 1793, when the Louvre, which had been a private palace of the Kings of France, was opened to the public as an art museum during the French Revolution. Most modern public museums and art education programs for children in schools can be traced back to this impulse to have art available to everyone. Museums in the United States tend to be gifts from the very rich to the masses (The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, for example, was created by John Taylor Johnston, a railroad executive whose personal art collection seeded the museum.) But despite all this, at least one of the important functions of art in the 21st century remains as a marker of wealth and social status.

Performance by Joseph Beuys, 1978 : Everyone an artist — On the way to the libertarian form of the social organism.There have been attempts by artists to create art that can not be bought by the wealthy as a status object. One of the prime original motivators of much of the art of the late 1960s and 1970s was to create art that could not be bought and sold. It is "necessary to present something more than mere objects" said the major post war German artist Joseph Beuys. This time period saw the rise of such things as performance art, video art, and conceptual art. The idea was that if the artwork was a performance that would leave nothing behind, or was simply an idea, it could not be bought and sold. "Democratic precepts revolving around the idea that a work of art is a commodity impelled the aesthetic innovation which germinated in the mid-1960s and was reaped throughout the 1970s. Artists broadly identified under the heading of Conceptual art… substituting performance and publishing activities for engagement with both the material and materialistic concerns of painted or sculptural form… [have] endeavored to undermine the art object qua object."

In the decades since, these ideas have been somewhat lost as the art market has learned to sell limited edition DVDs of video works, invitations to exclusive performance art pieces, and the objects left over from conceptual pieces. Many of these performances create works that are only understood by the elite who have been educated as to why an idea or video or piece of apparent garbage may be considered art. The marker of status becomes understanding the work instead of necessarily owning it, and the artwork remains an upper-class activity. "With the widespread use of DVD recording technology in the early 2000s, artists, and the gallery system that derives its profits from the sale of artworks, gained an important means of controlling the sale of video and computer artworks in limited editions to collectors."

Nice Forex Trading photos

Saturday, December 17th, 2011

A few nice forex trading images I found:

EUR201109-123exit
forex trading
Image by Tradingrichmom

Rich Mom’s system signals entry – testing 1-2-3 exit:
10:45 EUR$ sell @ 1.4886, S/L 1.4894, exit with 123 exit formation
Exit 11:30 @ 1.4881 = 5p. gain 45min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom

JPY251109-123exit
forex trading
Image by Tradingrichmom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry – testing 1-2-3 exit:
10:15 $ JPY sell @ 88.09, S/L 88.19, exit with 123 formation
Exit 11:00 @ 87.66 = 42p. profit in 45 min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom

Nice Website Design photos

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Check out these website design images:

http://www.thebridalboutiquebarwell.co.uk
website design
Image by spencewsi
A wordpress website complete with gallery and flash.

Nice Forex Trading photos

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

A few nice forex trading images I found:

GBP141009-123 exit loss
forex trading
Image by Tradingrichmom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry – testing 1-2-3 exit:
11:00 GBP BUY @ 1.5997, S/L 1.5981, exit with 123exit formation
Exit 11:45 @ 1.5989 = 8p. loss

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom

GBP041109-123exit
forex trading
Image by Tradingrichmom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry – testing 1-2-3 exit:
10:30 GBP buy @ 1.6518, S/L 1.6497, exit when 123exit
Exit 11:15 @ 1.6530 = 12p. profit in 45min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom

Nice Scam Reports photos

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

A few nice scam reports images I found:

Sorry… NOT!
scam reports
Image by eyewash
New Yorkers Protest the US0 BILLION (US TRILLION) Wall Street BAILOUT: Wall Street, NYC – September 25, 2008

VOTE YOUR CONSCIENCE on 04 NOVEMBER 2008!

Photographer: a. golden, eyewash design – c. 2008.

Friends,

The richest 400 Americans — that’s right, just four-hundred people — own MORE than the bottom 150 million Americans COMBINED! 400 of the wealthiest Americans have got more stashed away than half the entire country! Their combined net worth is .6 trillion. During the eight years of the Bush Administration, their wealth has increased by nearly 0 billion — the same amount that they were demanding We give to them for the "bailout." Why don’t they just spend the money they made under Bush to bail themselves out? They’d still have nearly a trillion dollars left over to spread amongst themselves!

Of course, they are not going to do that — at least not voluntarily. George W. Bush was handed a 7 billion surplus when Bill Clinton left office. Because that money was OUR money and not HIS, he did what the rich prefer to do — spend it and never look back. Now we have a .5 trillion debt that will take seven generations from which to recover. Why — on –earth – did — our — "representatives" — give — these — robber — barons — $ US850 BILLION — of – OUR — money?

Last week, proposed my own bailout plan. My suggestions, listed below, were predicated on the singular and simple belief that the rich must pull themselves up by their own platinum bootstraps. Sorry, fellows, but you drilled it into our heads one too many times: THERE…IS…NO…FREE… LUNCH ~ PERIOD! And thank you for encouraging us to hate people on welfare! So, there should have been NO HANDOUTS FROM US TO YOU! Last Friday, after voting AGAINST this BAILOUT, in an unprecedented turn of events, the House FLIP-FLOPPED their "No" Vote & said "Yes", in a rush version of a "bailout" bill vote. IN SPITE OF THE PEOPLE’S OVERWHELMING DISAPPROVAL OF THIS BAILOUT BILL… IN SPITE OF MILLIONS OF CALLS FROM THE PEOPLE CRASHING WASHINGTON "representatives’" PHONE LINES…IN SPITE OF CRASHING OUR POLITICIAN’S WEBSITES…IN SPITE OF HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE PROTESTING AROUND THE COUNTRY… THEY VOTED FOR THIS BAILOUT! The People first succeeded on Monday with the House, but failed do it with the Senate and then THE HOUSE TURNED ON US TOO!

It is clear, though, we cannot simply continue protesting without proposing exactly what it is we think THESE IDIOTS should/’ve do/one. So, after consulting with a number of people smarter than Phil Gramm, here’s the proposal, now known as "Mike’s Rescue Plan." (From Michael Moore’s Bailout Plan) It has 10 simple, straightforward points. They are that you DIDN’T, BUT SHOULD’VE:

1. APPOINTED A SPECIAL PROSECUTOR TO CRIMINALLY INDICT ANYONE ON WALL STREET WHO KNOWINGLY CONTRIBUTED TO THIS COLLAPSE. Before any new money was expended, Congress should have committed, by resolution, to CRIMINALLY PROSECUTE ANYONE who had ANYTHING to do with the attempted SACKING OF OUR ECONOMY. This means that anyone who committed insider trading, securities fraud or any action that helped bring about this collapse should have and MUST GO TO JAIL! This Congress SHOULD HAVE called for a Special Prosecutor who would vigorously go after everyone who created the mess, and anyone else who attempts to scam the public in future. (I like Elliot Spitzer ~ so, he played a little hanky-panky…Wall Street hates him & this is a GOOD thing.)

2. THE RICH SHOULD HAVE PAID FOR THEIR OWN BAILOUT! They may have to live in 5 houses instead of 7. They may have to drive 9 cars instead of 13. The chef for their mini-terriers may have to be reassigned. But there is no way in hell, after forcing family incomes to go down more than ,000 dollars during the Bush years, that working people and the middle class should have to fork over one dime to underwrite the next yacht purchase.

If they truly needed the 0 billion they say they needed, well, here is an easy way they could have raised it:

a) Every couple makeing over a million dollars a year and every single taxpayer who makes over 0,000 a year should pay a 10% surcharge tax for five years. (It’s the Senator Sanders plan. He’s like Colonel Sanders, only he’s out to fry the right chickens.) That means the rich would have still been paying less income tax than when Carter was president. That would have raise a total of 0 billion.

b) Like nearly every other democracy, they should have charged a 0.25% tax on every stock transaction. This would have raised more than 0 billion in a year.

c) Because every stockholder is a patriotic American, stockholders should have forgone receiving a dividend check for ONE quarter and instead this money would have gone the treasury to help pay for the bullsh*t bailout.

d) 25% of major U.S. corporations currently pay NO federal income tax. Federal corporate tax revenues currently amount to 1.7% of the GDP compared to 5% in the 1950s. If we raised the corporate income tax BACK to the levels of the 1950s, this would give us an extra 0 billion.

All of this combined should have been enough to end the calamity. The rich would have gotten to keep their mansions and their servants and our United States government ("COUNTRY FIRST!") would’ve have a little leftover to repair some roads, bridges and schools…

3. YOU SHOULD HAVE BAIL OUT THE PEOPLE LOSING THEIR HOMES, NOT THE PEOPLE WHO WILL BUILD AN EIGHTH HOME! There are 1.3 million homes in foreclosure right now. That is what is at the heart of this problem. So, instead of giving the money to the banks as a gift, they should have paid down each of these mortgages by 0,000. They should have forced the banks to renegotiate the mortgage so the homeowner could pay on its current value. To insure that this help wouldn’t go to speculators and those who tried to making money by flipping houses, the bailout should have only been for people’s primary residences. And, in return for the 0K pay-down on the existing mortgage, the government would have gotten to share in the holding of the mortgage so it could get some of its money back. Thus, the total initial cost of fixing the mortgage crisis at its roots (instead of with the greedy lenders) is 0 billion, not 0 BILLION.

And let’s set the record straight. People who have defaulted on their mortgages are not "bad risks." They are our fellow Americans, and all they wanted was what we all want: a home to call their own. But, during the Bush years, millions of the People lost the decent paying jobs they had. SIX MILLION fell into poverty! SEVEN MILLION lost their health insurance! And, every one of them saw their real wages go DOWN by ,000! Those who DARE look down on these Americans who got hit with one bad break after another should be ASHAMED.! We are a better, stronger, safer and happier society when all of our citizens can afford to live in a home they own.

4. THERE SHOULD HAVE BEEN A STIPULATION THAT IF YOUR BANK OR COMPANY GOT ANY OF OUR MONEY IN A "BAILOUT," THEN WE OWN YOU. Sorry, that’s how it’s done. If the bank gives me money so I can buy a house, the bank "owns" that house until I pay it all back — with interest. Same deal for Wall Street. Whatever money you need to stay afloat, if our government considers you a safe risk — and necessary for the good of the country — then you can get a loan, but WE SHOULD OWN YOU. If you default, we will sell you. This is how the Swedish government did it and it worked.

5. ALL REGULATIONS SHOULD HAVE BEEN BE RESTORED. THE REAGAN REVOLUTION IS DEAD! This catastrophe happened because we let the fox have the keys to the hen-house. In 1999, Phil Gramm authored a bill to remove all the regulations that governed Wall Street and our banking system. The bill passed and Clinton signed it. Here’s what Sen.Phil Gramm, McCain’s chief economic advisor, said at the bill signing:

"In the 1930s … it was believed that government was the answer. It was believed that stability and growth came from government overriding the functioning of free markets.

"We are here today to repeal [that] because we have learned that government is not the answer. We have learned that freedom and competition are the answers. We have learned that we promote economic growth and we promote stability by having competition and freedom.

"I am proud to be here because this is an important bill; it is a deregulatory bill. I believe that that is the wave of the future, and I am awfully proud to have been a part of making it a reality."

FOR THIS NOT TO REOCCUR, This BILL SHOULD HAVE BEEN REPEALED! Bill Clinton could have helped by leading the effort for the repeal of the Gramm bill and the reinstating of even tougher regulations regarding our financial institutions. And when they were done with that, they should have restored the regulations for the airlines, the inspection of our food, the oil industry, OSHA, and every other entity that affects our daily lives. All oversight provisions for any "bailout" should have had enforcement monies attached to them and criminal penalties for all offenders.

6. IF IT’S TOO BIG TO FAIL, THEN THAT MEANS IT’S TOO BIG TO EXIST! Allowing the creation of these mega-mergers and not enforcing the monopoly and anti-trust laws has allowed a number of financial institutions and corporations to become so large, the very thought of their collapse means an even bigger collapse across the entire economy. No ONE or TWO companies should EVER have this kind of power! The so-called "economic Pearl Harbor" can’t happen when you have hundreds — thousands — of institutions where people have their money. When we have a dozen auto companies, if one goes belly-up, we DON’T FACE A NATIONAL DISASTER! If we have three separately-owned daily newspapers in your town, then one media company can’t call all the shots (I know… What am I thinking?! Who reads a paper anymore? Sure glad all those mergers and buyouts left us with a STRONG and "FREE" press!). Laws Should have been enacted to prevent companies from being so large and dominant that with one slingshot to the eye, the GIANT FALLS and DIES. And no institution should be allowed to set up money schemes that NO ONE understands. If you can’t explain it in two sentences, you shouldn’t be taking anyone’s money!

7. NO EXECUTIVE SHOULD EVER BE PAID MORE THAN 40 TIMES THEIR AVERAGE EMPLOYEE, AND NO EXECUTIVE SHOULD RECEIVE ANY KIND OF "PARACHUTE" OTHER THAN THE VERY GENEROUS SALARY HE OR SHE MADE WHILE WORKING FOR THE COMPANY. In 1980, the average American CEO made 45 times what their employees made. By 2003, they were making 254 times what their workers made. After 8 years of Bush, they now make over 400 times what their average employee makes. How We have allowed this to happen at publicly held companies is beyond reason. In Britain, the average CEO makes 28 times what their average employee makes. In Japan, it’s only 17 times! The last I heard, the CEO of Toyota was living the high life in Tokyo. How does he do it on so little money? Seriously, this is an OUTRAGE! We have created the mess we’re in by letting the people at the top become bloated beyond belief with millions of dollars. THIS HAS TO STOP! Not only should no executive who receives help out of this mess profit from it, but any executive who was in charge of running his company into the ground should be FIRED before the company receives ANY help.

8. CONGRESS SHOULD HAVE STRENGTHENED THE FDIC AND MADE IT A MODEL FOR PROTECTING NOT ONLY PEOPLE’S SAVINGS, BUT ALSO THEIR PENSIONS AND THEIR HOMES. Obama was correct to propose expanding FDIC protection of people’s savings in their banks to 0,000. But, this same sort of government insurance must be given to our NEVER have to worry about whether or not the money they’ve put away for their old age will be there. This should have meant strict government oversight of companies who manage their employees’ funds — or perhaps it means the companies should have been forced to turn over those funds and their management to the government? People’s private retirement funds must also be protected, but perhaps it’s time to consider not having one’s retirement invested in the casino known as the stock market??? Our government should have a solemn duty to guarantee that no one who grows old in this country has to worry about becoming destitute.

9. EVERYBODY NEEDS TO TAKE A DEEP BREATH, CALM DOWN, AND NOT LET FEAR RULE THE DAY. Turn off your TVs! We are NOT in the Second Great Depression. The sky is NOT falling, Chicken Little! Pundits and politicians have lied to us so FAST and FURIOUS it’s hard not to be affected by all the fear mongering. Even I wrote to and repeated what I heard on the news last week, that the Dow had the biggest one day drop in its history. Well, that was true in terms of points, but its 7% drop came nowhere close to Black Monday in 1987 when the stock market in one day lost 23% of its value. In the ’80s, 3,000 banks closed, but America didn’t go out of business. These institutions have always had their ups and downs and eventually it works out. It has to, because the rich do not like their wealth being disrupted! They have a vested interest in calming things down and getting back into their Jacuzzis before they slip into their million thread-count sheets to drift off to a peaceful, Vodka tonic and Ambien-induced slumber.

As crazy as things are right now, tens of thousands of people got a car loan last week. Thousands went to the bank and got a mortgage to buy a home. Students just back to college found banks more than happy to put them into hock for the next 15 years with a student loan. I was even pre-approved for a USK personal loan. Yes, life has gone on with little-or-no-change (other than the whopping 6.1% umeployment rate, but that happened last month). Not a single person lost any of his/her monies in bank, or a treasury note, or in a CD. And, the perhaps the most amazing thing is that the American public FINALLY didn’t buy the scare campaign. The citizens didn’t blink, instead telling Congress to take that bailout and shove it. THAT was impressive. Why didn’t the population succumb to the fright-filled warnings from their president and his cronies? Well, you can only say ‘Saddam has the bomb’ so many times before the people realize you’re a lying sack of shit. After eight long years, the nation is worn out and simply can’t take it any longer. The WORLD is fed up & I don’t blame them.

10. THEY SHOULD HAVE CREATED A NATIONAL BANK, A "PEOPLE’S BANK." Since they’re really itching to print up a trillion dollars, instead of giving it to a few rich people, why don’t We give it to ourselves? Now that We own Freddie and Fannie, why not set up a People’s bank? One that can provide low-interest loans for all sorts of people who want to own a home, start a small business, go to school, come up with the cure for cancer or create the next great invention. And, now that we own AIG – the country’s largest insurance company – let’s take the next step and PROVIDE HEALTH INSURANCE FOR EVERYONE. MEDICARE FOR ALL! It will SAVE us SO MUCH MONEY in the LONG RUN (not to mention bring peace of mind to all). And, America won’t be 12th on the life expectancy list! We’ll be able to have a longer lifespan, enjoying our government-protected pension and will live to see the day when the corporate criminals who caused this much misery are let out of prison so that We can help re-acclimate them to plain old ordinary, civilian life — a life with ONE nice home and ONE gas-free car invented with help from the People’s Bank.

P.S. Call your Senators NOW !!! —> www.visi.com/juan/congress/

Since they voted against passing the extension of unemployment benefits and skipped out to "campaign" to us to be re-elected…call them and tell them you will vote for the other "guy" if they don’t get their act together!

UPDATE:

The Bailout Is A Truly Evil Disaster And Enabler Pelosi Must Go

We are hearing more and more reports of how badly the ill-advised banker’s bailout is being handled, multi-million dollar bonuses for Paulson’s old cronies at Goldman Sachs, billions going to finance the takeover of rival banks, making the "too big to fail" even bigger, and the taxpayer getting an otherwise rotten deal for their investment. We even heard a Republic senator asking how fast they could blow the money.

NONE of this could have happened without the fawning complicity of Nancy Pelosi, who infamously said it was Bush’s proposal, INSTEAD of coming forward with a robust alternative plan. Just like Bush, she believes she is immune, she believes she is unaccountable, and shame on us if we don’t do everything we can to defeat her this Tuesday, and replace her with Cindy Sheehan.

Here is Cindy’s last TV spot. Please make whatever donation you can to put this ad on the air in these critical final days.

Last Cindy TV Spot Action Page:
www.usalone.com/cindy/donations_tv2.php

There is still time for you to make a real difference. We thank all of our participants who have already donated so generously to make this campaign what it is. For those who cannot make a contribution, please consider helping with the phone banking, and there is a link for that also on the page above.

The one thing we know is that we must continue to speak out. We must continue to challenge. Surrendering is what our current so-called representatives in Congress are so prone to, NOT what we do. Ultimate victory is not only possible, it is assured if we work as hard as we can for real change, not just the rebranding of the same old boys’
network.

And we promise you, immediately after the election we will go right back to work on pure issue advocacy full time, to continue to build the base of action for the future.

Paid for by Cindy Sheehan for Congress

Donations to Cindy Sheehan for Congress are not tax-deductible

Please take action NOW, so we can win all victories that are supposed to be ours, and forward this alert as widely as possible.

If you would like to get alerts like these, you can do so at www.usalone.net/in.htm

Or if you want to cease receiving our messages, just use the function at www.usalone.net/out.htm

Nice Scam Reports photos

Sunday, October 30th, 2011

Check out these scam reports images:

Clothman. Fraudulent claim says Breakthrough charity
scam reports
Image by Alan Stanton
I scanned the leaflet above. It was one of many delivered to homes in Tottenham Hale by companies collecting clothing and other items for "good causes".

This particular company – Clothman Ltd – uses some of the same wording as in leaflets from SHC Collections. For instance: "We urgently need clothing . . . " etc. (Although this does not establish any direct link between the two companies.)

But as you see, the key feature of the Clothman leaflet is a claimed link to Breakthrough – a respected Breast Cancer charity. The leaflet even gives the correct charity registration number.

Breakthrough Breast Cancer completely denies the link and says that the leaflets are fraudulent.
In August 2010 the charity put this statement on its website. I checked back on 3 July 2011. Breathrough’s website carried the same statement.

"FRAUDULENT CLOTHING COLLECTION

"Breakthrough Breast Cancer is aware of fraudulent leaflets being distributed requesting donations of clothes and household goods to raise money for the charity.

"A number of residents have reported that they have received leaflets from Clothman Ltd that claim a donation of £100 will be made to Breakthrough Breast Cancer for every tonne of clothes collected. The leaflets feature a pink ribbon symbol and Breakthrough’s registered charity number.

"Chris Askew, Director of Fundraising at Breakthrough Breast Cancer, says: "We do not receive funding from Clothman Ltd and we are saddened that the suggestion of a charity donation is playing a part in this scam.

"We would encourage people who want to donate unwanted clothing and household items to take them directly to a charity shop, as this will ensure that the full value of the donations will go to a legitimate cause. There are a number of ways that people can support our life-saving work towards a future free from the fear of breast cancer."

"Trading Standards and the police have been notified and are investigating Clothman Ltd to prevent these fraudulent collections from happening in the future. If residents receive a leaflet from Clothman Ltd they should report this to supporterenquiry@breakthrough.org.uk and Consumer Direct (the trading standards help line) 08454 040506."

__________________________________

Companies House shows Clothman Ltd was incorporated on 13 November 2007. But the company was dissolved on 6 April 2010. It had not filed accounts and it should not be trading.

Facebook Hypocrisy
scam reports
Image by gweggyphoto
While Facebook administrators hastily flag and remove innocent pictures of natural breast-feeding Mom’s from member photo albums ala Flickr, the Social Networking site peddles soft-porn and objectification of young Women – many with seemingly artifical breasts – in their very own Facebook Flyer ads with a reckless disregard for their own Terms of Use which ban obscenity.

I should add that the gratuitous sexually exploitive images that accompany the Facebook Flyer banner ad have nothing to do with the product being sold and the that the Making Money From Home web site is largely reported on the Internet to be a Scam. Thanks for caring Facebook.

www.greggscott.com

Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

Check out these small business ideas images:

Thames-Coromandel, New Zealand
Small Business ideas
The highlight 350.org
Hello 350Ich could not, so I took a group photo 70 individual images of people from this 350-Banner. I had planned to gather them all in the form of 350, but in the struggle with it so that I only have a few 350 jetzt.Die Subscribe Day of Action, which I organized in my small town included a presentation of the “Age of Stupid “movie in our local cinema, a” not so dumb ideas hard “on the front of the Community’s rights groups present their climate-friendly businesses & Ideen.Außerdem we put a big gong in the middle of town and invited the audience to hit the 350 times Tag.Wir has over 250 signatures for a Greenpeace campaign sign-on that is going on here in NZ, and I have about 60 “Come on John, Sign On” box on people’s arms (a gimmick aimed at our Prime Minister to him excessive emissions reduction targets set in Copenhagen) It was a really successful day and a lot of fun. Thank you, your team to make it happen. The images on this site are 350-erstaunlich.ProstSheena Beaton

Nice Website Hosting photos

Monday, October 17th, 2011

Check out these website hosting images:

(animated stereo) Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay in the Gilded Age
website hosting
Image by Thiophene_Guy
To animate view the image at original resolution (under "actions" menu) or simply scroll down.

The purpose here is not to duplicate the original image, from the Maritime History of the Great Lakes website, but to generate a downloadable animated gif to assist viewing and presentation.

The website, maintained by Walter Lewis, collects a variety of Great Lakes themed images online, many in the public domain with no restrictions on redistribution. The circa 1900 Underwood & Underwood image, published by Strohmeyer & Wyman, is titled Ocean Steamers at the Docks, Montreal, Canada. Lewis notes that the ship "Californian" is being loaded with grain from a floating elevator. The original image is in the public domain due to expiration of copyright and has no restrictions on use.

Image rotations, resizing, alignment, and animated gif generation done with StereoPhotoMaker, a freeware program by Masuji Suto & David Sykes.

(animated stereo) On Deck of the Santa Maria, 1893
website hosting
Image by Thiophene_Guy
To animate view the image at original resolution (under "actions" menu) or simply scroll down.

The purpose here is not to duplicate the original image, from the Maritime History of the Great Lakes website, but to generate a downloadable animated gif to assist viewing and presentation.

The website, maintained by Walter Lewis, collects a variety of Great Lakes themed images online, many in the public domain with no restrictions on redistribution. The 1893 George Barker image, published by Strohmeyer & Wyman and sold by Underwood & Underwood, is titled On Board the Santa Maria, Columbus’ Flagship. Lewis notes that the ship wasa reproduction for the Chicago World’s Fair that year. The original image is in the public domain due to expiration of copyright and has no restrictions on use.

Image rotations, resizing, alignment, and animated gif generation done with StereoPhotoMaker, a freeware program by Masuji Suto & David Sykes. Rotations: Left, -.3; Right, +0.3; Scaling: Left, 100.1; Right, 99.3.

(animated stereo) Fishing the great lakes circa 1890
website hosting
Image by Thiophene_Guy
To animate view the image at original resolution (click all sizes) or simply scroll down.

The purpose here is not to duplicate the original image, from the Maritime History of the Great Lakes website, but to generate a downloadable animated gif to assist viewing and presentation.

The website, maintained by Walter Lewis, collects a variety of Great Lakes themed images online, many in the public domain with no restrictions on redistribution. The untitled image of a small group of fishermen returning with their catch is circa 1890. This image is in the public domain due to expiration of copyright and has no restrictions on use.

Image rotations, resizing, alignment, and animated gif generation done with StereoPhotoMaker, a freeware program by Masuji Suto & David Sykes.

Nice Scam Reports photos

Monday, October 17th, 2011

some good reports stitch pictures I found:

Comfortable

socialism.
scam reports
The highlight simulated
New Yorkers protest against US0 billion (U.S. billion) Wall Street bailout Wall Street, New York – 25 2008VOTE your conscience on 4 September November 2008 Photo by: a. golden, eyewash station design – c.! 2008.Freunde, The richest 400 Americans – that’s right, only 400-100 people – more than the bottom 150 million Americans combined! 400 of the richest Americans has gone more than half of the country hidden! Their total wealth is 0.6 trillion dollars. In the eight years the Bush Administration, their wealth has increased by nearly 0 billion – the same amount that we ask them to give them for why they do not just spend the money they made “bailout”. To save himself from Bush? They would still nearly one trillion U.S. dollars to distribute themselves left of course they do not – at least not voluntarily. George W. Bush was a 7 billion surplus when Bill Clinton left office to pass. Because money was our money and not his, he did what the rich prefer to do – to use it, and never see again. Now we have a 0.5 trillion debt, seven generations to recover it will. Why – on – the – - soil type – - our – “representative” this – robber – barons – $ US850 billion – - our – money, last week hit my own bailout plan. My suggestions, listed below were based on the unique and simple belief that the rich must pull themselves up by their own platinum bootstrap. Sorry, folks, but it drilled into our heads one too many times: THERE IS … … NO … FREE … Lunch ~! And thanks for encouraging us to hate people on welfare! So it should not have any benefits from the U.S. to you! Last Friday, after having voted against the bailout, in an unprecedented turn of events, house flip-flopped her “no” and said “Yes” in the race version of a “rescue” law agree. DESPITE THE PEOPLE ‘overwhelming rejection of the bailout BILL … DESPITE millions of calls from people like Washington “representative” phone lines … Despite Crashing OUR WEBSITES politicians … Despite hundreds of thousands of people protested across the country … They voted for this bailout! The people succeeded first on Monday with the House but failed to do so by the Senate and so the house is ON U.S. TOO! It is clear, however, can protest, we will not just proceed without this connection exactly what we believe these idiots should be / has you / one. So after consulting a number of people smarter than Phil Gramm, here is the proposal that is now known as “Mike has the bailout.” (From Michael Moore’s rescue plan) It has 10 simple, straightforward points. Are you sure you do not, but should have: 1 Appointed a special prosecutor indict prosecuted anyone on Wall Street who has knowingly contributed to this breakdown. Before any new money has been spent, should Congress be required to have resolution to prosecute anyone who had anything to do with the attempted sacking of our economy. This means that anyone, insider trading, securities fraud or any action that helped to create this collapse must be employed and must go to jail! This congress will be a special prosecutor, who has called strongly for all the chaos, and all others who cheat the public in the future, creating experiments. (I like Elliot Spitzer ~ then he has played a little hanky-panky … Wall Street hates him, and it’s a good thing.) 2 The rich for their own bailout paid! You may have to live in 5 houses instead of the seventh You have to drive 9 cars instead of perhaps 13th The chef for their mini-terriers may be reassigned. But there is no way in hell to go after forcing family incomes more than $ 000 during the Bush years, which has the working people and middle class to more than a cent sign to buy the fork into the next yacht they sollte. Wenn really use 0 billion they say they need, well, here is a simple way they could raise it: a) Every couple should be makeing more than a million dollars a year and every single taxpayer who makes more than 0,000 a year to pay 10% surcharge tax for five years. (It is Senator Sanders plan. He’s like Colonel Sanders, only he is to fry the right chickens.) This means that the rich would still have to pay less income tax than when Carter was president. That would raise a total of 0 billion Euro.b) Like almost every other democracy, they should have a 0.25% tax on every stock transaction. This would more than 0 billion a year raised haben.c) Because each shareholder a patriotic American, shareholders waived receipt of a dividend check for one quarter and instead this money would have the Treasury went to pay for the bullsh * Rettungsaktion.dt ) 25% of large U.S. companies now pay no income tax. Federal corporate tax revenues currently amount to 1.7% of GDP compared to 5% in 1950. If we increase the tax to the level in 1950, this would would have given us an extra 0 billion Euro.All combines this enough to have a catastrophic end. The rich would come to their homes and their employees and our government in the United States (“country first!”) To keep I would have a small remnant of some roads, bridges and schools need to repair … 3 You must save the people losing their homes to build, not the people, eighth at home! There are 1.3 million homes in foreclosure now. This is what is the core of this problem. So give instead the money to the banks as a gift, they must be paid by each of these mortgages have 0000th They should be forced banks to renegotiate mortgages new, so that the homeowner would pay on the current value. To ensure that this assistance is not trying to go to speculators and those who make money by turning houses should bailout is only for people who were primary residences. And in return for 0k to pay down existing mortgage, the State would come to share in the ownership of mortgages, so some could get their money back. Thus, the total acquisition cost for fixing the mortgage crisis at its roots (instead of with the greedy lenders), 0 bn 0 MRD.Und not let the record straight. People who have defaulted on their mortgages are not “bad risks.” They are our fellow Americans, and all she wanted was what we all want: a home to call their own. But had lost during the Bush years, millions of decent-paying job. SIX MILLION fell into poverty! Seven million lost their health insurance! And if, all saw their real wages fall by them, 000! Those who look made on this American DARE, which was a bad break after another should be ashamed.! We are a better, stronger, safer and happier society where all our citizens can afford, in a house in their possession leben.4. It should contain a provision stating that if your bank acquired company or any of our money in a “bailout” Then we will OWN you been. Sorry, that’s how it goes. If the bank gives me money so I can buy a house, the bank “owns” the house until I pay it all back – with interest. Same thing for Wall Street. Whatever money you need to stay afloat, if our government considers you a safe risk – and necessary for a good part of the country – so you can get a loan, but we should have you. If you default, we will sell you. This is how the Swedish government did it and it has funktioniert.5. ALL systems will be restored. Reagan revolution is dead! This catastrophe happened because we let the fox have the keys to the house. IN 1999. Phil Gramm one bill for all the regulations that governed Wall Street and wrote remove our banking system law was signed, and Clinton. Here is what Sen.Phil Gramm, McCain’s chief economic advisor, said Bill signing: “In 1930 … It was believed that the government was the answer it was believed that stability and growth came from government overriding. Functioning of free markets.” We are here today to repeal [that] because we have learned that government is the answer. We have learned that freedom and competition are the answers. We have learned that we promote economic growth and we promote stability by competition and freedom. “I am proud to be here because it is an important law, it is a deregulatory bill. I think the wave of the future and I’m terribly proud to be part of making it a reality. “prevent this from happening again, this is the promise BILL! Bill Clinton was helped by an expansion of efforts to repeal the Gramm bill and the restoration of even tougher regulations regarding our financial institutions. And when they were finished with this, the rules for airlines, the inspection of our food, oil industry, OSHA, and any other entity that affects our daily life is restored. Had all the prudential rules for “bailout” should have enforcement money to them and criminal penalties for all Täter.6. If it is too big to fail, it’s too big to exist! Taking into account the creation of these mega-mergers and not enforcing the monopoly and anti-trust laws, a number of financial institutions and companies are allowed, so great are the very means of their collapse thought an even bigger collapse across the economy . No one or two companies should never have this kind of power! The so-called “economic Pearl Harbor” can not happen if you have hundreds – thousands – of institutions where people of their money. If we have a dozen auto companies, if one goes belly up, we did not face a national disaster! When the three separately-owned daily newspapers in your town, so media companies can not be called all the shots (I know … What do I do? Who has a paper to read more? Sure glad all those mergers and acquisitions, leaving us with a strong and “free” press!). Laws should be adopted for companies large and dominant that with one slingshot to prevent eye, and if this is GIANT. And no institution should be the way to set up money schemes that no one understands. If you can not explain it in two sentences, you should not be under anyone’s money! 7th NOT MORE THAN EVER EXECUTIVE 40 times their average employee will be paid, and no executive power, any form of “parachute”, apart from very generous salary, he or she has made while working for the company to receive. In 1980 the average American CEO made 45 times what their workers. Until 2003 they made 254 times what their employees. After 8 years of Bush, now makes more than 400 times what their average worker. How we have allowed this to happen in listed companies is no reason. In the UK, making the average CEO 28 times what their average employee makes. In Japan there are only 17 times! The last I heard was the CEO of Toyota living the high life in Tokyo. How can he do with so little money? Seriously, it’s a scandal! We need to show we are of the people is inflated at the tip created without faith with millions of dollars. This has to stop! Not only should no executive who helps them get out of this mess, but any executive who has been for the leadership of his company into the ground shall, before the company receives no Hilfe.8 get fired. Congress would have the FDIC stepped up and made it a model not only to protect people’s savings, but also their pensions and their homes. Obama was right to propose expanding FDIC protection of people’s savings in their banks to 0.000. But the same kind of insurance for our government never about the money they put away for her age, it will be given care. Or maybe the company is already forced to return these funds and their management to the government – this should be a strict government oversight of companies that their employees are designed to handle money? People’s private retirement party must also be protected, but perhaps it is time to think, not an investment to retire in the casino known as the stock market? Our government should be a sacred duty to ensure that no one who grows old in this country, always devoid of hat.9 concerns. Everyone needs to calm down to take a deep breath, TO, and not let FEAR rule the day. Turn on your TV! We are not in another Great Depression. The sky is not falling, Chicken Little! Experts and politicians have lied to us so quickly, it’s hard FURIOUS not be affected by all the fear mongering. I also wrote and repeated what I heard on the news last week, the Dow fell the largest 1 day in their history had. Well, that was true with respect to the items, but its 7% drop came nowhere close to Black Monday in 1987 when the stock market on one day lost 23% of their value. In the ’80s, 3,000 banks closed, but America is not out of business. These institutions have always had their ups and downs and eventually it works. It must, because the rich do not like their wealth is not interrupted! They have an interest in running and calming things back in their hot tub before slipping into their million-count sheets, a peaceful, vodka and tonic and Ambien-induced Schlaf.So is crazy the way things are now, one of Thousands of people car loans last week. Thousands took to the bank and got a mortgage to buy a house. Students just back to college to find banks more than happy to put them into hock for the next 15 years with a student loan. I was even approved for a personal loan USK. Yes, life with little in the way-or-no-change (assessed differently than umeployment whopping 6.1%, but it happened last month). Not a single person lost all his / her money in the bank, or a separate note, or a CD. And it is perhaps the most surprising that the American public ultimately did not buy the scare campaign. Citizens do not blink, instead of saying Congress to take that bailout and push it. It was impressive. Why has not the population succumb to the terror-filled warnings from their president and his cronies? Well, one can only say: “Saddam was the bomb ‘so many times before the people you lie for realizing a sack of shit. After eight long years, the nation is worn out, and it simply can not. The world is fed and I give them no Schuld.10. You should have a national bank, “Peoples Bank”. CREATED have because they are really itching to get to a trillion dollars, instead of just a few rich people, why do not we bring them to us ? Now that we own Freddie and Fannie, why not a national bank established? One that low-interest loans to all types of people who want to own a home, start a small business, go to school, come up with cures for cancer or create can deliver the next great invention. And now that we own AIG – the country’s largest insurance company – we take the next step and provide health care insurance for all. Medicare for all! It saves us so much money in the long run (not to mention to bring peace for all). And America is not the life expectancy list of 12, we are able to have a longer life, enjoying our government protect pensions and to see them live, the day the company criminals which has caused so much misery to be released from prison, so we can help you acclimate them over plain old normal civilian life – a life with a nice house and a gas-free car with help from People’s Bank erfunden.PS Call your Senators NOW! —> www.visi.com/juan/congress/ Since they voted against the existence of an extension of unemployment benefits and jumped to “campaign” for us to re-election … Call them and tell them you will vote for the other “types” if they do not get their act together UPDATE: The bailout is a disaster and really evil enabler Pelosi Should GoWir hear more and more reports about how bad the bad advise banker bailout is handled, going multi-million-dollar bonus for old cronies Paulson at Goldman Sachs, billions to finance the takeover of rival banks, so the “too big to fail” even bigger, and taxpayers get an otherwise rotten deal for their investment. We’ve even heard a republican senator to ask how fast the money they could Schlag.Nichts it would be without cringing aiding Nancy Pelosi, said the infamous, it was Bush’s proposal to provide a fairly robust alternative plan happen. Like Bush, she believes she is immune, she thinks she is unpredictable and shame on us if we do not know what we can to fight this Tuesday, and replace it with Cindy Cindy Sheehan.Hier recent TV commercials. Be donation, you can always rely on this ad in the air in these critical last Tagen.Letzte Cindy TV Spot Action page: www .usalone.com/cindy/donations_tv2.php There is still time for you to make a real difference. We thank all our participants who have already donated so generously to this campaign, what it is. For those who can not afford a contribution, please refer to the help of telephone banking, please, and there is a link to those on the page oben.Das All we know is that we continue to talk. We must continue to challenge. Giving up is what our current so-called representatives in Congress are so vulnerable, not what we do. Ultimate Victory is guaranteed is not only possible, if we as hard as we can for real change, not just rebranding the same old boy work “Netzwerk.Und we promise, immediately after the election, we will go back to pure issue advocacy work full time , bauen.Bezahlt continuing basis of action for the future of Cindy Sheehan for Congress donations to Cindy Sheehan for Congress are not tax-absetzbarBitte take action now so that we can win all victories that supposedly will be ours, and forward this warning so far möglich.Wenn you want to get alerts like these, you can do so at www like it. usalone.net / in.htm Or if you stop receiving our messages, use the function on www.usalone. net / out.htm

Nice Blogging For Money photos

Sunday, August 28th, 2011

Some cool blogging for money images:

Is Obama a Mac and Clinton a PC?
blogging for money
Image by nimboo
From the NYT

Is Obama a Mac and Clinton a PC?

By NOAM COHEN
STYLES make fights — or so goes the boxing cliché. In 2008, they make presidential campaigns, too.

This is especially true for the two remaining Democrats, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Reporters covering the candidates have already resorted to traditional analysis of style — fashion choices, manner of speaking, even the way they laugh. Yet, according to design experts, the candidates have left a clear blueprint of their personal style — perhaps even a window into their souls — through the Web sites they have created to raise money, recruit volunteers and generally meet-and-greet online.

On one thing, the experts seem to agree. The differences between hillaryclinton.com and barackobama.com can be summed up this way: Barack Obama is a Mac, and Hillary Clinton is a PC.

That is, Mr. Obama’s site is more harmonious, with plenty of white space and a soft blue palette. Its task bar is reminiscent of the one used at Apple’s iTunes site. It signals in myriad ways that it was designed with a younger, more tech-savvy audience in mind — using branding techniques similar to the ones that have made the iPod so popular.

“With Obama’s site, all the features and elements are seamlessly integrated, just like the experience of using a program on a Macintosh computer,” said Alice Twemlow, chairwoman of the M.F.A. program in design criticism at the School of Visual Arts (who is a Mac user).

It is designed, she said, even down to the playful logos that illustrate choices like, Volunteer or Register to Vote. She likened those touches to the elaborate, painstaking packaging Apple uses to woo its customers.

The linking of Mr. Obama with Mac and Mrs. Clinton with PCs has already become something of a theme during the primary. Early in the campaign, a popular YouTube parody of Apple’s “1984” Super Bowl ad made Mrs. Clinton the face of oppression. This week on The Huffington Post, Douglas T. Kendall, the founder of the Community Rights Counsel, a public interest law firm, made the connection more explicit.

But the designers believe the comparisons — but not perhaps the Orwellian overtones — are apt. In contrast to barackobama.com, Mrs. Clinton’s site uses a more traditional color scheme of dark blue, has sharper lines dividing content and employs cookie-cutter icons next to its buttons for volunteering, and the like.

“Hillary’s is way more hectic, it’s got all these, what look like parody ads,” said Ms. Twemlow, who is not a citizen and cannot vote in the election.

Jason Santa Maria, creative director of Happy Cog Studios, which designs Web sites, detected a basic breach of netiquette. “Hillary’s text is all caps, like shouting,” he said. There are “many messages vying for attention,” he said, adding, “Candidates are building a brand and it should be consistent.”

But Emily Chang, the cofounder of Ideacodes, a Web designing and consulting firm, detected consistent messages, and summed them up: “His site is more youthful and hers more regal.”

Mr. Obama’s site is almost universally praised. Even Martin Avila, the general manager of the company responsible for the Republican Ron Paul’s Web site, said simply, “Barack’s site is amazing.”

But the compliments are clearly double-edged.

While Apple’s ad campaign maligns the PC by using an annoying man in a plain suit as its personification, it is not clear that aligning with the trendy Mac aesthetic is good politics. The iPod may be a dominant music player, but the Mac is still a niche computer. PC, no doubt, would win the Electoral College by historic proportions (with Mac perhaps carrying Vermont).

While Mr. Santa Maria praised barackobama.com for having “this welcoming quality,” he added that it was “ethereal, vaporous and someone could construe it as nebulous.” He said there was a bit of the “Lifetime channel effect, you know, vasoline on the lens” to create a softer effect on the viewer. The “hectic” site that the Clinton campaign is offering could actually be quite strategic, exactly in step with her branding. After all, Mrs. Clinton repeatedly emphasizes how hard she will work for the average American “starting on Day 1.” If she comes across as energetic online, that may simply be her intention. If she shouts a bit more, typographically speaking, that may be the better to be heard.

Unlike the Republicans, the Democratic contenders have incorporated social-networking tools to their sites — allowing supporters to create their own groups, for example, though Mr. Obama is considered the pacesetter in that regard.

“Obama’s campaign gained attention here in the Bay area tech community early on when he launched the My.BarackObama.com portal that allowed for personal blogging from the public, messaging with other supporters, and a host of other tools,” Ms. Chang wrote in an e-mail message.

On the big Internet issues like copyright, Lawrence Lessig, a Stanford law professor who is supporting Mr. Obama, said there was “not a big difference on paper” between the two Democrats. Both tend to favor the users of the Internet over those who “own the pipes.” He is impressed by Mr. Obama’s proposal to “make all public government data available to everybody to use as they wish.”

In the long run, however, Mr. Lessig believes that it is the ability to motivate the electorate that matters, not simple matters of style. And he’s a Mac user from way back.

Valentine tango, Feb 2011 – 09
blogging for money
Image by Ed Yourdon
Some of the early onlookers and spectators, who began arriving about half an hour before the dancing began.

Note: this photo was published in an undated (Feb 21, 2011) Everyblock NYC neighborhoods blog titled "Battery Park City – Lower Manhattan." It was also published in a Jun 14, 2011 blog titled "“BLOGGING TO THE BANK IN 2011 EBOOK” | PRINT MONEY FROM YOUR BLOG."

*************************

As I’ve pointed out in previous Flickr albums (here, for example), I do not dance the tango, and I know little or nothing about the history, the folklore, or even the steps and rhythms of the dance. But after accidentally stumbling upon a local gathering of tango aficionados on a business trip to Washington in the summer of 2009 (see my Flickr set Last tango in Washington), I subsequently learned that there were similar informal events throughout New York City. When I got home, I searched on the Internet and found a schedule of upcoming tango events at several different NYC locations — including Pier 45, where I made my first visit in mid-April of 2010, which led to this set of photos.

I subsequently returned in mid-July, even though I knew it would be much hotter … and indeed, it was so hot that the music did not even begin until 6 PM. But then the dancers began to appear, one after another, until there were a few dozen couples filling a large space under a sheltering canopy, as the sun went down. And since it was the end of a hot summer evening, tango wasn’t the only thing going on: there were people sunbathing, watching the boats on the river, playing frisbee, or simply enjoying themselves. I photographed a little of everything; you can see it in this Flickr set.

There were three more tango gatherings at the edge of the Hudson River in late summer and early autumn of 2010: one was further north, up near 70th Street (here), and two more back at Pier 45 in September and October (here and here). And though I occasionally received email notices of planned events even later in the fall, I assumed that for all practical purposes, it was over — at least until next spring or summer.

But I had forgotten that the tango does not always have to be danced outside, in the open air; it can work just as well indoors. So when I received yet another email notification, announcing the details of a 2011 Valentine’s Day tango event down in the Winter Garden plaza of New York’s World Financial Center — complete with a live orchestra — I decided that it was too tempting to pass up. There was a mid-day event, which I skipped; but that was followed by an evening event, which lasted from 6 PM to 9 PM. Many of the same dancers I had photographed in the spring, summer, and fall were back once again; I have no idea who they are, or what part of the city they live in … but tango is obviously a big part of their lives.

I only stayed until 8 o’clock, but that was enough to take some 700 photos of the dancers, as well as the tourists, and office workers, the romantic couples, and the curious onlookers attracted by the sound of music, and who wondered what on earth was going on. As usual, I deleted about 90% of what I shot, and have uploaded only the best 10% to Flickr; there are also two short 30-second video clips included in this collection — partly because Flickr has a limit of 90 seconds for video clips, but also because I thought a short clip was sufficient to convey the mood. Beyond that, I’ll have to let the pictures speak for themselves.

If you’d like to watch NYC tango dancing on your own, check out Richard Lipkin’s Guide to Argentine Tango in New York City.

Nice Forex Trading photos

Sunday, August 7th, 2011

some good forex trading pictures I have found:

gbp240311
Forex trading
The highlight Tradingrichmom
GBP $ 15min. – 7:30 posted sales 1.6231 Stop Loss 1.6271 1:01 = 1.6191 Limit 1.6230 departure 09.15 clock (manually stop – exit to try to signal) = 1 go pips profit trading more examples see www.flickr.com/photos/tradingrichmom/ make Dagmar trading results, you tell me about WOWFollow twitter.com / tradingrichmom

GBP111109 – jerk
Forex trading
The highlight Tradingrichmom
Rich Mom, the system does not signal post – barDagmarTrading results, although the canal break at 10:15 and 11:15 Price bar • Rule No. 3 of Rich Mamas Online Trading System was not • Protected trade huuuge tendency to 11:30 price you say WOW Follow me on twitter.com / tradingrichmom

Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Check out these small business ideas images:

Kinosaki
small business ideas
Image by john weiss
For the second time in the past twelve months (in April 2003) I was visiting my son who was living and teaching in Kyoto, Japan. This time my wife stayed home and so it was just the two of us. After spending the first night in Kyoto following my flight from Washington, DC, we took the JR train to Kinosaki, one of Japan’s Onsen towns near the Sea Of Japan about a 2 1/2 hour train ride from Kyoto.

Once we checked into our ryokan, we changed into Yukatas, the traditional Japanese robe, an outer jacket called a Tanzen, and a vest. Our maid showed us how to wear them but I got the order confused and when we got to the lobby, the owner and maid both undid what I had done and re-dressed me. Apparently my approach is what is done when dressing for a funeral. Each Ryokan in Kinosaki has its own distinctively designed Yukata, which can be seen as you walk through the streets of the town. At first we thought we were the only ones venturing outside dressed in costume, but soon found it was de rigueur, and even though we are both over 6′ 4", we set out confidently. Not us, but everyone else wore getas, the Japanese wooden clog shoes. There are seven public baths in town and the idea of Kinosaki is to get to as many as you can during your stay.

We went to the Kauno-yu bath. It had both indoor and outdoor bathing areas. After showering we started with the inside bath and then moved into the outside one where the air was cooler and not steamy. But there were too many bugs for me and I went back inside. I was comfortable (having learned to enjoy Japanese baths last fall) and stayed immersed up to my neck (showing that gaijin could stand the hot water, or so I thought) longer than I should have. I felt fine in the water, but when I started to get up my balance was tenuous and I was having trouble lifting my leg up to the ledge so that I could climb out. I remember feeling that I wanted to go to sleep and may have passed out for a moment as I fell along the side of the bath. Joseph was there to catch me. I heard him yell, “get an ambulance” and apparently a number of people rushed to my side. One bather spoke English and helped communication. I stayed prone on the side of the bath, with towels as pillows, and with a few draped over my naked body. So much for demonstrating impressive gaijin bath behavior. I was awake through it all and could only think I was going to miss dinner. Finally, I was able to get up with help, got dressed, and we took a cab the few blocks back to the Ryokan. Despite the ignominy, I was fine. I even got the courage to visit another bath before we left and survived without spectacle.

The next day we went for a walk around town. It is charming and very pedestrian friendly. It is built on both sides of a narrow river with the bath houses located in different sections of town, each one with its own special characteristics. We thought we could walk along the main river, which is just outside the center of town, but could hardly see it as it is separated from town by the railroad tracks that run along the river. The parts of the river we could see were attractive – surrounding mountains and nice views. But all too typically, there were small businesses and run down shacks along the shore. The town itself ignores the main river. Instead it is built around a small stream off the big river, with trees and the inevitable concrete along the banks. It is a pretty town but ignores what should have been a magnificent setting.

Streetcar Future
small business ideas
Image by gregraisman
This street will soon have a street car running on the curb lane. They will remove the parking. The apprimately 6.5 foot wide sidewalks will not be widened. In my opinion, there are better ways to introduce streetcar to this road.

My concern is the current cross-section will place cramped pedestrians too close to moving trains, will place tracks in the far right lane where people are most likely to ride bikes, and will strip parking used by the small businesses on the left side of the frame.

My idea? Parking protected bike lane on the curb with island transit stops for the streetcar.

Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

A few nice small business ideas images I found:

March 8th 2008 – Humiliation Come In Size Small
small business ideas
Image by Stephen Poff
Okay… so… I’ve never really owned a suit before. One would think it’s because I’m just a "Jeans and T-Shirt" guy, and one would be partially correct, but it’s not the full story.

In case you haven’t noticed, I’m a really small guy. It’s something that really kind of haunts me on a day to day basis. I’m the only guy I’ve ever heard of that’s 110 lbs. I have an incredibly small frame and It makes it really tough to find clothes to fit me properly. Especially if I have to buy those clothes from the mens department.

But I needed a suit for our wedding and I wanted something that I could walk away with afterwards and wear for business occasions and other events. We had just done a commercial for a suit company and thought that it might be a good idea to start there.

It wasn’t.

The lady there was friendly, but I don’t think she really understood what a suit is supposed to look like on a man. She kept picking suits many sizes to big for me… jackets that made me look like David Byrne from that video "Letting the Days Go By" (where he had on a GIANT suit). It was not good. But it wasn’t all her fault, they really didn’t have my size.

So then we went to Burlington Coat Factory. Again, they started at two sizes above my size. I then decided to take a trip over to the boys section… where they had coats to fit me. I tried on one to show Tam. She seemed really embarassed to be with me trying on a suit jacket in the little boys section and frankly… I was even more embarassed. The jackets fit, but they were clearly made of quality material… I mean, you don’t need suit for a growing kid to last more than a couple of wear cycles.

So needless to say I was very frustrated. After that we decided to try one more place and we headed over to Men’s Warehouse

I was delighted to find that after just a minute of being in the store and having someone actually measure me, they found a splendid coat for me. Before long I had jacket, pants, shoes, vest and tie… but then we ran into a snag.

The shirt.

They didn’t have a shirt to fit my neck size and couldn’t order one for me. But that was okay right… I’d find a shirt somewhere else. So we paid more than I had ever paid for an outfit before in my life and left to find me a shirt.

We spent about three more hours looking through the men’s section in many stores only to find that they all started a size and half to big for me. Frustrated, I headed to the JCPenny’s boys section and began to look through thier dress shirts. The worst part was having to unpack them from these little bags and try them on. Little boys looked shocked to see me in their dressing rooms. I was humiliated. But after a trying on about 3 shirts, I found a shirt that fit my neck. One size down would’ve fit my neck better, but the sleeves were too short.

After all that, the worst part about it was that it came with this tiny little clip on tie.

I was not amused.

basilico
small business ideas
Image by semiotheque
Helvetica. There’s an upcoming movie, I don’t know if you’ve heard.

So I’ve been doing this for three weeks, and the trend seems to be this: designers will play with lowercase letters, kerning and stroke width when the typeface is sans-serif, and the kinds of places that do this kind of playing are a) small businesses eager to seem modern and hip, b) big old stodgy companies eager to seem modern and hip. I never see pubs and bars with one-word all lowercase Futura or Helvetica. Clubs, yes, but never pubs.

Pubs are all gold wood-cut serifs set on a black field. I will take a few shots of those just so you get an idea.

Coming up soonish: major UK chains and their uses of type, and Holiday type.

Nice Goals & Motivation photos

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

Some cool goals & motivation images:

Glee 1896
goals & motivation
Image by Space Art
Inspirational and motivational poster for all who want to achieve their goal. Buy prints or merchandise from timeship.deviantart.com to support our cause for FREE publishing.

the most satisfying click of all time
goals & motivation
Image by ario_
from 43 things.

thanks to Buster and the 43 Things! Having my goals visible (and as a "personal challenge") really helped with my motivation!

Cadet 1942
goals & motivation
Image by Space Art
Inspirational and motivational poster for all who want to achieve their goal. Buy prints or merchandise from timeship.deviantart.com to support our cause for FREE publishing.

Nice Work From Home photos

Saturday, July 23rd, 2011

A few nice work from home images I found:

01/06/09 – Sent home
work from home
Image by motti82
The phones are not working at the office, so home we go to work

On the edge of Royal Theatre
work from home
Image by Martin Nikolaj
Despite that the mermaid is in China you can still find lovely ladies on the seafront in Copenhagen

Nice Blogging For Money photos

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

A few nice blogging for money images I found:

10/8 Drudge
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

Nice Website Traffic photos

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

A few nice website traffic images I found:

Recent Website Statistics
website traffic
Image by Krypto
Ever since I posted about the 75 bands image my traffic has quadrupled

Traffic signal at Third and Pike, 1931
website traffic
Image by Seattle Municipal Archives
See our website for the story of Seattle’s first stoplight. Item 4842, Engineering Department Photographic Negatives (Record Series 2613-07), Seattle Municipal Archives.

Nice Website Design photos

Wednesday, July 6th, 2011

A few nice website design images I found:

website design ideas
website design
Image by nadworks
www.olliekav.com

website design ideas
website design
Image by nadworks
bitsamppixels.com

website design ideas
website design
Image by nadworks
designreviver.com

Q&A: I want to start selling my photos, what print service should I use?

Monday, July 4th, 2011

question winter_shadows : I want to sell my photos, what should I use pressure-service ?
I want to sell pictures online … and I thought of an online printing service. Is there anything I should use? I need some professional quality, but also more comfortable because I was in school and determined to cash habe.So all the information you want to get prints of my images for sale of these great … I am new to all this, lol best answer.

answers from SPC I’m using
Adorama, I’m fully on their quality customer service and very satisfied. Good luck with the shoot. (Www.adorama.com)

What do you think? Answer below!

Nice Online Business photos

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Check out these online business images:

Spanair El Caso, en el Foro they publicidad Online
Online business
The highlight Edan
Pablo Foncillas, Director of Marketing of Spanair, que el sigue un-component of the su compromiso they puntualidad Compañía … Clavadito al Tiempo asignado :-)

Small Business Week Workshop
Online business
The highlight kellypretzer
Online marketing and social media – with presentations from Yelp and Twitter. Over 150 came to our shop! Hotel Whitcomb 5:19:09

Nice Website Design photos

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

Check out these website design images:

Website Interactive Design
website design
Image by VFS Digital Design
Learn more about VFS’s one-year Digital Design program at www.vfs.com/digitaldesign.

Website Interactive Design
website design
Image by VFS Digital Design
Learn more about VFS’s one-year Digital Design program at www.vfs.com/digitaldesign.

Nice Forex Trading photos

Friday, June 17th, 2011

A few nice forex trading images I found:

If this is not a real owl, then what the heck is it doing up here in this tree?
forex trading
Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: this photo was published in an undated (Mar 2010) EveryBlock New York City blog titled "1 – 99 block of W. 72nd St.." It was also published in an undated (Mar 2010) Owl City – Fireflies blog titled "I’d Like to Make Myself Believe that Planet Earth Turns Slowly." It was also published in a Mar 24, 2010 MatadorLife blog titled "Photo Essay: People Watching in Verdi Square, New York City." And it was published in an undated (mid-Nov 2010) Top Music Video blog titled "How to Read a Forex Chart." It was also published in an undated (mid-Nov 2010) MyForexPartners-dot-com blog, with the same title and detailed notes that I had written on this Flickr page. And it was published in a Dec 10, 2010 blog titled "How To Trade Forex."

Moving into 2011, the photo was published in a blog titled "Forex Trading Education: Preparing yourself for Profit and Risks Involved."

*****************

This is a continuation of a set that I created in 2009 (shown here ) and 2008 (shown here ) to show a variety of scenes and people in the small park known as Verdi Square, located at 72nd Street and Broadway in New York City’s Upper West Side.

PopTech 2009 attendees, day 3 – 38
forex trading
Image by Ed Yourdon
Note: with rare exceptions, I don’t know the names of any of the individuals photographed in this set. If you know of them, please feel free to add a "tag" on the Flickr page; or if you know anyone who attended Pop!Tech this year, please tell them where they can find the Flickr set, so they can see whether they’re included among all the photos…

Note: this photo was published in a Nov 22, 2010 Forex Currency Trading Exchange blog titled "What is the best way to invest money- 100k$ , long terms from 5-7 years?" It was also published in a Jan 16, 2011 Finance News blog, with the same title as the caption that I used on this Flickr page. And it was published in an undated (early Apr 2011) blog titled "Forex Trading Secret System."

*********************************************************

For approximately the sixth time since 2001, I attended the annual Pop!Tech conference in Camden, Maine; it’s always held in October, and this year, it took place on Oct 22-24. People often ask me what Pop!Tech is all about, and the simple answer is that it deals with the interaction between technology and society — most often in the form of lectures and presentations about the innovative ways that people around the world are using today’s technology to make a positive impact on a wide range of social problems. But rather than depending on my summary of what it’s all about, I recommend that you visit the Pop!Tech web site for more information.

Unlike previous years, I photographed almost every Powerpoint slide presented by each of the speakers throughout the conference. Combined with the photos that I took of conference attendees, that resulted in some 600 images on the first day — which I whittled down to 450 on this Flickr set, but that’s an overwhelming collection for anyone to look at.

For the second and third day of the conference, I decided to separate the photos of attendees from the straightforward photos of speakers and their Powerpoint slides; the speaker/presentation slides from the second and third day of the conference will appear in separate Flickr sets. This set contains about 50 images of attendees from the final day of the conference, and it will give you a good sense of the kind of people who invest their time and money to trek all the way to Camden, Maine to sit on uncomfortable seats for three days indulging in a sensory overload of materials from dozens of impassioned speakers. The attendees are from all over the U.S., and from several other countries too; they include both young and old; men and women; students and professors; academics and practitioners.

Aside from the energy, enthusiasm, and commitment to social change (with or without technology), the other thing that is obviously shared among all of these attendees is the gadgetry they use to stay in touch with the world. You’ll see a predominance of Mac laptops in these photos; and you’ll also see a lot of iPhones and other "smart phones." Keep in mind that people were not chatting on their phones during these presentations; instead, they were using their smart-phones to email, Twitter, chat, and browse the Web.

A couple of technical notes: I used a Nikon D700 for all of these photos, mostly with a 70-300mm zoom lens. I sat in the balcony section of the Camden Opera House, where the conference took place, so I was primarily photographing other people in the balcony section. An equally large number of attendees were seated on the main floor of the building, but I didn’t see much point in photographing the tops of their heads. Because I could increase the ISO setting on the camera all the way up to 6400, I was able to get reasonably good images without a flash. The lights were turned on while I was photographing, but it was fairly dim in some areas; I did my best to compensate with an appropriate "white balance" setting on the camera.

Colorful Old Oil Barrels
forex trading
Image by L.C.Nøttaasen
Colorful Old Oil Barrels
Used @:

1 Iran won’t benefit much from Venezuelan gasoline
worldfocus.org/blog/2009/09/09/iran-wont-benefit-much-fro…
2 Iran won’t benefit much from Venezuelan gasoline
www.heralddeparis.com/iran-won%e2%80%99t-benefit-much-fro…
3 Oil’s Part in the Financial Crisis
www.rff.org/wv/archive/2009/10/20/oils-part-in-the-financ…
4 Tuesday’s Reads
www.rff.org/wv/archive/2009/11/10/tuesdays-reads-17.aspx
5 Interior Secretary Tells Big Oil – Public Lands are Not Your Candy Store
twilightearth.com/energy/oil/interior-secretary-tells-big…
6 Want to Promote Oil and Gas Use? Hire an Environmentalist — Like Big Oil Did
industry.bnet.com/energy/10003292/want-a-powerful-pro-oil…
7 Big Oil Wreaks Havoc in the Amazon, But Communities Are Fighting Back
www.alternet.org/world/145968/big_oil_wreaks_havoc_in_the…
8 Why Oil Prices Will Only Go Up, Why Your World is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller, by Jeff Rubin
internationaltradecommodities.suite101.com/article.cfm/wh…
9 Another Good Reason to Cut Oil Use
motherjones.com/blue-marble/2010/04/another-good-reason-c…
10 A Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash
documentaryfilms.suite101.com/article.cfm/a-crude-awakeni…
11 Why Peru’s Rainforest Is About to Be Decimated While Across the Border Celebrities Rally to Save Ecuador’s Rainforest
www.alternet.org/world/146764/why_peru’s_rainforest_is_ab…
12 Report Feature: Oil Sands Media Monitor
portalfornorthamerica.org/spotlight/2010/05/report-featur…
13 A Thousand Barrels a Second, by Peter Tertzakian
sciencetechbooks.suite101.com/article.cfm/a-thousand-barr…
14 Why Peru’s Rainforest Is About to Be Decimated While Across the Border Celebrities Rally to Save Ecuador’s Rainforest
btragert.blogspot.com/2010/05/why-perus-rainforest-is-abo…
15 blog.hmns.org/?p=6761
16 EIA Annual Energy Outlook: Where, Exactly, is the Oil Coming From?
www.rff.org/wv/archive/2010/06/02/eia-annual-energy-outlo…
17 The Road To Hell In Defense Procurement Reform Is Paved With Good Intentions
industry.bnet.com/government/10006377/road-to-hell-in-def…
18 So Much for Market Mechanisms
www.progressivefix.com/so-much-for-market-mechanisms
19 Crude Oil, Contango and Roll Yield for Commodity Trading
www.automated-trading-system.com/crude-oil-contango-and-r…
20 Deepwater
ourdhstreets.blogspot.com/2010/05/deepwater.html
21 Oil prices continue declines
envirotell.com/oilnews/580-oil-prices-continue-declines
22 North Sea still has oil to yield
solarpanelquoter.blogspot.com/2010/07/north-sea-still-has…
23 Olie expert overleden na kritische interviews
www.argusoog.org/2010/08/olie-expert-overleden-na-kritisc…
24 Check out these commodities trading images:
commoditiestradingblog.com/2010/08/colorful-old-oil-barrels/
25 Crude oil trading
www.selkblog.com/crude-oil-trading-2/
26 Oil Sands Project Coming To Utah
outside-blog.away.com/blog/2010/09/oil-sands-project-comi…
27 U.S. Military Must End Oil Dependence Within 30 Years, Report Says
blog.cleantechies.com/2010/09/29/u-s-military-must-end-oi…
28 Die Entwicklung des Ölpreises in den letzten zehn Jahren
forex-aktuell.de/die-entwicklung-des-oelpreises-in-den-le…
29 A Few of the Substantial Benefits of Automated Forex Day Trading
forextrading-systems.org/automated-forex/a-few-of-the-sub…
30 Forex Expert Advisor Forum – Forex Expert Advisors That Work
homecareersystem.com/tag/work
31 Forex Market Charts – The Importance of Studying a Forex Chart
www.for-investor.com/forex-market-charts-the-importance-o…
32 Suffle effect
wonderfl.net/c/e0ik
33 Biotechnology Helps Clean Oil
www.biotech-weblog.com/39444424/biotechnology_helps_clean…
34 Potential Drawbacks On Oil ETF
www.etf-weblog.com/35666489/potential_drawbacks_on_oil_et…
35 Le pic pétrolier ? qu’est ce que c’est ?
www.rfi.fr/emission/20101219-1-le-pic-petrolier-est-depas…
36 Automated Forex Trading: The Easy Way To Make Money With Currency Trading?
www.robotstradingtheforex.com/automated-forex-trading/aut…
37 What should we do about Iran’s nuclear issue?
iranians.tk/iranian/what-should-we-do-about-irans-nuclear…
38 Is an alliance of Russia, China, Venezuela, Iran, Cuba too strong for the US to defeat?
iranians.tk/iranian/is-an-alliance-of-russia-china-venezu…
39 1 – Le pic pétrolier ? qu’est ce que c’est ?
www.rfi.fr/emission/20101219-1-le-pic-petrolier-est-depas…
40 Crude Calculation – The Continued Lack of Transparency Over Oil in Sudan
sustainablesecurity.org/resources/crude-calculation-conti…
41 Gasoline prices are rising
www.publiccitizenenergy.org/tag/gasoline-prices/
42 Scottsdale Artificial Grass – The Benefits of Artificial Grass
www.frugalfanny.ca/tag/scottsdale/
43 Russia Wants Gas From 3rd EU Package
www.azglasuvamzaevropa.eu/25338561/russia_wants_gas_from_…
44 Gas mileage conversion chart: Canada & USA
www.cgwerks.com/steveblog/2011/02/01/gas-mileage-conversi…
45 As oil prices rises..
www.energyvox.org/2011/01/04/as-oil-prices-rise-beware-fa…
46 Why Crude Prices Haven’t Spiked Over “Peak Oil” Concerns in Saudi Arabia
www.bnet.com/blog/clean-energy/why-crude-prices-haven-821…
47 Forte hausse du pétrole à Wall Street face à la situation en Lybie
www.france-amerique.com/articles/2011/02/22/forte_hausse_…
48 Farewell, #6! (Hello, Bioheating Fuel)
blog.urbangreencouncil.org/2011/02/farewell-6-hello-biohe…
49 Pétrole cher : qui va régler la douloureuse ?
www.terra-economica.info/Petrole-cher-qui-va-regler-la,16…
50 Airline profits hit by high oil prices, rise in fares possible
www.gadling.com/2011/03/02/airline-profits-hit-by-high-oi…
51 Oil Prices Top 6 Per Barrel
inhabitat.com/oil-prices-top-106-per-barrel-as-crisis-fla…
52 Social Media for Oil and Gas Companies
www.sbkelsick.com/2011/03/01/quickinar-social-media-for-o…
53 Spiraling Oil Prices Will Raise Airfares Further
www.wandalust.com/47696650/spiraling_oil_prices_will_rais…
54 Hello, Washington: Anyone There?
www.thehavananote.com/2011/04/hello_washington_anyone_the…
55 Will it take eight years to find out the role the oil companies played in the war in libya
fdlaction.firedoglake.com/2011/04/20/will-it-also-take-ei…
56 High Gas Prices Expected
calgaryrealestate.ca/2011/05/high-gas-prices-expected/
57 Saudi Prince Worries We Might Find Alternatives to Oil
www.treehugger.com/files/2011/05/saudi-prince-worries-we-…

Nice Website Traffic photos

Tuesday, June 14th, 2011

Check out these website traffic images:

Traffic Light Truss
website traffic
Image by ChrisM70
Here is some info on this truss from the KC Star:
"Marquardt’s latest project, at Interstate 35 and 87th Street Parkway, is unlike anything else in the metropolitan area.

A truss he designed spans 87th Street Parkway and holds a single set of traffic signals controlling all vehicles entering and exiting the intersection.

Marquardt’s creation became operational in early October. But last month, the artistic flourishes became visible.

From Interstate 35, drivers can see blades of grass, crafted of stainless steel, that appear to be growing on the 87th Street bridge railings overhead. Marquardt also designed lighting effects into the pylons that support the truss.

“The image we wanted to portray was a city that is both high-tech and also environmental,” Marquardt said. “On the bridge, we didn’t want to do something flamboyant. It needed to be simple, but good.”

Visit my website: ChrisM70.com.

Nice Local Business photos

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

cool local images:

Business reporter Patrick Danner and James Madore
local business
Year peak of BizJournalism
Patrick Danner (left) in the San Antonio Express-News and James Madore of Newsday at the Reynolds Center workshop on Mining census to listen to local stories. The free workshop was SABEW Conference SMU in Dallas.

local characters
local business
Year peak of Nick Wright Planning
local advertising in booths supermarket parking lot, Carnforth

Nice Online Business photos

Tuesday, May 31st, 2011

Some cool online business images:

Grumbi Doll
online business
Image by University of Salford
Pauline Ng is graduating today (15 July) with first class BA (Hons) Design Futures degree.

In her final project she developed a concept product called the Grumbi Doll which is made from old dusters, tea towels and odd buttons. She now has an online business, grumbi.co.uk, where customers can buy readymade dolls or use instructions to make their own.

www.salford.ac.uk/news/details/1178

Central Desktop provides Web Based Collaboration Tools for Business Teams
online business
Image by www.CentralDesktop.com
Central Desktop delivers a Complete Business Collaboration platform for the mid-market enabling business teams to connect, share, collaborate and manage business both internally and externally on customizable web workspaces. Its solution is delivered as a pure-play web-based platform (SaaS) that combines the most robust collaboration tools available with consumer-level service and afford-ability. Central Desktop enables teams of all sizes to work virtually and seamlessly without the need for IT resources, leveling the playing field for SMBs wishing to do business with the Fortune 5000 through technology that is as simple as launching a browser. Central Desktop was founded in 2005, and is a privately-held company located in Pasadena, California.

Central Desktop provides Web Based Collaboration Tools for Business Teams
online business
Image by www.CentralDesktop.com
Central Desktop delivers a Complete Business Collaboration platform for the mid-market enabling business teams to connect, share, collaborate and manage business both internally and externally on customizable web workspaces. Its solution is delivered as a pure-play web-based platform (SaaS) that combines the most robust collaboration tools available with consumer-level service and afford-ability. Central Desktop enables teams of all sizes to work virtually and seamlessly without the need for IT resources, leveling the playing field for SMBs wishing to do business with the Fortune 5000 through technology that is as simple as launching a browser. Central Desktop was founded in 2005, and is a privately-held company located in Pasadena, California.

Nice Work From Home photos

Saturday, May 21st, 2011

Check out these work from home images:

Home Desk
work from home
Image by RyAwesome
I worked from home this weekend… lame.

30 November 2009
work from home
Image by Alegrya
I’m not a morning person at the best of times, and the combination of very late night and early morning alarm didn’t go exactly as planned. Sunlight was bursting into my room, usually what wakes me before my alarm but after only about 4hrs sleep snuggle pillow got used as impromptu blindfold as I hit snooze 5 or 6 times before getting up.

Mornings like today make me glad I don’t have to rush into an office and make hasty apologies to my boss for not starting work at exactly 9a.

Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

Check out these small business ideas pictures

Interactive sketching notation
Small business ideas
Year peak of NathanaelB
In response to the blog post Are there any Interactive sketching notation used? .—– potential employers and customers often ask “Show us your work” … and sometimes I can show the final product if there is a public website, but if there is a CD-ROM, touch screen kiosk application on your intranet or the software, I can not really, except maybe the screenshots … there are really only shows the graphic design skills rather than mine – it’s hard to see beyond color and beautiful images of the underlying bone advise, structure and consistent approach to interaction design sehen.Meine to work more in the process, facilitate and guide enterprises, developers and designers through the creation of claims process by connecting ideas together, identification of risks – come and then its specification can build a second … – Particularly in terms of user experience, usability and accessibility, although I still find myself here, a lot of front-end HTML, CSS and JavaScript development, as I try to go from bin.Also I try to collect artifacts, I create in the course of design process as this sketch of an interface for a touchscreen application – you will never look messy comes in a UI specification or report, but it is an important part of the iterative design and prototyping process to better Lösung.Mein “toolbox” consists of a feather A5 spiral bound cartridge paper pads and pens the following: * Copic multi liner, brush, small, black * COPIC Multi Liner, 1.0, Black * Rotring Tikky graphics, 0.2, Black * Zig Millennium, 0, 05, B * COPIC Multi Liner, 0.05, black * Stabilo Sensor, 0.3, blue * Artline drawing system, 0.3, * Black Uni-Ball Eye appears red * Copic Marker, Toner Gray No. 1 * Sharpie, fine black

little boy of faith and surprises
Small business ideas
Year peak of BO47
exposureoflife.com/2011/02/small-boy-of- Faith-and-surprises / I never be too biased, but in some situations, I can not help it, and start my own expectations on how or what a particular person must do to be. And because such a little surprised when the person turns out to be quiet different. This is not necessarily a bad thing, on the contrary, it is normal to Besseren.Nehmen this boy, this is a Buddhist monk – or for which there still is, I’m not sure if she called the monks this morning – from Thailand, I know not so much about Buddhist monks and their daily lives, but I would not have thought there would be concern in many electronic devices, and certainly not digital SLR’s. I was at Wat Saket Temple Fair Go (Temple of the Golden Mount) in Bangkok, as I boy inspection passed – or something – some other kids washing floor, I began some photos from shooting him, and when he saw me, he stopped and stood still for me, my photo when I saw it done and gave him the gratitude of many smiles and wanted to go on nehmen.Nun you can imagine, I am a bit surprised when he came to me to take a look at screen on the back of the camera needs to see his picture, I – of course – showed him, he took a look, nodded, smiled at me and she drove with his Geschäft.Ich I also go with a smile on my face for two reasons I got a really good portrait of the boy and secondly, I really had my idea to know what the Buddhist monks on modern technology to review and grant this boy really fooled me. [Exif show = "camera, aperture, shutter, focus, ISO, time, place ,"]

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Pope-Leighey House
Small business ideas
Year peak of cliff1066 ™
By the time he began designing and building these houses, he was also working on housing for the Kaufman’s and the Johnsons in, was priced 000 – 0000 range. Building modest homes for young families seemed like a great deviation from the normal working hours, Wright. But it was actually an idea he had for many years before treatment. www.peterbeers.net / interests / flw_rt / Virginia / pope_leighey …

Nice Finders Fee photos

Sunday, April 24th, 2011

Some cool finders fee images:

Nice Local Business photos

Friday, April 1st, 2011

cool local images:

needful things – door knockers
local business
Year peak of Dominic’s pics
Ornate door knocker from needful things, an antique furniture and art business in St. James’s Street, Kemp Town, Brighton, East Sussex. needful things is the name of the Stephen King novel and Film.Die kitsch-shop is such a wonderful part of Villa can be on Council straße.de Right that the store refused planning permission for the style of the house (and would not win even if requested). It seems hypocritical element of the local protesters is that for some time to work, even if they do not correspond with the building permit.

Nice Forex Trading photos

Friday, March 25th, 2011

A few nice forex trading images I found:

$ CHF240709
forex trading
Image by Tradingrichmom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry:
11:45 $ CHF sell 1.0710, S/L 1.0717, exit when CCIx -123 up
Exit 12:25 @ 1.0682 (trailing S/L) = 38p. profit in 40 min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom
www.fortunemachine.info

Nice Website Traffic photos

Saturday, March 12th, 2011

A few nice website traffic images I found:

Site Traffic, Jan. 1, 2005-Dec. 31, 2005
website traffic
Image by djwudi
Traffic for my weblog for 2005.

Page Loads: Total: 627,282 // Per-day average: 1,719
Unique Visitors: Total: 488,405 // Per-day average: 1,338
First Time Visitors: Total: 459,491 // Per-day average: 1,259
Returning Visitors: Total: 28,914 // Per-day average: 79

Statistics provided by StatCounter.

Site Traffic, Jan. 1, 2006-Mar. 31, 2006
website traffic
Image by djwudi
Traffic for my weblog for 1st Quarter 2006.

Page Loads: Total: 187,175 // Per-day average: 2,080
Unique Visitors: Total: 143,936 // Per-day average: 1,599
First Time Visitors: Total: 137,330 // Per-day average: 1,526
Returning Visitors: Total: 6,606 // Per-day average: 73

Statistics provided by StatCounter.

Nice Local Business photos

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

Check out this local images:

Cambridge. Local businesses
local business
Year peak of flour.arrangements
Cambridge is not so crowded downtown Boston, it is also something Austiny. There is a wealth of local, quirky businesses and interesting places to shop.

Nice Local Business photos

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

A few nice local business images I found:

Local Business 1
local business
Image by HotrodII
Some Local Businesses

Central Garage
local business
Image by gregwake
It’s nice to see Middleton-in-Teesdale still has shops and local businesses in operation. Too many towns and villages have already lost what they had. A good indication of the size of the community is given by the sign: it doesn’t give an area code!

Nice Local Business photos

Saturday, January 22nd, 2011

Some cool local business images:

restaurant business
local business
Image by costa-rica-beauty
great restaurant in the hills of costa rica. Incredible view of the mountains and lake nearby.

Jesus targets Local Businesses
local business
Image by plassen

Grrr…Local business opening
local business
Image by Nagyman

Nice Online Business photos

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Check out these online business images:

IMG_0041
online business
Image by Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots from F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 7, 2010.

IMG_0039
online business
Image by Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots from F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 7, 2010.

Nice Website Design photos

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

Check out this site design images:

Vera Website Design # 2
Website design
Year peak of eworm

Vera

Site Design # 6
Website design
Year peak of eworm

Nice Work From Home photos

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Some nice work from home pictures that I took:

Brooklyn Home Office, Minimized At Night
work from Home
Year peak of mkosut
I’m out in recent months, who spent down the scale many things I do not need and keep my home office very minimal. These included ditching the big 30-inch Apple Cinema Display (blocking my view from the windows!) And based on a single laptop with two headless servers (on the old G5 OSX server ready, and an Ubuntu Dual Core 2, 8 GHz HP ProLiant server hidden behind the desk) I have my speakers hidden behind the desktop and minimize power on an AirPort Express station cord plug-ins. The two cables were visible hidden under the table (Ethernet for OS X server and some other cable), they did not see in the image until it’s too late war.Ich have an all-in-one scanner / printer, perfect in glass door cabinet for easy access gekauft.Mein old and trusty Aeron finally made his return from Vermont. Thanks Thanks for the gift of Adam, I took years of whiteboard drawings, I use markers on windows I make sure I do not write anything sensitive information about them as they are clearly visible from the street!). This gives the maximum of table space to work with, while not distracted. I work from time at home (I am a Senior Linux Systems Engineer for MTV Networks / Viacom), I wanted a place to focus comfortably without working on my assignments. I said no stones in the vase for the flower, so I change with all the silver I could find ended This works well because it looks interesting, but also relieved divide the extra cash into it comfortably no cents allowed in advance: ..
Year peak of
Travis Isaacs
17 “MacBook Pro

Nice Affiliate Marketing photos

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Check out these affiliate marketing images:

Favorite Hangout at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Willie Crawford at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) Workshop 3
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
Photo of Willie Crawford was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on January 29-February 1, 2010.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Nice Blogging For Money photos

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Some cool blogging for money images:

10/8 CNN am
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

10/8 ABC AM
blogging for money
Image by MyEyeSees
Things Get Serious.
Pre-opening – Fed cut rates, generates big impact on futures, up 100 points after being down 150 points and other markets followed suit in world coordination- Does this help stabilize? Billion bailout in UK enacted — Bank of England announces 0 pool of money for banks to borrow from – intrabank lending… First emergency rate cut by England, last time did this was on 9/11

Market Opens… Dow down 206.13 points
US consumers paying down debt forthe first time in a decade – MarketWatch
Dow down more than 1400 points over past five sessions
Day Ended: The Dow closed down 189.01 to 9,258.10
Henry Paulson, warned that financial "turmoil" will not end soon and that more banks are likely to bite the dust. Stocks close, stock indexes suffer sixth straight day of losses

Part I: Sept. U.S. Economic Crisis Media Study —
www.flickr.com/photos/myeye/sets/72157607584362826/
Blogging on the subject starts with
Bigge$ st Cri$ i$ and Media–
motherpie.typepad.com/motherpie/2008/09/bigget-crii-and.html

Nice Small Business Ideas photos

Saturday, December 11th, 2010

cool small business ideas pictures

Notes

me .. or maybe they are postcards from the edge?
Small business ideas
Year peak of honor the gift
1. I’m too href = “http://www.fluentself.com/monsters/”nofollow”> href = “http://menwithpens.ca/business-psychology-freelancer” article , which I found useful. I am grateful that I edited the # $ % from the post to make it palatable. 6 I advocate for thinking href = “http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2009/03/whats-your-super-power.html” Super Powers this week! 7: e I am grateful to Tracy K whose superpower is a fire igniting in reaching its own people to make art. She has completed a second superpower, our inner goofball. I’m grateful that she taught me by example that if Mon to someone you know does not connect, although it is a person with a fancy title you moseying on over to where they are and say howdy to start! Or something.:) 8 I am thankful for my camera with me on Saturday – the light turned out to be much nicer than I expected, and the wind blew away 30 degree heat to get me to cool properly. I’m grateful that it was quiet in the park that day too!: ) 9 I advocate the way creamed honey tickles the inside of my mouth grateful: D 10 I am grateful to my friend JP who, when I ask him via email, what time was it? (It was time Peanut Butterworth belly!) He emailed back that if he saw the subject line of his first thought was that it was time to hammer!:) 11 I am very grateful to Jenny that I talked to my RRSP. She was friendly, nice and wrote me the forms I needed to get things started. 12 I am grateful for href = “http://www.productiveflourishing.com/” Productive Flourishing and its guest author. I note that Mr. Gilkey seems a little quieter than usual, I hope he and his loved ones too. Please wish him all the best when you talk to him 13 I’m really grateful for the here because it is where I spent my time represented and helped me, I can think and take action to remedy the problem. 14 I’m all for the useful resources that I found on Silver’s Mark href = “http://www.heartofbusiness.com/” Heart of Business grateful. I like his slogan: “For small businesses that want to make a difference in the world and the need to make a profit. “15 I am grateful for the closure of two of the pieces I was working 16 I am grateful for the CD version of href = “http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/books.asp” linchpin that I succeeded in borrowing from the library. Although my screen reader is very useful for learning to get consultation href = “http://www.sethgodin.com/sg/default.asp” Godin of the book of life is even more appreciated!:) It was also good to have a reminder that * * Real Artists Ship!:) 17 I am for the fire engine that my work has passed the window and drove tooted his horn in a fun way appreciated! They made me laugh loud and lightened my day. (See next post gratitude.) 18 I am grateful to begin work on “Thank You” piece final. The “thank you” piece in the case of ‘thank you that I wrote in my head and on paper since that fateful day on Sept. 11, 2004, when I got invitation to be transplanted to a new kidney. I still cry when I actually, I could paper with a plastic cover! Maybe I need to research if the salt tears undermined acid free, archival quality paper and ink. I do not mind the tears smearing (because they are real and they float, if I remember) but I do not want to damage the work on these or other works. What turns me like Eva Hesse work is changing how life works. Anyway, I’d have to write a note to thank family, I have a feeling this will soon “hit the hardest, most important action I “in the lists. Now if I could just stop crying, so I could go to the store to get some fresh fruit that I eat because get this gift. If I put it so it does not diminish the tears of all ! ‘) 19 I’m sure if there nearly six years since receiving this gift of a healthy transplant and how it fits incredibly grateful. I am also of the people and their prayers that helped me here, thanks. Right here. Yep. Here.:) 20 I am grateful for matching underwear because it gives the wearer super powers! Have you tried it?:) 21 I am grateful that Zelder better (easier) when it sounded called today. I also grateful that she let slip that my photos show people their jobs. I’m learning how much they work a fan of my photography. I had no idea 22 I am grateful for that conversation with Zelder about my artwork. The discussions let them know that it’s okay if they are not based on the enjoyment of non-art photography that I’m involved, I know that we are still both male darn adorable!:) I had a fun idea attached to luggage, a creator of art – ever notice how you can not enjoy the work of a dentist or a professional parasitologist, but offense is not. Professional artists do the same 23rd study, I am grateful for the courage, Arabic, enriched my life greatly. I can like the fact that Arabic is phonetic and patterns is fascinating. I like how it stems that you can understand more if you help encountering unknown words. I also like how there are other, deeper meanings of words and phrases, depending of how they are used. I also like that it is challenging and rewarding. I recommend learning another language, it makes other things seem not so hard, and you can meet some very cool people that you can not get! Warning however: it will change how you view the world and themselves.:) I am grateful for Bassim, the patient communicates with me while I learn Arabic! Bassim means “smiling one” in Arabic – I asked him how did his parents, as a perfect name for him?:) 24 I am grateful to escape the rigid way, I thought I had as a professional artist so I could see when I grow up along. Even when I was in denial about the need for to make art and was pretending to be an engineer and computer scientist, these experiences still useful to practicing art. Mathematics is not only sexy, it makes sense: D 25 I’m for the greatness that href = “http://www.bushbeans.com/” Bush Brothers baked beans is appreciated. I’m grateful that I now get it in Canada at my favorite local grocery store. I’m grateful that Bush’s baked beans Zelder brought some from the U.S. 26th I am to do what I would have too many thoughts and chickpeas for cooking because they did Smoooooth hummus and some really good curry grateful:) Also froze very good 27th. I am grateful to search for an audio version of Tom Butler-Bowden 50 Spiritual Classics: Timeless Wisdom from 50 Great Books on Inner Discovery, Enlightenment and purpose . Fascinating reading, although the reader as a doomsday documentary, flying to a stool or even a big hug and see Rule # 6 needs sounds. I was surprised to see how many of the books I’ve read some or all. I am grateful to the audio book pointed out to some books I could find interesting:) I love to learn!:) 28 I am for writers (including bloggers) that their stuff there, where I choose to share can read it thanks. Rock on people!:) 29 I to take my camera with me and the courage to use it more often, thankfully 30 I am grateful for hearing lots of happy news by and about people, both near and far! Which reminds me, Jesse href = “http://www.facebook.com/#!/event.php?eid=124444830937065″Crossing Tracks, a solo art exhibition is only at the Cumberland Gallery at the Saskatchewan legislature on 31 August 2010. If you go, you better:) 31 I’m too href = “http://judturner.com/” Jud Turner , and implementation of its work where I could find it, and from her inspiration to be grateful. I am also grateful because he said “a few days to make art is as always in a fight Got my ass kicked today by the physics and geometry of the attempt to install large gates to bring it back tomorrow at dawn … .. “Because it reminds me that art is work, I am grateful, because he inspired me to stfu and go my voice:) His comment inspired me to deactivate my Facebook account and get more in about a month when I had all of last year, I am also grateful that I can observe him via e-mail to thank him know! Rock on Mr. Turner!:) 32 I am grateful that I delivered some letters thank you this week!: ) Hooray!:) 33 I am grateful for your reading my list. Now go great:)

Oasis Poster – Idea 1
Small business ideas
Year peak of Feven-Steven Williams
You tell me what you think about this poster, the dotted lines represent small businesses that are off the poster of people who can pass zerrissen.Alle designs shall be the same color – Pantone 7460

Nice Online Business photos

Monday, December 6th, 2010

Some cool online business images:

IMG_0120
online business
Image by Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots from F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 7, 2010.

IMG_0059
online business
Image by Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots from F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 7, 2010.

IMG_0060
online business
Image by Mark & Andrea Busse
Various shots from F5 Expo online business strategy conference at the Vancouver Convention Centre on April 7, 2010.

Nice Website Hosting photos

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

A few nice website hosting images I found:

mr_homo_unzuechtig
website hosting
Image by probondage2008
nominated by kreuz.net, elected by the gay community. Thank you.

There is a German website (hosted in Canada) on internet that attacks unpunished and in its worst the gay community and openly calls for violence and discrimitation against it. In addition they also stir up against Muslims, Jews and other groups in the population, all that done under the facade of an establishment of the Catholic Church.

STOP HATRED, DISCRIMINATION and INCITEMENT against gays and other minority groups.

Sign my online-petition:

www.louder.org.uk/gaysagainstkreuz/

Photoshelter
website hosting
Image by dklimke
www.photoshelter.com/mkt/201003/20100323.html

Nice Website Hosting photos

Thursday, November 18th, 2010

Some cool website hosting images:

April Social Media Expedition
website hosting
Image by LunaWeb
Food and networking at the April Social Media Expedition Breakfast.

Social Media Expedition is hosted by LunaWeb.

April Social Media Expedition
website hosting
Image by LunaWeb
Food and networking at the April Social Media Expedition Breakfast.

Social Media Expedition is hosted by LunaWeb.

Nice Website Traffic photos

Monday, November 8th, 2010

A few nice website traffic images I found:

Site Traffic, Apr. 1, 2006-Jun. 30, 2006
website traffic
Image by djwudi
Traffic for my weblog for 2nd Quarter 2006.

Page Loads: Total: 144,417 // Per-day average: 1,587
Unique Visitors: Total: 109,851 // Per-day average: 1,207
First Time Visitors: Total: 104,070 // Per-day average: 1,144
Returning Visitors: Total: 5,781 // Per-day average: 64

Statistics provided by StatCounter.

Three of the four spikes in traffic were prompted by links from Jason Kottke. I’m not sure when I showed up on his radar, but I’m not likely to complain, either. ;)

website traffic wrightonmedia.com
website traffic
Image by kylemac

Site Traffic, Jul. 1, 2006-Sep. 30, 2006
website traffic
Image by djwudi
Traffic for my weblog for 3rd Quarter 2006.

Page Loads: Total: 113,658 // Per-day average: 1,235
Unique Visitors: Total: 88,353 // Per-day average: 960
First Time Visitors: Total: 83,535 // Per-day average: 908
Returning Visitors: Total: 4,818 // Per-day average: 52

Statistics provided by StatCounter.

Definite downward trends, especially when compared to prior quarters. What with the onset of school and various other "real world" concerns, I just haven’t been posting as much as I used to…and my traffic stats are reflecting that. Still get a good number of hits per day from Google searches, but that’s about the majority of it anymore.

Nice Local Business photos

Tuesday, October 19th, 2010

Check out these local business images:

Governor Patrick hosts a small business roundtable with local business owners.
local business
Image by Office of Governor Patrick
Friday, April 9, 2010 — Governor Patrick hosts a small business roundtable with local business owners at the Middlesex Savings Bank in Westborough. Learn more at www.mass.gov/governor.

(Photo credit: Eugena Ossi/Governor’s Office)

MO; Terry Akins, IBEW Local 124 Business Manager
local business
Image by aflcio
photo Credit: Kelly Casey

Nice Blogging For Money photos

Tuesday, October 12th, 2010

cool fr money blogging photos: “? fr money blogging”

src p>? rh? jdepunkt p? Chris Pirillo Watch the video “How to write a book” live.pirillo.com / ? critics and his peers.Chris’ sr? d cracked: “write what you write and what you g? r.” If you do not really understand? R problem s? you probably b? s not edn’re a book? Overwrite it. Even if you need to understand? to g’re a theme, s? m per row you? worked? If you really? Want to write a book, m?, Because if you f you? R the money, you are encouraged to write a book disappointing. ‘S can instead be considered? Want to blog about the topic you m? after a? rs blogging, you can actually k gene neighborhood content fr a book and everything you need? world that m is take that content and create a mashup of a book format.Also consider g? route eBook. You are n? Dt for m? Not treated with an extended ejector? Gger and it is m? Possible, a good size? M of earnings with this method.Do create proposals f? R Lyle? M? You’ll like our book writes integrate video in your blog? With this c ode: http://live.pirillo.com/ / http://chris.pirillo.com/media/ This video originally? Avail? Specific and availability blip.tv from l0ckergn0me with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs .

alt = “Blogging f? r money” src = “http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3598/3498616143_8f4dff7ba0.jpg” width = “400″ />

I started blogging in January 2008 . It has never v? Right a money g’re consists? Confirm, but a little f? R Spa? made. I M? March 2008 setup a Google Adsense I will serve up ads account via my website and blog. Google pays no f? R you n? A 0 USD m? Rket. S? Headed l? Gger paid advertisements p? my site, I f? R around 50% of my online costs .. no d? honestly f? r to g’re nothing. :) I’m not leaving my job, but if Income? Income negates my on-costs, which is pretty out?.

Nice Affiliate Marketing photos

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Check out these affiliate marketing images:

Rob Anderson & Karen Ferrante at Niche Affiliate Marketing System (NAMS) 2
affiliate marketing
Image by rogercarr
This photo was captured at the Niche Affiliate Marketing System Workshop held in Atlanta, GA on 13-17 August, 2009.

To learn more about the next NAMS Workshop, go to www.NAMSExperience.com.

Nice Website Traffic photos

Sunday, October 10th, 2010

Some cool website traffic images:

Browswer October 2007 – Clicky Website Visit Information
website traffic
Image by adria.richards
I use clicky to get a big picture overview of tr

I use clicky to get a big picture overview of traffic to my various websites. It’ especially useful for tracking my craigslist ads. I can see which posts are working based on title and content

I use clicky to get a big picture overview of traffic to my various websites. It’ especially useful for tracking my craigslist ads. I can see which posts are working based on title and content

Browser June 2008 – Clicky Website Visit Information
website traffic
Image by adria.richards
I use clicky to get a big picture overview of tr

I use clicky to get a big picture overview of traffic to my various websites. It’ especially useful for tracking my craigslist ads. I can see which posts are working based on title and content

I use clicky to get a big picture overview of traffic to my various websites. It’ especially useful for tracking my craigslist ads. I can see which posts are working based on title and content

Nice Forex Trading photos

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

A few nice forex trading images I found:

GBP0209
forex trading
Image by Trading Rich Mom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry:
12:45 GBP$ sell @ 1.4405, S/L 1.4462, exit when CCIx -97 up
Exit 12:45 1.4378 = 28p. profit in 75 min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom
www.fortunemachine.info

$CHF160609
forex trading
Image by Trading Rich Mom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry:
10:45 $CHF sell 1.0863, S/L 1.0873, exit when CCIx -134 up
Exit 11:10 @ 1.0843 (trailing S/L) = 20p. profit in 25 min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom
www.fortunemachine.info

$CHF040209
forex trading
Image by Trading Rich Mom
Rich Mom’s system signals entry:
12:15 $CHF buy 1.577, S/L 1.1526, exit when CCIx 158 down
Exit 12:45 1.1611 = 34p. profit in 30 min.

Dagmar
Trading results that make you say W.O.W.
Follow me on twitter.com/tradingrichmom
www.fortunemachine.info


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