Check out these photo albums images:
St Andrew's Cathedral Sydney N.S.W.
Image by Australian National Maritime Museum on The Commons
This photograph album belonged to Edward Hungerford and contains images of shipping and street scenes around Sydney from the 1880s.
Edward Hungerford was born on 10 June 1863 in Cahirmoore, Ireland (County Cork), the son of Henry Jones Hungerford and Mary Boone Cowper. Hungerford migrated to Australia around 1882 and became a long-serving member of the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron. He died 24 June 1956 in Newtown, Sydney.
The Australian National Maritime Museum undertakes research and accepts public comments that enhance the information we hold about images in our collection. If you can identify a person, vessel or landmark, write the details in the Comments box below.
Thank you for helping caption this important historical image.
ANMM Collection Gift from the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron
00013762_55
logos, eros, cosmos - cover art
Image by yugenro
This was the cover art for my album "logos, eros, cosmos," which was created as the capstone project for my Master of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies degree from Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi, in May 1996.
The project's theme was the unification of all opposites and seeming paradoxes in my life up to that point. The drawing of the brain contrasts with, balances, and complements the photograph of the heart, by their being conjoined in a sort of yin-yang fashion. The brain is drawn because the function of the brain is to abstractize, to interface physical reality with our minds, to render in the imagination, to separate reality into intellectually-comprehensible bits. The heart is photographed because the function of the heart is to sense physical reality, to act as interface between our abstracting mind and our sensing physical senses, to feel the world, and to directly experience the whole of time-and-space.
The two halves are unified into one whole, symbolizing their complementarity: how they each serve a purpose in the wholeness of human existence.
The stick figures of the male and female humans, rendered in all the colors of the rainbow and supporting each other in opposite directions , represents another set of complimentary opposites, which, when joined, complete each other.
And finally, the infinitesimally-small is represented by the nuclear particle-collider bubble-trails, which are the tracks that subatomic particles leave upon being smashed together at near-light-speed, while the infinitely-large is represented as the canvas upon which the entire composition is held.



