Quick Search of DRB:
Lijit Search
drb rss about
suggest
advertise
subscribe
rss rss
rss
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | famous | cool ads | funny pics | food | futurism | gadgets | history | japan
military | music | nature | photo | russia | sci-fi | signs | space | sports | steampunk | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Surreal Art Update


"QUANTUM SHOT" #387
link - by Avi Abrams



If you prefer to cling to reality, this page is not for you

Try to use your imagination a little... or a lot. Some of this art requires a fresh perspective and the suspension of disbelief from the viewer, while some requires... well, a strong drink to properly figure it out.

We're fully aware that it's impossible to probe the (often) murky depths of the sea of surreal art in a single article. So this is only a sample of the best material that came our way in recent months - art we found irresistible and memorable enough to highlight here. Send us tips about artists and their works that similarly impressed you, for inclusion in a follow-up issue.

Augmented Nature in Ilkka Halso's Surreal Photography

This is the best attempt to build something in natural environment, period. Too bad it's only a rendering. Imagine wandering through the serene Finnish forests, and encountering such structures.... Simply sublime.





"Museum" is the best expression for ecology-concerned thinking that we encountered so far:


(images credit: Ilkka Halso)

The Mood is Set. The Visual Treat is Before You.

I personally consider some surreal art therapeutic: such art soothes or inspires in the exact moment of emotional need, sometimes quite unexpectedly so. While realistic art is constrained in its means to convey emotion, surrealism's deceptive freedom of expression can be just as challenging to deal with. Here are a few deeply-felt artistic "ventures" into imaginary realms:

"Waiting for Godot" by Victoria Lamb



"Desperation" by Josh Sommers -



Nikki Pinder knows what takes root in your soul in certain situations:



"Creative Writing & Gainful Employment"
(this dilemma sounds pretty familiar...) -



Anyone who knows the highs and lows of creative writing will appreciate this image:
"Mind Control"



Her "Birdman" we featured before, but it's fantastic and elaborate enough to display again:


(art by: Nikki Pinder)


Profound Imagery of Samuel Bak, Holocaust Survivor

Samuel Bak was born in Vilna and started to display his drawings in the Vilna ghetto. "Bak's father was killed just a few days before Vilna was liberated by the Russians. After the war's end, he was sent to refugee camps in Germany, and emigrated to Israel in 1948"

"Targets Revisited" -



"Still Life with Ego" - part of the spectacular "The Fruit of Knowledge" series -



The shape of a pear exists either in its
"Present Absence" -



or "Absent Presence":



"Sefarim" -



He also re-works the hebrew letters of names of his parents and grandparents, placing these shapes in a surreal (blasted and sorrowful) landscape. You have to see this series for yourself.


Landscapes of the Soul, Amplified

You can not find this "terra impossible" on any maps, but you can easily relate to the mood and the message of most of these surreal images. Salvador Dali created the sub-genre of psychedelic landscape, but even he might be startled by the weirdness of some of the most far-out offerings - but then again, after a few glasses of wine and some petting of his favorite cats, I'm sure, he'd ask to see some more...

First, George Grie with his thrilling landscape vistas:

"Infinite Improbability Drive"



"Dehydration"



"Arrested Expansion"



"Ice Age Premonition"



"Sanctuary"


(art by George Grie)

French illustrator Francois Baranger has a great portfolio with post-apocalyptic / science fiction flavour:




(image credit: Francois Baranger)

Russian surrealist painter Alexander Kruglov can whip up pretty powerful Dali-esque landscapes, seemingly effortlessly:



"Subtle Melodies of Sunset"



Russian "post-everything" sadness, amplified:





"Never gonna fly again" -




Darker Visions

David Ho is equally adept at creating haunting magazine illustrations and more personal works, such as his "Contemplation" cycle:



"My Darkest Hour" -




Art of Erlend Mork is also heavy stuff: emotionally and visually loaded - and as such, pretty much unforgettable:

"Our faces as our days"



"Birthmark"



"Nos Morituri"




Futuristic "Primitive" Art of Ian Pyper

This is what "primitive" graffiti and folk/naive art from the future may look like - delivered to you by Ian Pyper, who spends time scouring the future for symbols of atoms, flying saucers, robots and aliens! -



More of his "Paleolithique Moderne" -




Larry Carlson: Fractal Surrealism

Something quite unusual can be seen among Larry Carlson' s psychedelic creations. Fractal collages are not new, but fractal cottages are...! Plus some totally improbable objects, placed in normal suburbia:












Various other fascinating surreal collages:








(images credit: Thomas Herbrich)


(image credit: Paul Ruigrok)


(image credit: Jan Hathaway)


(image credit: Jan Hathaway)

Painted blog of Paul Rica is a reflection of his web-surfing during the week. He says: "Every week I collect stuff on the web that's funny, poetic or weird and make an oil painting from it." Pretty neat idea, we think.


"Tongue-in-Cheek" Surreal Art

Sometimes it takes very little to achieve an original result. Why nobody combined yet Starbucks culture with Victorian sensibilities, I have no idea.


(original unknown, via)

All artwork is published by permission of respective owners

CONTINUE TO NEXT PART! ->

Also see:
Fascinating Worlds of Jacek Yerka
Fantastic Art by Tomasz Maronski
Fantasy Art of Vladimir Kush

Permanent Link......+StumbleUpon ...+Facebook
Category: Art,Weird

READ LATEST POSTS:

November 20, 2009 - Quantum Shot #599
The Extraordinary World of Ex Libris Art

Mythic, bizarre, fantastic

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

incl. "Marvelous Burj Dubai Fountain Show"

SFSite
"Steampunk Anthology" Reviewed, in All Its Brass Glory

Making all sci-fi punks in the world "feel lucky", since 2008
(for other weekly "Biscotti" issues - see our main page and monthly archives)

COMMENTS:

5 Comments:

Anonymous LittleInsect said...

For me, Salvador Dali has always been the great surrealist painter. But you've introduced me to names I've never come across. I particularly like the work of Bak and Grie.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm a big fan of Jack Yerka, and I know I've seen at least one of his paintings on this site.
Thanks for giving me some new artists to explore!

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Larry Carlson is really the greatest!
People call him "the Salvador Dali of the Next Century" because as well as creating these masterpieces he also makes insane movies,web art and music! Bravo !Carlson!!!!!

___  
Anonymous BonzaiRob said...

Seeing the guy turning into a tree reminded me of this, the video for Ween's Transdermal Celebration by Adam Phillips: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DU91POX33aE

Check out his other work at http://biteycastle.com/

___  
Anonymous Dawid Michalczyk said...

A lot of cool surreal art here!

___  

Post a Comment

<< Home


SF ART & BOOK REVIEWS:
Don't miss: The Ultimate Guide to SF&F Writers!
Fiction Reviews: Alastair Reynolds "Chasm City"
Short Fiction Reviews: Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" (with pics)
New Fiction Reviews: The Surreal Office

MORE RECENT POSTS:


Outrageously Creative Ads, Issue 12

Unexpected Weirdness & Visual Candy


Weird Food McDonald's Sells Around the World

Spaghetti! Soaked! In Sugarrr!


The World's Most Magnificent Pipe Organs

Simply Blockbusters of Their Time!


Lovely Cowgirls in Vintage Westerns

Beauties with guns scorched the screen... and it was good


Weirdest Cell Phones Ever!

Totally non-conventional looks and futuristic specs.


British Pubs: Signs of the Times, Part 2

Pub signs are almost like time machines...


Fabulous Las Vegas: Vintage Treasures

Part 1: Glamour vs. Kitsch


Incredible Astronomical Clocks

Antique and medieval technology blended with art


Battersea, and Other Abandoned Power Stations

Part 2 of popular urban exploration series


Hilarious & Crazy Signage

Part 13 of this side-splitting series


Living, Growing Architecture

Grow your house one root at a time


Alone in the Wild: Yukon Survival Saga

How to eat porcupine livers, and more!


Unusual and Marvelous Maps

Alternate histories, sea monsters, weird politics


Airships & Tentacles

Exclusive Interview with artist Myke Amend


Jet Engines on Trucks (For Fun and Profit)

Snow-blowers from hell, and more...


Star Wars for Your Mind, Heart and Soul

Part 3 of the popular series


Britain's Colorful Pub Signs, Part 1

A map to your last night adventures


Flying Colors! Creative Paint on Airliners

Groovy additions to the fleet...


Walled Cities: Keeping Out the Joneses

Highlights of the defensive architecture


Postage Stamps From the Future

...and some alternative realities


The Glamour of Flight: Sexy Stewardesses

Part 4 of highly popular series


Flags of Forgotten Countries

Don't just wave a black flag... consider your options


Spectacular Steampunk Art Update

Part 2 of this eye-popping, mind-boggling series

MORE OF THE RECENT POSTS:








Anything for the Perfect Shot! Part 3
Charmed by the Unknown Brazil
Ekranoplans Showcase, Part 2
Riot Vehicle with Water Cannon
Thrilling Vintage Movie Posters
Cheers to Beers!
Most Interesting Bridges, Part 3
Mesmerizing Kinetic Sculptures
Real Life Spy Gadgets
Tangled & Crazy Wiring
Underground Cities and Bunkers
Extraordinary Clocks & Watches
Pasta Monster & Other Strange Food
How Morgan Cars Are Made
Abandoned Boeing-747 Restaurant
Surprised Astronauts (Funny Pics)
One-Track Wonders: Early Monorails
Komodo Dragons: They Eat Meat
Spring Cleaning of the Mind: Surreal Art
Crazy & Funny Faces, Part 5
Wonder Weapons of World War Two
Narrow Buildings in Japan & Around the World
The Cutting Edge of Retro Tech
Bladerunner Tokyo Large-Format Photography
Nightmare Playgrounds, Part 3
Victorian Flea Circuses: A Lost Art Form
Strangest Music Scores, Part 2
Monstrous Aviation: Huge Helicopters!
- many more in the Archives and in the Contents Index (left bar)


FULL ARCHIVES (with previews, fast loading):

September 2009 -- August 2009 --
June-July 2009 -- May 2009 -- April 2009 -- March 2009 --
February 2009 -- January 2009 -- December 2008 --
November 2008 -- October 2008 -- September 2008
August 2008 -- July 2008 -- June 2008
May 2008 -- April 2008 -- March 2008
February 2008 -- January 2008 -- Dec, 2007
November 2007 -- October 2007 -- Sept, 2007
August 2007 -- July 2007 -- June 2007
May 2007 -- April 2007 -- March 2007
February 2007 -- January 2007 -- Dec, 2006
November 2006 -- October 2006 -- Link Lattes




CATEGORIES:
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | books | cool ads | funny pics | famous | futurism | food
gadgets | health | history | humour | japan | internet | link latte | military | music | nature | photo | russia | steampunk
sci-fi & fantasy | signs | space | sports | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird



Discretion Advised! These cartoons contain some extreme animated violence!






Airplanes
Animals
Architecture
Art
Auto
Boats
Computers
Cool Ads
Extreme Weather
Food
Funny Pics
Futurism
Gadgets
History
Humour
Link Latte
Military
Music
Nature
Oops Accidents
Photography
Robots
Science
Science Fiction

Space
Sports
Technology
Trains
Travel
UE Abandoned
Vintage
Weird




Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
James Golbey
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman
Steve Levenstein

- Join Our Team -
Guidelines








  • RE: Mystery Photo,

    It is a US military photo circa 1941-1945. Along the lines of "loose lips sink ships." In other words keep your damn mouth closed about what is happening or you could give intelligence to the enemy that could lead to your death.
    Read more

  • Last photo should have title: "Say Good-bye to your USB mouse" ;-)
    Read more

  • mouse... of course!
    Read more

  • macman47 is right, here is an article explaining in more detail:
    http://www.eyewitnesstohistory.com/lslips.htm
    Read more

  • If you talk....

    American propaganda, WWII:

    http://www.scribd.com/doc/45253/If-You-Talk-Too-Much-This-Man-May-Die-100-American-Propaganda-Posters-from-World-War-II

    Cheers.
    Read more

  • here is the eng. version of the rus. tank driver interviews.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UUZKqpA5K20&feature=related
    Read more

  • what is that uuuuuugly thing?
    Read more

  • I think it's a turkey!
    Read more

  • the thing identified as a hyena is a xoloitzcuintle dog, aka the mexican hairless. they're kinda fun little monsters.
    Read more

  • Really funny. The second picture is Gizmo. I send you another funny elephant.
    http://clipaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/he.JPG
    Read more

  • I think i spotted the homeless elephant on adsoftheworld before... not shure
    Read more

  • I think that the three tigers in the water trough may be by Phil Parker (a.k.a TigerToy) -- I recall seeing it in one or more art shows at Chicago area SF cons (DucKon, Windycon or Capricon) with other photographs from the same exotic animal refuge
    Read more

  • The three tigers in the tub is in fact my photo. I took it back in 2002; the tigers live at Exotic Feline Rescue Center an hour west of Indianapolis, where I'm a volunteer.

    The pic has been all over the Internet for years.

    (Thanks, RonO!)

    Phil "tigertoy" Parker
    Read more

  • Phil, thank you!
    I included the credit.
    Read more

  • The uuuugly creature is, in fact, a typical wild turkey. If you've seen drawings of those turkeys, they have this fleshly appendage that usually hangs to one side of their beaks; it's a display thing. They expand and contract depending on the male turkey's... well... anyway, this one seems to have expanded all over uuuugly's beak, giving him the appearance of something bizarre and alien.

    There's a local lady who does wild turkey races at fairs. It is the most freakin' hilarious thing you can imagine, because turkeys are Dumb.
    Read more

  • Hello,

    Someeone gave me a tip to watch this site and I love it!
    Read more

  • The "prayer bear" caption is the usual stance of a Polar Bear as it is about to pounce/grab a Seagull or (unlikely but has happened in rare cases) a human. The Polar bear will then do a death roll (similar to what a Nile croc does) and will break its victims neck.
    Read more

  • Will, your comment made my day! very interesting.
    Read more

  • The penguins in the closet look like a Monte Dolak image that may be out of print
    Read more

  • the last one looks like "no peeing, else we'd cut it off...."
    Read more

  • The mystery animal is called an Axelotle (it was our grade 3 pet in Australia). have a look at this one http://www.aquaticcommunity.com/aquariumforum/showthread.php?p=208475
    Read more

  • sorry its spelt axolotl or Mexican walking fish read about it here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walking_fish
    Read more

  • Hey we had an axolotl as a class pet too, in year 2 though, but also in Australia. My desk was right next to the tank, it ate frozen meat. It is actually a salamander though- it just stays in its larval stage.
    Read more

  • Love the puppy and cat!
    Read more

  • "There are three intersections like this in UK: in Swindon, London and in Cardiff, near Southampton."

    Either there are 4 or a major geographical disturbance - Cardiff is in no way near Southampton.

    And yay at seeing "Devizes" on a sign...on the big Internets! (I lived there).
    Read more

  • You missed the Marquette interchange in Milwakee Wisconsin. It wraps around the Aldrich Chemical Company building. You can drive past all sides of the building at several levels.
    Read more

  • I think city planners must clean the hair out of the drain, study it for a moment and say, "I think I could build that."
    Read more

  • lol - they might actually do it in spare time!
    Read more

  • "There are three intersections like this in UK: in Swindon, London and in Cardiff, near Southampton."

    And one in Hemel hempstead.....
    Read more

  • There isn't one in London, just this one in Swindon. I was driven across it by the police once after being arrested and was interested to obxerve that they just drove straight through it ignoring all the many markings and rules. This was at 2am, however, so there wasn't any other traffic- not that they would accept that as an excuse if I'd been driving.
    Read more

  • Seriously the traffic jams in this article are amateur stuff. Cairo, Egypt has the absolute worst traffic EVER!
    Read more

  • This just makes me wanna play SimCity 4 in the WORST way.
    Read more

  • the 7th picture from traffic jams is from bucharest, romania
    Read more

  • I used to take learners onto the Magic Roundabout in Hemel. They coped - it's not really as bad as it seems. Until a fire engine turns up - they just take the shortest line between entry and exit and everyone else scatters.
    Read more

  • The picture in São Paulo is not from Google's headquarters, but from Red Hat's office. It was first posted here: http://www.glommer.net/blogs/?p=189
    Read more

  • I used to live 100 yards from the magic roundabout in Swindon (pictured). I remember it going in, replacing a giant roundabout that was probably the busiest intersection in town. It was bewildering at first, but it doubled and tripled the traffic flow.
    Read more

  • You missed the 3 tier intersection in Sheffield, the murderous ring road in Bradford and the havoc wreaking Gunwharf Quays entrance zone that cuts up about a quarter of Portsmouth Docks.
    Read more

  • What's the back-story to the pic of the jam surrounding what appears to be a petrol station?
    Read more

  • You missed the worst traffic of Dubai. A 10 mins walk sometimes takes 45-60mins driving. And the crazy drivers that caused a pile up of 200+ vehicles on a foggy morning. Ghantoot Car Accident, google it.
    Read more

  • very cool... all these suggestions will go into a next part
    Read more

  • What about the Mixing Bowl just south of DC?
    http://www.springfieldinterchange.com/before_after.asp
    Read more

  • 'There isn't one in London' - certainly one in Greater London, outside Hatton Cross tube station.
    Read more

  • I will never complain about traffic here in the US ever again. Euro and eastern Euro traffic planners are utterly retarded.
    Read more

  • jay whitlow said he would never drive again after viewing these images and he's glad he lives in extreme-rural kansas where he can get anywhere he wants without using a public road and sammie gave up on roads being that they go in two directions and he never could figure out which direction to go.
    Read more

  • No traffic jam survey is complete without mentioning Bangkok!
    Read more

  • "You missed the Marquette interchange in Milwakee Wisconsin. It wraps around the Aldrich Chemical Company building. You can drive past all sides of the building at several levels."

    The Aldrich Chemical building is long gone - it was torn down at the very beginning of the Marquette Interchange rebuilding. (While the reconstruction did make the interchange theoretically safer, it didn't make it any less complex. In fact, I'd say it is even more complex than before.)
    Read more

  • tangle: Planners don't design interchanges, engineers do.
    Read more

  • That shot of the Miami Gardens interchange is a recent one - that's what it looks like after a reworking that seemed to drag on for something like a decade. Previously, the layout was so demented, that there were a couple of transfers from one road to another that took no fewer than 7 steps (exits, ramps, u-turns, etc.) to complete.

    The current arrangement is much less treacherous, though increased traffic volume has pretty much negated any improvements in the rush-hour commute.
    Read more

  • You cannot talk about intersections without mentioning Birmingham's Spaghetti Junction!
    Read more

  • What about Spaghetti Junction in Atlanta, GA?

    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=norcross,+ga&ie=UTF8&ll=33.891846,-84.258978&spn=0.011613,0.0156&t=k&z=16
    Read more

  • Great blog! That one in Minneapolis of course isn't getting as much use these days because it is directly south of the 35w bridge that collapsed last summer.
    Read more

  • The image of this traffic jam at São Paulo it's definitely a good sample of what's going on every day here. Not to mention the ridiculously small tube lines and the lack of attention that mayor-house and state-house are giving for mass transport. Instead, they push car production by having a rotative system where you cannot drive your car in one day of the week during rush hours (depending on your car's plate last number: 1's & 2's can't drive on Mondays, 3's & 4's on Tuesdays and so on...). What happened is that who can afford, is buying another car to drive every day. Bloody dumb!
    Read more

  • That intersection in Minneapolis is .5 km from the 35W bridge collapse. I quit my job when that happened- traffic here is now horrible.
    Read more

  • and they call the geniouseses that design them roads/intersections experts ???

    LOL UNREAL !! wheere they get their Urban planning degrees from??? as a prize inside a bag of Lay ??? Im amazed you missed bangkok !!!!!!!!
    Read more

  • bangkok definitely deserves one ... but wierd how they totally missed out the unbelievable spirals of saudi arabia during the hajj. I was witness to how chaotic it gets there during the hajj. I was stuck in a traffic jam for 8 hours. the distance i was travelling was approximately 7km. *to think. the movement of 3 million people in the same direction all trying to get to another point before midnight.
    Read more

  • Railway Diamond Crossings.

    There is one in Newark , Nottinghamshire where the East-Coast mainline crosses the line from Nottingham to Lincoln. For years there were arguments between the individual railway companies that owned these two lines, with accusations that The East-Coast trains were given priority because that company operated the signals that controlled the crossing.
    Read more

  • God, I was in that crossing at Sao Paulo, Brazil at the same time that person took the photo. Yes, I'm from Sao Paulo, Brazil!

    It took more than an hour to drive a single block!!!
    Read more

  • This is the Aston Expressway in Birmingham england. http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=aston+expressway&sll=54.162434,-3.647461&sspn=13.303156,51.328125&ie=UTF8&ll=52.510762,-1.863856&spn=0.006373,0.014462&t=h&z=16
    Read more

  • Read more

  • it's good article, You can make your article (news/video/image) more popular to primary Indonesian Social Community site at InfoGue.com. Get more traffic from Indonesian community members by installing INFOGUE widget. thanks.

    your article:
    http://www.infogue.com/aneh/traffic_jams_paling_buruk_di_dunia_worst_intersections_traffic_jams/
    Read more

  • The magic mushroom roundabout, theres 2 in the county i live in alone, the biggest being the Greenstead roundabout in Colchester.
    Read more

  • that is only half of the I35W/I94 intersection in Minneapolis. The roads run next to each other for about half a mile to the east of the picture and then do roughly the same samething they do in the picture.
    Read more

  • This one in Frankfurt is crazy too, especially since it's so bafflingly complex for a intersection of two freeways that could be much simpler, imho:
    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=frankfurt&ie=UTF8&ll=50.07616,8.543801&spn=0.014817,0.031285&t=k&z=15&iwloc=addr
    I hate going through it.
    Read more

  • all of those pictures are a walk in the park compared to mexico city. you obviously have no whatsoever notion of what is traffic.
    Read more

  • The Turcot Yards Interchange" (due to be torn down sometime soon because they discovered putting the drains inside the concrete wasn't such a bright idea after all) is an interesting one too. Not the most convoluted but it's up there. It might help to decode it if I mention that the highway leaving to the west is actually contra-sense. That is, you drive on the left...
    Read more

  • None of the interchanges mentioned on this article or by the other posters come close to this one in Newark NJ.
    http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=40.70231,-74.176598&spn=0.022742,0.040169&t=k&z=15
    I've looked for ages to find a one
    that is more insane than this,
    and I just couldn't. In my opinion
    this is the worst designed interchange anywhere in the world.
    Read more

  • There are more than three magic mushroom islands in the UK
    >here
    is Colchester:

    and as for diamond crossings here is the double diamond at newark.
    Read more

  • What, no Cairo traffic?

    Like so. And some more.
    Read more

  • And one on the A13 by Canvey Island
    Read more

  • There are a bunch of underpasses in Arizona that resemble the "humorous solution". It's a good thing Arizona is a desert, because they fill up with water when it rains!
    Read more

  • i was in bangkok in february when it was offically declared (by head of traffic police) that it is NOT bad traffic, until you stay in the same spot and do not move for ONE hour.
    Additionally, they have many officers posted on roads to hospitals that are trained to deliver babies in cars! One officer being interviewed had delivered 2 babies in february alone. Gotta love Asian traffic...

    then we could talk about Saigon on a Saturday night... or even Seoul...
    Read more

  • i was in bangkok in february when it was offically declared (by head of traffic police) that it is NOT bad traffic, until you stay in the same spot and do not move for ONE hour.
    Additionally, they have many officers posted on roads to hospitals that are trained to deliver babies in cars! One officer being interviewed had delivered 2 babies in february alone. Gotta love Asian traffic...

    then we could talk about Saigon on a Saturday night... or even Seoul...
    Read more

  • What about the Grandview Triangle in Kansas City? Not the biggest, or even the nastiest, but pretty hairy to drive through even if you're a local.

    http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=i435+and+i470+kansas+city+mo&jsv=123&sll=39.054822,-94.472633&sspn=0.237277,0.43602&ie=UTF8&latlng=38936223,-94532456,13992783483913857487&ei=FquoSMPlLqTIigGCg8DbCg&sig2=rjIMyN6vcVRGkPzmdQd_9w&cd=6
    Read more

  • SPAGHETTI JUNCTION ATLANTA GA
    Read more

  • I've managed to live through spaghetti junction. My hubby was following me in a semi and missed the exit. I didn't see him for 4 hours. I was the one driving on a learner's permit.
    Read more

  • anyone ever hear about a place called "Los Angeles" ...

    there are these intersections about every 5 miles...

    check this one out as an example...

    http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&ie=UTF8&ll=34.030772,-118.216259&spn=0.008358,0.021887&t=k&z=16
    Read more

  • These speghetti junctions are far better than the intersection of 22, 30, 65, 279, and 376 in Pittsburgh, PA. They all merge together for 1/4 mile and then split apart again. In that short span, everybody frantically changes lanes. Looks orderly on the map, but it's a total mess.

    http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=40.443028,-80.009093&spn=0.015612,0.02635&z=15
    Read more

  • "There are three intersections like this in UK: in Swindon, London and in Cardiff, near Southampton."

    I can honestly say that there isn't one in Cardiff. Sorry to disappoint.
    Read more

  • anyone know where #2 from the traffic jams is?

    http://lh5.google.ca/abramsv/R9WYOKtLe1I/AAAAAAAALO4/FLefbnOq5rQ/s640/495711679_52f8d76d11_o.jpg

    that's nuts!
    Read more

  • Spaghetti Junction in Atlanta (85-285) is pictured in another section.

    That isn't a petro station pictured, it's the Port strike.

    Also, what about Los Angeles? New York? New Jersey? Or horror upon horrors, CHICAGO!!!!!
    Read more

  • Very interesting selection of pictures ! Thanks for this article.
    Read more

  • Now I'm grateful to live in Los Angeles!
    Read more

  • looking at some of those intersections makes me never want to drive again. Fortunately, I'm not driving in any of those areas.
    Read more

  • Wow, crazy intersections! Also, check out this cool animated video about how traffic jams work:
    http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/06/17/fastdraw/entry5093379.shtml?tag=contentMain;contentBody
    Read more

  • Hahahahahaha...no one mentions those terrible places in India where people get stuck for many hours...Gurgaon for example...Delhi and many others...
    Read more

  • I remember traffic jam #7! it was one day in Bucharest when traffic lights had failed in a major intersection. Eventually some people got out of their cars and started to direct traffic until it cleared out a little bit.

    The jams in Bucharest are not that frequent, but when they do happen, you can get stuck from hours.

    From my own experience, though, Bangkok is far worse...
    Read more

  • Your discus Good topic and good problem. I hate Traffic jams. World's worst Traffic Jams in my city Hyderabad(India)
    Read more

  • the in the last block of pictures, with the metal statues can be found in Aachen, germany.

    its the "Money Fountain" or "Circulation of Money" and depicts the ways how money changes their owners, or not.

    the picture you can see here on darkroastedblend is missing the "Father with Child"-part, thats on there, too.

    here is a picture of the whole thing: http://www.strs.org.uk/lang_coll/trips/aachen2004/fountain-2.jpg


    you can see there: father counting money infront of his child (left, missing on the picture here on drb)
    next to the right is bribary, buying and selling.
    in the front is the guy who isn't part of the system, and doesn't have any money, but wants some.


    usually people who come by this well drop some coins in it . . . and sometimes people like the one in the front can be seen wading in it picking up the money.
    Read more

  • Thank you - this is great info. Money Cycle...
    Read more

  • The violin player braking trough the floor can be found inside the townhall/operahouse in Amsterdam. The artist is unknown and the statue is placed there 'illegal' (or so they tell the people).
    There are a few more statues in the city by the same artist (but he/she is still 'unknown')
    Read more

  • http://www.flickr.com/photos/alessandro_isnotaurelio/1498736852/
    Read more

  • Where do you find the feather tie?
    Read more

  • Very interesting article !
    (by the way I'm Stéfan from Flickr and the Révolte des Mannequins blog)
    Read more

  • @Brian Hall : the feather tie is from the Hunter from the Revolt of the Mannequins. More photos here.
    Read more

  • check this out, its on the city of Chihuahua Mexico, its on spanish.

    http://www.pascualita.com/leyenda.htm
    Read more

  • On the Northrop-Loral F19 - it's only a model! That wiki page is easily debunked - there is no town of Longmont, Nebraska (there's one in Colorado), and hence no Longmont Aircraft Museum. There is no 17th Fighter Squadron, although the 9th Reconnaissance Wing is real. Furthermore, you can find the satellite shot of Davis-Monthan at http://maps.google.com/maps?t=k&ll=32.150,-110.833&z=18 rotated through 90 degrees. Note the missing aircraft. The only remaining question is why? Speculative fiction?
    Read more

  • The "spring cleaning" of the carriers deck is actually the fire supression system.
    Read more

  • I enjoyed the road rally clip. It looked like there was no room for error! Was the passenger reading instructions to the driver the whole time? Do they have a chance to memorize the road before their run?

    Also, I remember the Grim Fairy tale cartoon from MAD magazine about 3 decades ago.
    Read more

  • "Anonymous said...
    The "spring cleaning" of the carriers deck is actually the fire supression system."

    I believe what we're seeing is in fact the carrier's CBRN washdown system in operation (intended to remove radiological, chemical and biological contamination).

    Regards,
    Thomas
    Denmark
    Read more

  • "Was the passenger reading instructions to the driver the whole time? Do they have a chance to memorize the road before their run?"

    That is indeed what the passenger is there for, and yes, they do at least one run of the road to write down the cues. Otherwise we would be seeing far slower rallies than we do today and many more accidents.
    Read more

  • The Northrop-Loral F19 isn't real - note that the Category for the wiki page is "Fiction". (I liked the photoshop work, though.)
    Read more

  • seconded for the F19. It in fact look like... the F19... by Microprose and other toy maker. When rumors started to appear in the 80' about a stealth plane somebody had to come up with an artistic view of what it could look like.

    I managed to buy one Heller model last week, they fall into oblivion after the air force spoke openly about the F117

    wiki at
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-19_Stealth_Fighter
    Read more

  • The first of the two child/hand grenade pictures is "Child with Toy Hand Grenade in Central Park, New York City (1962)" by Diane Arbus, by the way - http://english.uchicago.edu/graduate/amer/images/nelson3.jpg

    Pity about the Northrop-Loral being a fake, it's a beautiful concept model. I think "F19" is a designation that has never actually been used for a USAF plane, even though there are ones named up to F18 and from F20 onwards.
    Read more

  • Another organic architect is Dr. Eugene Tsui (info at http://www.tdrinc.com/ and specifically his architecture at http://www.tdrinc.com/architecture.html ), who also designed a Nautilis House design to accomodate a program for a growing family (just as a nautilis adds chambers to its shell as it grows). You can see model pics at http://www.tdrinc.com/wilson.html
    Read more

  • If you want to see a *real* rally watch this:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MSrDD3tcibU
    Read more

  • In the Fallout picture, the aircraft carrier is wrong: the island should be on the other side. The bow, complete with catapults, is pointing towards the viewer, yet the island is right-hand side, when it should be on the left. Either the image is reversed, or the artist painted it from a reversed image.

    See here for reference:
    http://hnsa.org/ships/intrepid.htm

    (I presume the painting depicts the USS Intrepid at New York, but the observation would be true for any US carrier).

    The Nautilus house reminds me of the art and architecture of Roger Dean. See here for examples:

    http://www.rogerdean.com/architecture/index.htm
    Read more

  • Sorry, Anonymous. You have it exactly backward. The island on all American carriers is on the starboard (right-hand as she steams) side. In fact I don't know of a carrier from any country for which that isn't true. Note that the Navy's web site (navy.mil) has detailed information about many US ships; look it up. The picture is correct.

    The "F19" has an interesting history. When rumors started going around about "invisible" airplanes, the first thing that happened was people informing the public that they were talking about radar only; they went on and on about round surfaces being bad reflectors, hiding the inlets from the ground, and similar stuff. Then sketches started making the rounds, all with rounded and swoopy lines. It even made Tom Clancy, as the "Wobblin' Goblin" of Red Storm Rising. The real F117 is so totally different that there are those, myself included, who darkly suspect a disinformation campaign, and the fact that "F19" hasn't been used feeds our paranoia :-)

    Regards,
    Ric
    Read more

  • Ric, I think you misunderstood anonymous' comment. Although carrier islands are always on the starboard side,(I know from serving aboard everything class, forrestal to nimitz) the one in "fallout" appears to be reversed in the image or the image itself is reversed. The dead givaway is that the bow is facing the viewer. also it appears to be an older class ship due to the two bridle catchers sticking out.

    former flightdeck troubleshooter/tech USN.
    Read more

  • I don't get the comment about the carrier's island either .. it looks right to me in the picture. CVN 75 is USS Harry Truman.
    http://www.navsource.org/archives/02/75.htm

    As a point of interest, the Japanese Akagi and Hiryu had their island superstructures on the port side of the ship (there were a couple of convoluted reasons for this) but this feature increased the incidence of accidents as propeller aircraft tended to swerve left due to torque if engine power was suddenly increased. So this feature was abandoned in later ships.
    Read more

  • I'm the "anonymous" who posted the comment about the carrier's island. Couple of points:

    1. For clarity, I'm talking about the carrier in the post-apocalyptic-style painting from the game "Fallout" at the top of the page, NOT the photograph of the washdown system being tested on CVN-75.

    2. I stand by my observation: the carrier in the painting clearly has it's bow towards the viewer, which means the island is on the wrong side. All US carriers most certainly DO have the island to starboard (right) which means you can test this just by looking at the painting and the photo below it: they're both "bow-on" shots, so one of them MUST be wrong.

    3. The carrier in the painting has a funnel (so it can't be a CVN-anything) and looks awfully like a SCB-125 modified Essex class, hence my tentative ID of it as the Intrepid.

    HWS
    Read more

  • The carrier in the fallout pic is the USS Oriskany, I'm almost certain of it. Most likely inspired from it's gutted and rusted condition from before it was sunk as a reef in 2006.
    Read more

  • http://www.florida-divepros.com/P5160017.jpg

    You're right about the island, looks like it was reversed when the drawing was made
    Read more

  • haha found the source pic :P
    I wish I could just edit this into my previous post

    http://www.navsource.org/archives/02/023435.jpg
    Read more

  • Think you're right about it being inspired by the Oriskany: the painting has a suggestion of an anchor chain wrapped around the bow in exactly the same way as the one in the Florida-divepros photo, and the pattern of open and shut portholes in the bow is the same.

    Also, check out this picture of the actual sinking:

    http://slrsite.com/gallery/v/oriskany/fire-in-the-hole-1.jpg.html

    Guess that'd be where the artist got the idea for the red "glows" in the picture eh? ;-)

    HWS
    Read more

  • Oh yeah you're right. Neat photos, I had not seen seen that set of the sinking yet.
    Read more

  • The first 'anonymous' -- excellent homework on your debunking...but the other anonymous got it right by noticing the 'Fiction' category highlighted and bolded at the bottom. It's not the Microprose or the Testor's stealths (that were the most common) -- it's the Monogram stealth F-19:

    http://www.collectorsquest.com/blog/2008/02/04/the-stealth-that-never-was/

    Testor's had inside information on some parts of the real F117 and did more research; Monogram took a space-age picture from a Loral advertisement and copied it. I prefer the latter.
    Read more

  • IIRC, didn't the DoD actually ,sue Testors Hawk over their F-19, and then fail to produce any evidence in court on the grounds that it was classified? I always thought that was a marvellous bit of disinformation: it lent serious credibility to the Testors Hawk version, which turned out to be nothing much like the real thing...:-D

    HWS
    Read more

  • No suing occurred, but Congress did try to claim the Testor's model was proof that security had been breached -- a senator held up a Testor's model in session and asked, how can it be so classified if kids can buy them at a hobby shop. A high-ranking person in the F-117 project then built a simple model showing what the real stealth looked like, and took it to the security council to prove that Testor's model was entirely fictional. (this is truth, found in a couple different sources online; no time to find linkies at this time). Monogram, however, paid Testor's for the right to use the name "F-19 stealth" on the model in the Specter article, to avoid being sued for copying Testor's lead. That's why the F-19 Stealth video game looks like Testor's model: licensing fees speak volumes.
    Read more

  • About that Texas police car: those are not arrows! (so weird I had to Google it ;)
    More pics here: http://www.lonestarstangs.com/forum/schertz-police-car-v-ak-47-a-12658.html
    Read more

  • That so called London Met Police Lamborghini, is a Photoshop.
    One, because the Met do not have a Lambo.
    Two, because its very obviously shopped.
    And three, because the license plate reads "Yevil" which is the show plates given to a number of vehicles.
    Read more

  • It dont think the Segways with the big red sign "Paramedic" are police...
    Read more

  • I was a member of the forum this picture http://lh5.google.ca/abramsv/R8-tHHH54kI/AAAAAAAAKwo/TJJxpbHdwXo/2096443269_f8fd5ddb56_o.jpg?imgmax=512
    was originally posted to. Neither guy is a (goofing off) police officer. It's the result of an amusing and talented amateur photographer and willing friends.
    Read more

  • The 2nd pic with the clown, the cops are justified in their recoil and apparent fear. People have been known to put liquids other than water into water guns, such as diluted acid, pepper spray-like liquids, bleach, ammonia etc. People are messed up.
    Nice collection of pics, BTW.
    Read more

  • Actually, the cop leading the pig might not be dumb (or posed); Pigs have an excellent sense of smell (ask anyone who gathers truffles for a living) and, as I understand it, are just as good as dogs when it comes to sniffing out e.g. drugs. Also, a cop dragging (or being dragged by, as the case may be) a pig is probably less intimidating than some enormous, saliva-dripping German Shepherd.

    Regards & all,
    Thomas
    Read more

  • What on earth are they holding in the foreground of the 2nd picture of the Iranian Police? Whatever it is looks like it's absurdly high calibre - a flare gun, or something like an M79 maybe?
    Read more

  • Reply to 256:

    The guns in the 2nd Iranian Police pic are competition-type target pistols. The big tube is a recoil-compensator, not a barrel: the actual barrel is above it, and may be only .22 in calibre.

    This pic is presumably the Police sport-shooting team (or a staged publicitiy shot, of course). HWS
    Read more

  • Oops - re my last comment, the big tube isn't a recoil compensator, it's an air-reservoir: the guns are competition air-pistols........

    HWS.
    Read more

  • Indeed they are air pistols.

    Steyr LP's I beleive.
    Read more

  • QUOTE: Russian militia has to carry a CANNON around to adequately counter Russian mafia firepower: UNQUOTE...

    this not for fight the crime mans it is for shoot the snows on montain to make the slide. avalanche you call slide snow? not goode gun for mans fight. is goode for snow slideing for make the safe. My english not so good but i am snow slide works mans. thanks you.
    Read more

  • Successful website
    Read more

  • very nice made me lol
    only thing is... i dont think the segways are police, they say paramedic on the side...:S
    Read more

  • excellent snaps !!
    really liked it... can spend days just watching them...
    keep it up !!

    Akshay

    Web site Designing and Development Co Mumbai
    www.HugeH.com
    Read more

  • Captain Matt: The Met Lambo isn't photoshopped, they had it at the MPH motorshow at Earls Court, London, last year. It's just one they hired for a few weeks and stuck the stickers on for publicity (I had a chat with one of the cops at the stand). So it's not really theirs, but it definately isn't photoshopped :)
    Read more

  • i want uniforms like those in the cosplay.the fear factor would be great especially if it was all bullet proof
    Read more

  • the picture with the clown is actually of a member of the clown army (The Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army), protesting. They protest against the WTO, G8, etc.. The certainly do not carry anything more lethal/harmful than water. The shock on the policeman's face was probably more due to seeing another pesky cameraman.
    Read more

  • Um doesn't that say Paramedic on the side of the Segway? I think there is a HUGE difference.
    Read more

  • The picture captioned "Russian Military Police" is neither of Russians or Police. It is of the "White Helmets" motorcycle display team who are members of the Royal Corps of Signals in the British Army. Hope that helps.
    Read more

  • Azumanga FTW.
    Read more

  • Does anyone know what that spider is? It isn't quite as horrifying as an Australian Clock Spider, but it's pretty close.
    Read more

  • Did you know the USSMacon was a aircraft carryer dirigible?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Macon_%28ZRS-5%29
    Read more

  • alvarhillo, thanks for the info, updated
    Read more

  • When I was younger, I was fascinated by the airships and zeppelins of the early part of the 20th Century. In fact, I have a book called "Zeppelin: The German Airship Story", which touched on their rise and fall. I am struck by the fact that they could never seem to get the design of these monsters right, and the majority of them crashed to Earth or burned up. If you can find a copy of this book, snag it. It's very fascinating.

    Great article! Looks like they finally got it right!
    Read more

  • There are still airship hangars at Cardington in the UK. Check out the pictures on their web-site: http://www.controltowers.co.uk/C/Cardington.htm
    You cannot believe the immensity of them unless you've been there, as I have. The pictures just don't do them justice
    Read more

  • These are the Cardington hangars on Google Earth: http://tinyurl.com/3dc4k3
    Read more

  • Yes, Zeppelins certainly will become a familiar site in the skies over San Francisco! BTW, we're Airship Ventures, not Airship Adventures as you credit us on a couple of the images.
    www.airshipventures.com
    airshipventures.blogspot.com
    Read more

  • one of the tallest buildings in Europe is an aqua spa in the hangar of a bankrupt modern zeppelin construction factory: http://www.tropical-islands.de/de/presse/pressefotos.html

    and the central market in Riga is one of the biggest dayly markets in Europe and is in the old zeppelin hangars from the early 20th century
    Read more

  • Thank you for the link; what a great collection of images!

    The mooring mast on top of the Empire State Building seems to have been a publicity gimmick more than anything else. Certainly, it wasn't very well thought out: it was far too windy up there to be viable. Still, I did like seeing it in use in Sky Captain.
    Read more

  • We still have new, ACTIVE airships here in Elizabeth City, NC. Production and maintenance is on the old Weeksville Naval LTA Base. http://elizcity.com/weeksnas/
    http://www.newbegun.com/tour/Airship_Hanger.php
    http://www.newbegun.com/tour/Bicycling_02.php
    Read more

  • thank you all... wonderful info
    Read more

  • The real Problem with Airships is, that Helium is extremely rare. As a tecnician at the Zeppelin Yard in Friedrichshafen explained to me, there is only about enough helium to fill two of the once proposed "Cargolifter" Airships. Until we synthesize a light gas we probably wont see alot of these Dreams come true.
    Read more

  • Airships are still wonderful ships and could be on the way back. See my 2006 post that covers much of what's on here: http://www.creationrobot.com/2006/03/airships-they-are-coming-slowly-from-many-different-companies-and-countries/
    Read more

  • yes the gas is a problem but not the rare is the point ,but the priece.
    the cost of one fill for the cargolifter is more expensive than the rest of the zeppelin.

    sry for my bad english. ^.^
    Read more

  • Thank you, Creation Robot - great link!
    Read more

  • Hey there great article just blogged about it at Airshipworld. Here ist the Link: Dark Roasted Airships

    Regards

    Andreas
    --
    Editor of Airshipworld
    --------------------------------------------------------
    Visit the Airshipworld Blog at
    http://airshipworld.blogspot.com
    --------------------------------------------------------
    Read more

  • Thank you Andreas, we'll keep a close look on your site.
    Read more

  • The problem with airships of the past was that they were ahead of their time. The problem was materials and the flotation gas.

    The outer materials used to "protect" the skins of these beasts turned out to be the same formulation used for solid rockets today.

    The gas normally was helium, but Germany chose to use Hydrogen because the only source of helium was the USA.

    The structure of these beasts were typically made out of Aluminum, a fairly new metal not quite mastered. A lot of structural failures occurred because engineers assumed Aluminum was lightweight iron, which it wasn't. Aluminum, while strong, has different characteristics, which require different engineering considerations. Hence the designs were always flawed.

    Today we have carbon fiber based composites, super adhesives, light-weight fabrics and polymers, and a far superior knowledge of metals.

    There is one problem, however, there is a finite supply of helium, and once it's gone, it's gone. It's so light, it just leaves our atmosphere.
    Read more

  • Hi Avi,

    I'm looking for a higher resolution copy of your image titled "USS Macon over New York, in 1931."
    ussmacon3.jpg

    I'd like to make a print to put up in my living room.

    Could you help me out or direct me to the source?

    cheers,
    Kosta
    Read more

  • Try this link - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Uss-akron-manhattan.jpg
    Read more


Send us your topic ideas, site suggestions, rants or sweet unpublished poetry. We love to hear from you.



Misc.:
Compare Prices
Samsung LED TV






Blu