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  • Introduction to Libyan Food.Introduction to Libyan Food.

    Food in Libya is one of the most important activities of any Libyan family. The Libyans always say: one must eat well. Olive oil is the main ingredient of nearly any dish or meal in Libya, and it is almost impossible to cook or prepare any Libyan food without it. Its use in North Africa goes back thousands of years, and its healing goodness and life-prolonging properties were well known to the ancient Libyans and Egyptians. Offering of the olive branch to the Libyan oracle of the God Amon at Siwa indicates its sacred nature and antiquity.

    Its use in Mediterranean diets has always been associated with good health and preventing major diseases like stroke, heart disease and lung cancer. The healing properties are found mainly in the extra virgin olive oil (and virgin olive oil), which is naturally produced, unrefined oil (also called "cold pressed"); while the active ingredients of the second type, known as "pure oil" or "olive oil ", were badly destroyed by the chemical processes used to extract the oil. According to recent research extra-virgin olive oil contains a natural painkiller similar to ibuprofen (found in headache tablets), and its active ingredient oleocanthal inhibits the activity of enzymes involved in inflammation just as ibuprofen does. Olive oil is also widely used as a skin ointment for its healing properties and in perfumes and medicines.

    Ancient oil lamps in Libya were also kept alight by a regular supply of olive oil; adding a bit of salt around the wick prolongs the life of the lamp and reduces the consumption of oil. In fact the first commercial advert in the world was said to have been a Carthaginian oil lamp which went for sale for one penny.

     

    "Your balanced diet is your medicine."

     

    palm dates


    Dates & Date Syrup in Libyan Food:



    palm dates at various stages of ripening

    Dates at various stages: yellow when first ripen, dark brown when mature, black-dark-red as date syrup (rreb). The image on the right shows the seed, housed inside the date, which will go on to become another Palm.

    There are four main ingredients of  traditional Libyan food: olives (and olive oil), palm dates, grains and milk. These are very ancient foods and their use must go back to neolithic times, when humans first began to harvest their produce and make use of the natural surrounding ingredients. Grains are roasted, ground, sieved and used for making bread, cakes, soups, bazin, and other dough-based dishes. Dates are harvested, dried and stored for the rest of the year; they can be eaten as they are, made into syrup or slightly fried and eaten with "bsisa", or eaten with milk as a delicious delicacy. This traditional breakfast was very common in Libya until recently, when many of the traditional dishes and foods began to slowly disappear into the corridors of darkness, and supplanted by modern, bland, fat-rich foods.

    Anthropologists tell us that early neolithic societies never "end the life" of female cattle and that it is always the male who is subsequently consumed; females are a regular source of both: milk and more females, to continue the cycle of families. Thus milk by itself becomes a meal of its own; and from milk one obtains ghee, yogurt, butter and cheese. Sahara's slim and dignified Tuareg can easily live on dried dates and fresh milk provided by the palm and the goat respectively. Date syrup, olive oil, and boiled dough make one of the most ancient and popular dishes in Libya: "a'eish", "utshu" or "bazin" -- names which also mean "food" and "life".

     

    libyan traditional dish: palm dates, bsisa and a glass of milk
    Palm dates, bsisa and a glass of milk: prehistoric dish.

     

    Libyan Traditional Sand Ovens:

    cooking bread in hot sand, Ghadames, Libya
    Baking Bread in Hot Sand, Ghadames.

    The sand in Libya gets really hot in the summer that walking slowly on it with bare feet becomes unbearable; one needs to walk fast just like some walk on embers. Adding some real fire to that, one can imagine the effect on tender dough: instant baking.

    Traditional Tuareg way of cooking bread by burying it in hot sand, which is as effective as an oven. The technique can also be used to bake potatoes (jacket potato) and eggs by burying them whole beneath the hearth. A good shake and a couple of whacks renders the bread clean and ready to eat (see photo below).


    the cooked bread is  now clean and ready to eat
    Local Libyan Bread From Ghadames.

     

     

    libyan bread

    Modern bread: the one on the right is made in the bakery, and the one on the left is home-made tajeen-bread, some of which is made of real wholemeal flour and thus very filling and tasty.


     

    Libyan Black & Green Tea

     

    traditional Libyan tea pot, gently bubbling on embers

    One of the most important social occasions in Libya is the daily session of tea drinking. Brings families together, to chat, laugh, discuss and gossip about the highlights of the day and about life in general. Talking in Libya is very important social activity; it firmly bonds the family.

    Libyan tea is rather very strong, thick, syrup-like black tea. After boiling water in a traditional tea pot, one adds a handful of red tea leaves, and leaves to boil for a long time (ten to twenty minutes). Remove the pot from the fire, open the lid, add some sugar, and boil again for a few more minutes. The ready tea is then removed from the fire, left to settle for a few seconds, and served in small glasses (as shown in the photo). Normally this is prepared during a chat session, around which members of the family gather together to socialise for an hour or so before they each carry on with their own separate paths, and during which one drinks two rounds of tea (each round prepared as above and lasts about half an hour). The third round is served with roasted peanuts or roasted almonds (mixed with the tea in the same glass).

    In special occasions and for those who still follow the old tradition, the tea is first poured into another mug, and then using two mugs, one continuously empties the content of one mug into the other and then back into the original mug for at least twenty or thirty times, to produce what the Libyans call reghwet or reghwa, which can be translated as froth or foam, which is steadily added to one glass at a time as being made. After all the empty glasses are half-full with froth, the hot tea is poured over the froth and served hot. The trick to produce the froth is to lift one mug as high as possible, by stretching your arm over your head, while pouring the content into the other mug, and then repeat the process by lowering the raised hand and rising the other one, and so on until enough froth has been produced.

    After meals, the Libyans traditionally always use green tea to aid digestion, and also help eliminate stomach problems after a heavy meal. It really does work. Green tea is better for you, especially when drank without milk. Adding milk destroys much of the powerful effects of its antioxidants.

    One of the main components of tea are antioxidants. The process of oxidation in the human body causes damage to our cells. A free radical is a charged atom that steals an electron from a healthy cell in order to re-establish its own stability, leaving you with a bit of damaged DNA. Given time, the damage accumulates and as a result one ages faster or even dies quicker.

    Now comes the important role of antioxidants. They talk to free radicals and say: hi, I have some free electrons, do you want some? The free radicals, being lazy, care less where the electrons come from and thus happily take up the free offer and spare your helpless, healthy cells the loss of much-needed electrons.

    The process of oxidation is accelerated by pollution, alcohol and smoking, and therefore regular supply of green (or red) black tea and vitamins help keep the supply of antioxidants. Ask your Libyan guide to prepare some Libyan tea for you and taste the difference. The above photo is of a tea session we prepared for an Italian group while camping in the desert - in Adiri.

     

     

     

    Garlic

     

     

    garlic in the market

    Garlic and lemons for sale in a local market.

     

    Garlic is also one of the most important items in Libyan food, as it is usually added to most dishes that involve preparing tomato sauce or stew, especially for couscous and pasta sauce. It is finely chopped over the sauce as it boils, just before taking it off the ring (or the fire source) to preserve its goodness and flavour; and then served immediately while its rich aroma still in the air. Garlic can also be crushed and then either mixed with honey and eaten with bread, or mixed with olive oil and spread over food and salads.

    Garlic in fact is the most important medicinal food on the planet. It contains nearly 60 minerals, vitamins, antibacterial, anti-fungal and anti-cancer chemicals, all of which are almost essential to human's health, and many of which are said to ward off many types of cancer.

    The way nature compacted the individual cloves into one uniform head is instantly comparable to a jar of multivitamin tablets - except that the manufactured multivitamin tables are said to be devoid of any goodness and many scientists still think they are a complete waste of money. If nature has already made them for us, why then buy expensive artificial ones? Is there anybody in my head that is not me?

     

     

     

    Utshu, A'eish or Bazin

     

    One of the main and most popular dishes in Libya. A traditional, and probably neolithic, dish made of dough and sauce. The dough is kneed into a semi spherical ball and placed in the middle of a large bowel, around which the sauce is poured, making the dish look like a rock island surrounded by water.

    The Dough: the first stage is to prepare the flour which then can be stored for up to two years and used when needed: roast the grains in an empty frying pan until golden brown; grind into fine flour; sieve well and store away in a jar. To prepare the dish, take about one kilogram of flour from the mix, boil about third litre of water in a large deep saucepan, and then as the water is boiling keep adding a bit of flour with your hand while mixing with the other hand, using a large wooden ladle. Once you start this, do not stop, just keep adding flour with one hand while mixing in a circular fashion with the other, until the dough becomes hard to stir and the mixture solidifies into dough. Remove the saucepan off the ring, take out the dough, place in a larger bowel, and while wetting your hand with a bit of water (because the dough is still hot) start kneading the mixture into consistent dough, just as you kneed bread, and shape it into a ball, and finally place  in the middle of a large bowel and pour the sauce all around. It is eaten by hand by breaking a small bit with your fingers, pulling a small bit down into the sauce and kneading it with the sauce into a tasty lump which you throw into your mouth for further chewing. The traditional type of bazin, especially the one prepared by the mountain people, is very hard to drive the fingers in and thus known as "mountain bazin". This stiff consistency is achieved by boiling the final dough (after it has been prepared as described above).

     

    making bazin: mixing flouer in boiling water to make tough dough

    Doughing: making the dough.

    The consistency is solid and thick, where a bit of force is required to push your fingers through the finished dough. It is nothing like bread. And if you want a really tough bazin you need to visit Nafousah Mountain (say Jado) and ask for a traditional mountain bazin: very hard. Although in the above photo the cook is using one hand to mix the dough, usually women sit on the floor, wrap a thick cloth around the hot pan, and hold the pan between their feet, while both hands holding the wooden ladle (aghenjay) to mix the dough with their full strength - something many modern women cannot do, or instead they use white flour wich produces light and soft bazin, instead of the traditional wholemeal flour.

     

    dough now served on a plate

    The dough then is worked into a solid dome-shaped lump and placed in the middle of the plate.

    The Sauce: any kind of sauce can be used with this. Normally a simple meat and a couple of vegetables is used as follows: fry two large onions, add garlic, turmeric, chili powder, salt and tomato puree, then throw in the lamb chops (or beef or fish) and water, and then cook until the meat nearly done. Add potatoes and pumpkin pieces and further cook until vegetables are done. Pour the sauce around the dough, and serve while hot with lemon (ready to be squeezed into the sauce).

    A simple version of white bazin (made of white flour) is normally cooked for breakfast, but eaten with olive oil and date syrup: instead of mounting the dough like a mound, spread flat onto a plate, then sprinkle with olive oil and pour some date syrup in the middle (or alternatively use honey, or sugar, or fenugreek powder instead of date syrup). It is eaten in a similar way: break a small piece of dough, mix thoroughly with oil, dip into the syrup and mix with your fingers a few more times before throwing it into the mouth for further chewing.

     

    bazin with chicken sauce

    The sauce used for this one is made of tomato puree, turmeric, chili powder, potatoes, chicken and fenugreek seeds (still visible at the top). The fenugreek seeds are really unique: strong in flavour and slightly bitter.

     

    bazin with yugurt drink

    The sauce used for this one is made of sour milk (milk that tastes like yogurt) and topped with fenugreek powder. Delicious, to say the least. Again, this is an ancient dish, possibly neolithic.

     

    Libyan bazin with fish

    Libyan bazin with fish & potatoes

     


    Zummeeta

     

     

    zummita: a traditional libyan dish: dough made of roasted flour

     

    Z'ummeeta or zumita is yet another ancient Libyan dish. It is a doughy dish made of mixing water with flour until it is firm and doughy. It is eaten by dipping a small bit, taken by hand, in olive oil, and with the option of dipping in chili sauce. It is usually eaten for breakfast, but some times it is eaten whenever one is hungry, as it takes only few minutes to mix.

    The flour mix is made of whole grain barley or wheat, a bit of coriander and cumin seeds. These are dry roasted in an empty frying pan until golden brown, then ground into powder, sieved and finally placed in clay jars and put away. Normally this process is done once a year, although the mixture can last for even two years. Whenever you need some z'ummeeta, just take some flour, add a pinch of salt, mix thoroughly with a bit of water, spread on a plate, and pour the olive oil on top. The mixture breaks up in the hand nice and dry, and smells fresh with a hint of coriander and olive oil. The modern way of making it is to mix the oil with the mixture and serve it ready mixed, as in the above photo, normally with a bit of harisa in the middle as a dip.

     

    Couscous (Kesksoo)

    couscous meal, covered with traditional straw-made coloured  pyramidal cover
    Traditional couscous meal, covered with a straw-madecover.
    I can see the chickpeas (chick peas): an essential ingredient. From Ghadames, Libya.

    Couscous is one of the most widely popular dishes in Libya and, for that matter, in the whole of North Africa. Its recent spread in Europe is a testimony to its unique qualities and special taste, rarely found in other dishes. The dish involves cooking two things: the couscous, made of wheat or barley, ground into coarse flour just like semolina (but without the stickiness), and the vegetable and meat sauce to go with it.

    The couscous: to start with, sprinkle some salt, pepper, olive oil and a bit of water over the couscous grains, then mix thoroughly by hand, from right to left, slowly rolling the couscous grains into larger balls. Keep mixing and adding a few drops of water at a time until the balls become round and about a third the size of a rice grain. Keep mixing in this manner until all couscous has been used. (Nowadays you buy it mixed and ready to steam.) Place the mixture in a special saucepan called "keskas", which is like a steamer or a saucepan with lots of holes, and cover with the lid.

    This steamer is then placed on top of the other saucepan containing the vegetable and meat sauce, so that the couscous will be cooked by the steam rising from the simmering sauce, thus transferring the flavour to the couscous itself. The modern, commercial way of cooking couscous by placing the contents of the ready-mixed couscous bag in a saucepan and covering it for a few minutes with boiling water does not produce a good quality couscous, but some tasteless stuff you buy in supermarkets.  Real couscous needs to be steamed over a good sauce for the flavour to soak in, and then needs to be thoroughly mixed with a bit of extra virgin olive oil to further enhance the flavour, before covering the couscous with the lamb and vegetable sauce.

    couscous with meat, vegetables and fried green pepper on top

    Couscous with meat, vegetables, chickpeas, chips, and A fried hot green pepper on top.

    The sauce's recipe:

    • olive oil, water
    • onion & garlic
    • spices: chili powder, turmeric, cumin, coriander, salt.
    • tomato pure
    • vegetable: potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, chickpeas
    • lamb meat (or fish, or dried octopus, or chicken): lamb meat is the traditional favourite for its rich flavour.

    Heat the oil, fry the onions until golden brown, throw in the garlic, the spices and tomato puree and mix for a few minutes, and then add the meat and about half a litre of water and cover the saucepan with the lid and cook for at least half an hour. Then remove the lid and add the vegetable and the chickpeas to the sauce, make sure there is enough water but not to much so that the sauce comes out nice and thick, and place the steamer containing the couscous on top and cover with the lid and leave to cook for a further 15 or 20 minutes on a slow heat.

    After that, take the couscous out of the steamer and pour into a large bowl and leave to cool for a few minutes, then sprinkle some olive oil and mix again, breaking the congealed clumps into fine soft grains of couscous and place back in the steamer for a further few minutes cooking.

    To serve, put the couscous in a large bowl (if the whole family eating from one bowl) or serve small portions into plates, cover with the vegetable sauce (using a good ladle), place a piece of tender lamb on top of the sauce, then finally fry some finely chopped onions until golden and mix them with a bit more of cooked chickpeas and sprinkle the mixture on top of the sauce and the meat. Some people further place peeled boiled eggs between the lumps of lamp. Finally, do not forget to eat.

    beans, nuts and seeds, in sacks

    Sacks of dries beans, nuts, seeds and roots in a local market.

    Dried beans and grains are also a fundamental part of food in Libya. Chickpeas are soaked in water for a few hours, then cooked with tomato and meat sauce for couscous or added to pasta sauce. Broad beans are cooked in a dipping sauce of tomatoes and herbs and deliciously eaten with bread.

     

    Mb'atten


    stuffed potatoes

    Mb'atten is really a Libyan specialty dish, prepared on special occasions, celebrations and festivities, often with Kofta and couscous. It is a unique dish never to be found anywhere else in the world (according to our current knowledge). It is made of slicing potato lengthwise into thin slices (about 3mm thick) but keeping each two slices joined together at the base, to form a sandwich, which will be stuffed with minced meat and herbs and then fried. The remaining mix of meat and herbs can be flattened into small burgers, dipped into white flour and then fried to make Kofta.

    The Stuffing: a good quantity of minced meat (beef or lamb), about half of the mixture should be meat, a bundle of fresh green dill, a bundle of fresh parsley, two bundles of spring onion, a bit of fresh parsley, 3 cloves of garlic (ground into paste), teaspoon of salt, teaspoon of hot chili, 2 teaspoon of turmeric, a touch of cinnamon, 3 tablespoons of tomato puree, and one egg. (Modern variants of the dish do not include dill any more in the ingredients.)

    fresh herbs from the market
    Weighing fresh herbs at the local market. The most common herbs used in some dishes, like Mb'atten, include spring onions, coriander, parsley, dill, and vine leaves (used for stuffing with rice).

    cutting the fresh herbs to be mixed with the mince
    Cutting the fresh herbs, to be mixed with mince, egg, tomato puree, spices, salt.

    cut herbs ready for mixing
    Finely chopped herbs (left), then mixed with mince meat, spices and the rest of the mix (right).

    Preparation: finely chop the fresh herbs (parsley, dill and spring onion) and place in a large bowel. Spice and season with the spice mixture and add the tomato puree, break in the egg and mix and squeeze (with your hands to force all the juice out of the herbs). Pour some oil in a frying pan, chop in one onion very fine, and add the mince, and cook until nearly done, and then put the mince in a bowel and leave to cool down, before finally mixing it with the fresh herb mixture.

    how to cut the potatoes redy for stuffing with the herbs
    How to cut the pototo as described: you cut a thick slice, then cut each slice half way down.

    The second stage involves preparing the potatoes: slice the potato lengthwise, cutting one slice three-quarters down and stopping just before reaching the bottom, then cutting the second all the way down, ending with two slices of potatoes joined at the base, each about 3mm thick. Sprinkle some salt on all the slices and dry with kitchen paper, if wet. Open the two slices and stuff with the mixture (about 2 tablespoonfuls for each sandwich), until the sand witch is full and fat, and then tap in firmly with your hand along the exposed edge.

    stuffing the potatoes with the mixture of mince and herbs
    Stuffing the potatoes with the mixture of mince and herbs.

    stuffed potatoes
    The herbs, the sliced potatoes, the egg mix and the flour. Stuff the slice, dipped in egg then in flour and put on the side (or straight into hot sizzling oil).

    now the stuffed potatoes are frying in hot oil

    Hold the two slices from the joined end and dip the exposed stuffing into white flour and then dip (only the exposed stuffing, not the rest of the potato) in egg (to hold together while frying) and throw in a deep fryer (or frying pan with lots of oil), and fry until golden brown.

    ready to eat mbetten or herb-stuffed potatoes

    These are now ready to eat, but traditionally, they can be cooked for a further few minutes in a saucepan with a bit of tomato sauce, as follows: place all the remaining potato pieces that were left over from the slicing in the saucepan, place all the stuffed potatoes on top, pour in a bit of tomato sauce, cover the saucepan, and heat over a very low heat for about ten minutes. This turns the fried potatoes into soft and sauce-covered delicious chunks, just like adding a bit of ketchup to chips.  Serve warm with couscous or salad. If there is a lot of mixture left over, then roll into small balls, flatten onto a plate containing white flour, then fry in olive oil as koftas. The stuffed potatoes are also great cold, after being kept in the fridge overnight (my favourite).

    stuffed potatoes ready to eat


     

    Summer Salad


    Traditional Libyan "slatha" is a main meal eaten by itself and is not a side dish that accompanies a main course. This is a traditional summer salad in Libya, often prepared by the beach for an easy and light lunch after swimming in the sea.

    Preparation: cut one onion very thinly into a large bowel, chop five tomatoes into six segments each, cut half cucumber into small cubes, throw in a handful of pitted green olives, cut one fresh green chili pepper into small pieces, add a pinch of salt, 3 tablespoons of olive oil, and about half a cup of water. Mix well by hand, squeezing the tomatoes and the vegetable to release some of the flavour into the water (but not to much as to mush up the contents), squeeze a bit of lemon and serve with crispy bread.

     

    libyan summer salad

    Libyan Summer Salad

    The dish is eaten by breaking a piece of bread and dipping it into the salad and lifting some of the vegetables with it by folding it over the vegetables. Many of the younger generations nowadays add a tin of tuna to the salad for richer flavour and some protein.

     

    pumpkins
    Pumpkins at sale in the local market.

    Pumpkins are cooked in tomato and herb sauce with other vegetables like potatoes and carrots (or/and meat or chicken), and served either with couscous, rice or pasta, or even eaten as a dip with bread.

     

    Shorba (Libyan Soup)

     

    Fry finely-cut large onion and garlic in ghee until golden brown; add the meat cubes (beef or lamb), spices (turmeric, chili, salt, a bit of curry powder, and a teaspoonful of sugar), tomato puree and water, then cover and simmer for about 40 minutes until the meat is cooked. Add in the orzo (pasta shaped like pearls of barley) and cooked chickpeas and cook for 15 minutes until orzo is cooked. Chop a bit of fresh parsley and crush one clove of garlic and mix with olive oil and add to the mixture just before removing from the ring. Serve with lemon wedges, raw chopped parsley (sprinkled at the top) and crispy warm bread.

     

    green chili

    T'ajeen or Tajeen


    libyan tajeen

    Peel and cut potatoes into thick slices, boil until cooked, crush, and spread in a "tajeen" (a baking tray). Fry thinly-chopped two onions until brown, and add the mince and cook for a few minutes, then add the crushed garlic and spice up with chili, turmeric, salt and curry powder, and stir and simmer until cooked. Remove and spread on a large plate and leave to cool. All the ingredients cold, add to the potatoes and mix in the beaten eggs and bake for 20 minutes at mark 180. Finally, take out from the oven, sprinkle some mozzarella cheese on top and bake for a further 15 minutes until the dish is covered with a light golden crust. Serve hot with crispy bread.

     

    Boureek: Bureek: Burik

     

    The Libyan basic boureek, also written as bourik, burik or bourek, is a very simple and deliciously crispy dish, made as follows:

    • break an egg on a flat piece of pastry
    • fold the other half of the pastry over to form a triangular shape
    • pinch the edges together to seal firmly
    • brush the edges with a solution of egg and water (to prevent the egg leaking out while frying)
    • throw in hot oil to sizzle for a few minutes
    • turn over and fry the other side for a few more minutes
    • then take out and serve hot and crispy

    Of course, there are other flavours of the dish, made by varying the filling, including one with minced meat: fry the meat with onions, add the herbs of your choice, then take a large table spoonful and spread on the pastry, break the egg on top, fold over and then continue as above. In other North African countries, like Algeria, the shape of the boureek is like a "spring roll" or a sausage roll.

    boureek: a libyan dish made of pastry: an egg broken inside a flat pastry, folded over, edges seals then fried. Crispy and yummy.

    Libyan Boureek

     

    Lebrak

     

    Lebrak is a dish made of stuffed vine leaves (locally called esselk leaves). In fact any kind of green thick leaves will probably do the job. The mixture is made of rice, tomato pure, herbs, spices, garlic, a bit of salt, and either small pieces of meat or mince. Mix all well, put a bit on a leaf, roll over and fold the edges, then place in a saucepan, making sure you place a few leaves in the bottom of the saucepan to take the heat, and these extra leaves (or carpet) often come out burnt. Once all in the saucepan, you need a lid that is slightly smaller than the saucepan so that it will drop all the way down inside the saucepan and sit directly on the stuffed pieces. Then you need a heavy stone to put on the lid, to keep it down. All this is to prevent the stuffed pieces from opening up while cooking. Finally put a little bit of water in the saucepan, not much at all (maybe a small cup), and then place over slow fire to simmer gently for about half an hour until the rice is cooked. Take out gently, sprinkle some olive oil, and serve. Really nice cold too.

    lebrak: a Libyan dish made of vine leaves stuffed with rice


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  • The Giant Mountains in Kjerag Depths.The Giant Mountains in Kjerag Depths.


    source: Images Photo Gallery

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  • Lukasz Warzecha for 10 years climbing, shooting and crossing mountains.Lukasz Warzecha for 10 years climbing, shooting and crossing mountains.


    Lukasz Warzecha born in 1983 in Poland and now vide in Edinburgh, Scotland, where he runs his photography business LWimages.


    Amateur photographer Lukasz was for 5 years. In 2007, won the "National Diploma Photography" (Digital Imaging and Photo Studio) at Thames Valley University.


    "The time you spend in college helped me develop some philosophies to keep my photographic work and also provided me with a valuable insight into the" industry standard "," said Lukasz.


    After graduating from college, Lukasz start the process of establishing itself as a professional photographer. For 10 years he was climbing and crossing mountains, that have led to major climbing areas in Europe.










































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  • Escher, the artist of metaphysical dreams, creator of impossible worlds.Escher, the artist of metaphysical dreams, creator of impossible worlds.

     mcescher Sure you have seen any of his prints and drawings, and if not it's time you do. Escher is an artist creating impossible worlds where objects are math and evoke landscapes.

    MC Escher is a great artist noted for his drawings, engravings in stone or wood. That paltry limits reproduced to small details. Highlighting both its great technique and the originality of many of us jobs.

    Maurits Cornelis Escher (Leeuwarden, The Netherlands, June 17, 1898 - Hilversum, Netherlands, March 27, 1972), better known as MC Escher was a Dutch artist known for his wood engravings, woodcuts and lithographs dealing with figures impossible, tessellations and imaginary worlds.

    Her work experiments with different methods of representing (in drawings of 2 or 3 dimensions) paradoxical spaces that challenge common modes of representation.

    Throughout his career he made over 400 lithographs and woodcuts, and some 2,000 drawings and drafts. In many there are dozens of plays, hundreds and even thousands of others. At the end of his career destroyed some of the plates for not conducting more reproductions of originals. There are also studies and drafts of many of his works, sometimes also several versions of some of them. Many of his works were sold off shortly after his death and are spread throughout the world. An important group is exposed permanently in the Escher Museum in The Hague, Netherlands.

    Escher_Museum As an artist, MC Escher is difficult to classify. There have been many interpretations of his works, but the reality is that Escher had no great pretensions or transmit messages, but basically embodied what he liked. No work based on feelings, like other artists, but simply in situations, solutions to problems, visual games and winks to the viewer. Visions sometimes befell him at night, which passed through his imagination and he thought worthy of being captured in his paintings.

    He himself would recognize that not very interested in reality or humanity in general, people or psychology, but only the things that went through his head. In a way it was someone introverted treatment even say difficult, he preferred to create his own universe.

    Experts agree, and it is quite evident considering most of

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  • Metal sculptures by Robert Jefferson.Metal sculptures by Robert Jefferson.
















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    author: wikiwill

    Eastern water dragon on rock

    Eastern water dragon on rock
    author: wikiwill

    Flying Fox

    Flying Fox
    author: littleredelf

    Young Echidna

    Young Echidna
    author: ausemade

    esturine crocodile

    White Lipped Green Tree Frog

    White Lipped Green Tree Frog
    author: Fayes4Art

    Southern Cassowary

    possum

    possum
    author: P. Emerson

    Eastern Long-Necked Turtle

    Eastern Long-Necked Turtle
    author: dave.scriven

    splendid fairy wren

    splendid fairy wren
    author: doublebug

    sugar glider

    sugar glider
    author: Leo Reynolds

    Australian Leaf Insect

    Frogmouth Owl

    Frogmouth Owl
    author: snapper

    Meet Winifred – an 8 week old wombat

    Meet Winifred - an 8 week old wombat
    author: Percita

    The Monitor Lizard

    The Monitor Lizard
    author: rajith

    Emu

    Emu
    author: a-Reino

    Dugong

    Dugong
    author: TevaD

    Mud Skipper

    Mud Skipper
    author: webecho

    Little Penguins

    red kangaroo

    Ulysses Butterfly

    Ulysses Butterfly
    author: Major Clanger

    water dragon

    water dragon
    author: The Waterboy

    Coral and Fish

    Coral and Fish
    author: richard ling

    Australian Pelican

    Australian Pelican
    author: Lip Kee

    tree-kangaroo

    tree-kangaroo
    author: swh

    Sacred Kingfisher

    Sacred Kingfisher
    author: marj_k

    rainbow-lorikeet

    rainbow-lorikeet
    author: RaeA

    Numbat

    Numbat
    author: geoffreycrane

    Wedge-tailed Eagle

    Wedge-tailed Eagle
    author: kookr

    flikfrog

    flikfrog
    author: pointr

    Bush fly

    Bush fly
    author: Ratabago

    Butterflies of Kuranda

    Butterflies of Kuranda
    author: Gary Hayes

    Blue Beauty

    Blue Beauty
    author: aussiegall

    Crimson Rosella

    Crimson Rosella
    author: 0ystercatcher

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  • Super creative designs.Super creative designs.

    Paint sound sculptures by Dentsu.

    Pencil vs Camera by Ben Heine.

    Works of art of money by Scott Campbell.


    LED light spray by Aissa Logerot.

    Michelangelo nintendo remix by Kordian Lewandowski.




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  • Morocco in Pictures.Morocco in Pictures.




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  • Mali History and LifestyleMali History and Lifestyle


























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  • Weapons Turned Into Musical Instruments.Weapons Turned Into Musical Instruments.

    Since 2008, the Mexican artist Pedro Reyes has been turning to weapons as a means to deal with crime in his native transforming them into objects of social commitment. he began working with shovels for uns, a campaign that invites citizens of the western Mexican city of Culiacan - a city known for high rates of deaths related to firearms -. illegal weapons voluntarily donate rewards in the form of coupons redeemable at local stores for appliances and electronics, where given to those who did.
    1527 guns collected were then crushed by steamroller, melted in a foundry and given to a major hardware be cast into
    blades which were then distributed to a number of institutions for adults and children to participate in the 1527 trees brushing action. his latest project "Imagine" is a set of 50 musical instruments also manufactured a variety of firearms such as handguns, shotguns, pistols, etc. Students commissioned machine. The company evolved from a simple phone call he received from kings government he had learned about guns shovels and informed by the artist who would be a public destruction of weapons that take place in Ciudad Juarez. asked if he wanted to keep the discarded metal that otherwise would be buried. armed with 6700 pieces, in the course of two weeks, in collaboration with six musicians, confiscated weapons transformed into a fully functioning orchestra, including a flute, guitar and drums. subject of musical destruction are on display as part of the "adhocracy" exhibition, curated by Joseph Grima in Istanbul Design Biennial 2012.



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  • Absolute dedication to creating by Hideyuki Nagai.Absolute dedication to creating by Hideyuki Nagai.

    These eye-popping two-dimensional sketches look as though they are about to leap off the page thanks to Japanese artist Nagai Hideyuki's clever pencil work.

    Hideyuki, 21, creates tricks of perspective by playing with where light and shadows would fall if the object really were coming out to meet you.

    Once propped against a wall these vivid optical illusions work perfectly to create a trompe l'oeil effects.

    He was inspired by a technique known professionally as anamorphosis as used by British artist Julian Beever who creates similarly elaborate 'three-dimensional' work when viewed from the right angle on pavements using chalk. 

    Because of stricter laws in Japan, Hideyuki has been restricted to the confines of his sketchbook but it has not stopped him making equally impressive artwork, letting his imagination run riot with everything from gremlins to trains to gaping mouths.

    The artist says he is inspired by English artist Julian Beever¿s street art, which he does in chalk on pavements


    Handiwork: Japanese artist Nagai Hideyuki creates there realistic 3-D drawings just by using his pencils, sketchbooks and his eye for detail

    Japanese artist Nagai Hideyuki creates there realistic 3-D drawings just by using his pencils and sketchbooks


    Trompe l'oeil: Hideyuki says he is inspired by English artist Julian Beever's street art, which he does in chalk on pavements

    Hideyuki uses unusual angles to make drawings that pop off the page, like this seated gremlin


    Fresh perspective: Hideyuki uses unusual angles to make drawings that pop off the page, like this seated gremlin

    Hideyuki, 21, from Japan, uses just his pencil to conjure up amazing sketches that fool the brain.

    His ability to draw so well in three-dimensions came from the restrictions on street artists in Japan. He wanted to work to resemble street art that pops out from walls.

    He was inspired by a technique known professionally as anamorphosis as used by British artist Julian Beever who creates similarly elaborate 'three-dimensional' work when viewed from the right angle on pavements using chalk. 

    Because of stricter laws in Japan, Hideyuki has been restricted to the confines of his sketchbook but it has not stopped him making equally impressive artwork, letting his imagination run riot with everything from gremlins to trains to gaping mouths.

    Hideyuki uses his lively imagination and tricks of perspective to create vivid imaginary characters


    Mythical creatures: Hideyuki uses his lively imagination and tricks of perspective to create vivid imaginary characters

    Nagai Hideyuki ponders one of his works with painstaking attention to detail


    Work in progress: 21-year-old Nagai Hideyuki ponders one of his works with painstaking attention to detail

     The young Japanese artist can make objects really appear like they are reaching out of the page


    Optical illusions: The young Japanese artist can make objects really appear like they are reaching out of the page

    A little monster pops out of Hideyuki's palm with a technique professionally called anamorphosis


    Cute: A little monster pops out of Hideyuki's palm with a technique professionally called anamorphosis

    This monster appears to be balancing a rubber at the end of his tongue as his gruesome head comes out of the paper


    Humourous: This monster appears to be balancing a rubber at the end of his tongue as his gruesome head comes out of the paper

    Clever uses of shadow mean that even the artist's most imaginative drawings still look realistic


    Optical trick: Clever uses of shadow mean that even the artist's most imaginative drawings still look realistic

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  • 10 Innovations That Built Ancient Rome10 Innovations That Built Ancient Rome

    The Western Roman Empire may have fallen more than 1,500 years ago, but its rich legacy of innovation and invention can still be seen today. The Romans were prodigious builders and expert civil engineers, and their thriving civilization produced advances in technology, culture and architecture that remained unequaled for centuries. From aqueducts to newspapers, find out more about 10 innovations that built ancient Rome.

    01. Aqueducts.

    The Romans enjoyed many amenities for their day, including public toilets, underground sewage systems, fountains and ornate public baths. None of these aquatic innovations would have been possible without the Roman aqueduct. First developed around 312 B.C., these engineering marvels used gravity to transport water along stone, lead and concrete pipelines and into city centers. Aqueducts liberated Roman cities from a reliance on nearby water supplies and proved priceless in promoting public health and sanitation. While the Romans did not invent the aqueduct—primitive canals for irrigation and water transport existed earlier in Egypt, Assyria and Babylon—they used their mastery of civil engineering to perfect the process. Hundreds of aqueducts eventually sprang up throughout the empire, some of which transported water as far as 60 miles. Perhaps most impressive of all, Roman aqueducts were so well built that some are still in use to this day. Rome’s famous Trevi Fountain, for instance, is supplied by a restored version of the Aqua Virgo, one of ancient Rome’s 11 aqueducts.

    02. Concrete.

    Many ancient Roman structures like the Pantheon, the Colosseum and the Roman Forum are still standing today thanks to the development of Roman cement and concrete. The Romans first began building with concrete over 2,100 years ago and used it throughout the Mediterranean basin in everything from aqueducts and buildings to bridges and monuments. Roman concrete was considerably weaker than its modern counterpart, but it has proved remarkably durable thanks to its unique recipe, which used slaked lime and a volcanic ash known as pozzolana to create a sticky paste. Combined with volcanic rocks called tuff, this ancient cement formed a concrete that could effectively endure chemical decay. Pozzolana helped Roman concrete set quickly even when submerged in seawater, enabling the construction of elaborate baths, piers and harbors.

    03. Newspapers.

    The Romans were known to contribute to public discourse through the use of official texts detailing military, legal and civil issues. Known as Acta Diurna, or “daily acts,” these early newspapers were written on metal or stone and then posted in heavily trafficked areas like the Roman Forum. Acta are believed to have first appeared around 131 B.C. and typically included details of Roman military victories, lists of games and gladiatorial bouts, birth and death notices and even human interest stories. There was also an Acta Senatus, which detailed the proceedings of the Roman senate. These were traditionally withheld from public view until 59 B.C., when Julius Caesar ordered their publication as part of the many populist reforms he instituted during his first consulship.

    04. Welfare.

    Ancient Rome was the wellspring for many modern government programs, including measures that subsidized food, education and other expenses for the needy. These entitlement programs date back to 122 B.C., when the tribune Gaius Gracchus instituted lex frumentaria, a law that ordered Rome’s government to supply its citizens with allotments of cheaply priced grain. This early form of welfare continued under Trajan, who implemented a program known as “alimenta” to help feed, clothe and educate orphans and poor children. Other items including corn, oil, wine, bread and pork were eventually added to the list of price-controlled goods, which may have been collected with tokens called “tesserae.” These generous handouts helped Roman emperors win favor with the public, but some historians have argued that they also contributed to Rome’s economic decline.

    05. Bound Books.

    For most of human history, literature took the form of unwieldy clay tablets and scrolls. The Romans streamlined the medium by creating the codex, a stack of bound pages that is recognized as the earliest incarnation of the book. The first codices were made of bound wax tablets, but these were later replaced by animal skin parchment that more clearly resembled pages. Ancient historians note that Julius Caesar created an early version of a codex by stacking pages of papyrus to form a primitive notebook, but bound codices did not become popular in Rome until the first century or thereabouts. Early Christians became some of the first to adopt the new technology, using it extensively to produce copies of the Bible.

    06. Roads and Highways.

    At its height, the Roman empire encompassed nearly 1.7 million square miles and included most of southern Europe. To ensure effective administration of this sprawling domain, the Romans built the most sophisticated system of roads the ancient world had ever seen. These Roman roads—many of which are still in use today—were constructed with a combination of dirt, gravel and bricks made from granite or hardened volcanic lava. Roman engineers adhered to strict standards when designing their highways, creating arrow-straight roads that curved to allow for water drainage. The Romans built over 50,000 miles of road by 200 A.D., primarily in the service of military conquest. Highways allowed the Roman legion to travel as far as 25 miles per day, and a complex network of post houses meant that messages and other intelligence could be relayed with astonishing speed. These roads were often managed in the same way as modern highways. Stone mile markers and signs informed travelers of the distance to their destination, while special complements of soldiers acted as a kind of highway patrol.

    07. Roman Arches.

    Arches have existed for roughly 4,000 years, but the ancient Romans were the first to effectively harness their power in the construction of bridges, monuments and buildings. The ingenious design of the arch allowed the weight of buildings to be evenly distributed along various supports, preventing massive Roman structures like the Colosseum from crumbling under their own weight. Roman engineers improved on arches by flattening their shape to create what is known as a segmental arch and repeating them at various intervals to build stronger supports that could span large gaps when used in bridges and aqueducts. Along with columns, domes and vaulted ceilings, the arch became one of the defining characteristics of the Roman architectural style.

    08. The Julian Calendar

    The modern Gregorian calendar is modeled very closely on a Roman version that dates back more than 2,000 years. Early Roman calendars were likely cribbed from Greek models that operated around the lunar cycle. But because the Romans considered even numbers unlucky, they eventually altered their calendar to ensure that each month had an odd number of days. This practice continued until 46 B.C., when Julius Caesar and the astronomer Sosigenes instituted the Julian system to align the calendar with the solar year. Caesar lengthened the number of days in a year from 355 to the now-familiar 365 and eventually included the 12 months as we know them today. The Julian calendar was almost perfect, but it miscalculated the solar year by 11 minutes. These few minutes ultimately threw the calendar off by several days. This led to the adoption of the nearly identical Gregorian calendar in 1582, which fixed the discrepancy by altering the schedule of leap years.

    09. The Twelve Tables and the Corpus Juris Civilis

    Subpoena, habeas corpus, pro bono, affidavit—all these terms derive from the Roman legal system, which dominated Western law and government for centuries. The basis for early Roman law came from the Twelve Tables, a code that formed an essential part of the constitution during the Republican era. First adopted around 450 B.C., the Twelve Tables detailed laws regarding property, religion and divorce and listed punishments for everything from theft to black magic. Even more influential than the Twelve Tables was the Corpus Juris Civilis, an ambitious attempt to synthesize Rome’s history of law into one document. Established by the Byzantine emperor Justinian between 529 and 535 A.D., the Corpus Juris included modern legal concepts such as the notion that the accused is innocent until proven guilty. After the fall of the Roman empire, it became the basis for many of the world’s legal systems. Along with English common law and sharia law, Roman law remains hugely influential and is still reflected in the civil laws of several European nations as well as the U.S. state of Louisiana.

    source: Images Photo Gallery

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  • Amazing worlds within glass terrariums.Amazing worlds within glass terrariums.

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  • Metal sculptures by Edouard Martinet.Metal sculptures by Edouard Martinet.


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  • Ceramic sculptures by Christopher David White.Ceramic sculptures by Christopher David White.


    source: Images Photo Gallery

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  • Tigers are Running Out of Time.Tigers are Running Out of Time.

    Wild tiger numbers are at an all-time low.

    We have lost 97% of wild tigers in just over a century. Tigers may be one of the most revered animals, but they are also vulnerable to extinction. As few as 3,200 exist in the wild today

    The largest of all the Asian big cats, tigers rely primarily on sight and sound rather than smell. They typically hunt alone and stalk prey.

    A tiger can consume up to 88 pounds of meat at one time. On average, tigers give birth to 2-3 cubs every 2-2.5 years. If all the cubs in one litter die, a second litter may be produced within 5 months.

    Tigers generally gain independence at two years of age and attain sexual maturity at 3-4 years for females and at 4-5 years for males.

    Juvenile mortality is high however—about half of all cubs do not survive more than two years. Tigers have been known to reach the age of 26 years in the wild.


    Males of the largest subspecies, the Amur (Siberian) tiger, may weigh up to 660 pounds. For males of the smallest subspecies—the Sumatran tiger—upper range is at around 310 pounds. Within each subspecies, males are heavier than females. Tigers are mostly solitary, apart from associations between mother and offspring. Individual tigers have a large territory and the size is determined mostly by the availability of prey. Although individuals do not patrol their territories, they visit over a period of days or weeks and mark their territory with urine and feces.

    Across their range, tigers face unrelenting pressure from poaching, retaliatory killings and habitat loss. They are forced to compete for space with dense and often growing human populations.




    Sumatran Tiger



    Bengal tiger walking beside lake


    Malayan Tiger



    South China Tiger



    Sumatran Tiger



    Indochinese Tiger



    Indochinese Tiger



    Indochinese Tiger Drinking



    Bengal Tiger



    Bengal Tiger



    Bengal Tiger



    Bengal Tiger



    Amur Tiger



    Siberian Tigers



    Amur TIger



    Sumatran Tiger Cubs



    Indian Tigers



    Tigers are Mighty But Vulnerable



    Illeagal Wildlife Trade


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  • Beautiful Animals by Roeselien Raimond .Beautiful Animals by Roeselien Raimond .

    Roeselien Raimond is a passionate photographer – totally in love with animals & nature- who’d like to spend almost every minute of the day on photography.

    His main interest is nature, from tiny water drops, fascinating insects, hidden treasures, beautiful scenery to exotic animals… He also love to take photographs of people, no matter if they’re willingly modeling or just passing by, as long as they’re interesting …

    In the world of animals Photographer Roeselien Raimond_001

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  • 40 Stunning and Creative Graffiti Artworks.40 Stunning and Creative Graffiti Artworks.

    Modern graffiti achieves many of the same things – to state a message that doesn’t necessarily fit into the norms of society. In this collection, for your inspiration and adoration, we present 40 remarkable graffiti and street artwork.

    Screenshot

    unknown

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    Vaccine Graffiti

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    JR

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    C215

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    Claus Winkler

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    werk, vyal, seak

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    Dan

    Screenshot

    spok

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    swoon

    Screenshot

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    Adam Neate

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    The GC Four

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    Peter Baker

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    Anarchosyn

    Eagle

    finbarr (DAC)

    Screenshot

    Banksy

    Banksy

    40

    Banksy

    osloann

    osloann

    ripo, above

    Screenshot

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    unknown

    Screenshot

    Lachlan

    Lachlan

    periphery

    periphery

    periphery

    Collaboration between 3dom and Voyder

    Walt Jabsco

    unknown

    Screenshot

    Saul

    Saul

    Flan

    Spencer

    PaulGreen

    PaulGreen

    Various artists (MadPoster event)

    Dr Case

    Dr Case

    Lister

    Paolo

    Generoso Rodriguez Querol

    Generoso Rodriguez Querol

    Jan

    Jan

    julien

    julien

    gábor

    gábor

    pixelpancho

    pixelpancho

    pixelpancho

    TT Freak

    Josh Blair

    S O X

    S O X

    Neal

    Neal

    Barbara

    Barbara

    Geoff B.

    Geoff B.

    Shiratski

    Screenshot

    Last Click

    Watchmen Premiere Aerosol Graffiti Timelapse Video

    MUTO a graffiti, wall-painted animation by BLU

    unknown

    Screenshot

    source: Images Photo Gallery

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  • Skate Rate by HaroshiSkate Rate by Haroshi

    Haroshi makes his art pieces recycling old used skateboards. His creations are born through styles such as wooden mosaic, dots, and pixels; where each element, either cut out in different shapes or kept in their original form, are connected in different styles, and shaven into the form of the final art piece. Haroshi became infatuated with skateboarding in his early teens, and is still a passionate skater at present.

    He knows thoroughly all the parts of the skateboard deck, such as the shape, concave, truck, and wheels.

    He often feels attached to trucks with the shaft visible, goes around picking up and collecting broken skateboard parts, and feels reluctant to throw away crashed skateboards.

    It’s only natural that he began to make art pieces (i.e. recycling) by using skateboards. To Haroshi, his art pieces are equal to his skateboards, and that means they are his life itself. They’re his communication tool with both himself, and the outside world.

    The most important style of Haroshi’s three-dimensional art piece is the wooden mosaic. In order to make a sculpture out of a thin skateboard deck, one must stack many layers. But skate decks are already processed products, and not flat like a piece of wood freshly cut out from a tree.

    Moreover, skateboards may seem like they’re all in the same shape, but actually, their structure varies according to the factory, brand, and popular skaters’ signature models. With his experience and almost crazy knowledge of skateboards, Haroshi is able to differentiate from thousands of used deck stocks, which deck fits with which when stacked. After the decks are chosen and stacked, they are cut, shaven, and polished with his favorite tools.

    By coincidence, this creative style of his is similar to the way traditional wooden Japanese Great Buddhas are built. 90% of Buddha statues in Japan are carved from wood, and built using the method of wooden mosaic; in order to save expense of materials, and also to minimize the weight of the statue. So this also goes hand in hand with Haroshi’s style of using skateboards as a means of recycling.

    Also, although one is not able to see from outside, there is a certain metal object that is buried inside his three-dimensional statue. The object is a broken skateboard part that was chosen from his collection of parts that became deteriorated and broke off from skateboards, or got damaged from a failed Big Make attempt. To Haroshi, to set this kind of metal part inside his art piece means to “give soul” to the statue. “Unkei,” a Japanese sculptor of Buddhas who was active in the 12th Century, whose works are most popular even today among the Japanese people; used to set a crystal ball called “Shin-Gachi-Rin (Heart Moon Circle)” in the position of the Buddha’s heart. This would become the soul of the statue. So the fact that Haroshi takes the same steps in his creation may be a natural reflection of his spirit and aesthetic as a Japanese.

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  • The amazing images of the Maracana Stadium reopening. The amazing images of the Maracana Stadium reopening.
    maracana
    maracana15The Maracana reopened after nearly three years of renovation on Saturday, with construction workers getting the first glimpse of the iconic Rio de Janeiro stadium which will host the 2014 World Cup final and the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2016 Olympics.
     
    The new stadium's first match was an exhibition between Friends of Ronaldo and Friends of Bebeto, former Brazil teammates.

    "It looks amazing," said former Brazil star striker Ronaldo. "I'm happy to see the stadium ready again. The Maracana is a symbol of this country."

    The workers who helped renovate the famed venue and their families were invited to witness the first test event at the new Maracana, which will be home to three Confederations Cup matches in June, including the final.
    brazil-map
     
    Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and other guests were among the nearly 30,000 people attending the inauguration, which came after a series of delays, criticisms and protests.
     
    A few hundred people took the opportunity to hold a peaceful protest against the stadium's privatization plan, saying it will give the government much less money than it invested in the venue and will lead to the demolitions of an indigenous museum, a public school and some athletics facilities in the area. On Friday, riot police removed a small group of indigenous people at the abandoned museum.

    Maracana was initially expected to be completed last December, but the need to change the venue's roof forced the deadline to be extended into 2013. Rio organizers also missed an April 15 deadline set for all Confederations Cup stadiums.

    The nearly $500 million spent to renovate the venue also attracted criticism, especially after the stadium had already gone through a significant face-lift before the 2007 Pan American Games. It had also been upgraded before FIFA's inaugural Club World Cup in 2000.
     
    Each of the nearly 5,000 workers received tickets for themselves and their families, and before the match local media reported that some of the workers were selling the tickets for about $50.

    In an unofficial opening ceremony, local artists sang popular songs and the ceremonial kickoff was done by of one of the stadium workers.

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