Resultats de la recherche : zoomorphic

Damien Youth - Zoomorphic Kingdom (live) - 325 sec
Damien Youth's first ever live performance his song "Zoomorphic Kingdom." He is joined by Steven Sane on drums. Recorded at the Neutral Ground Coffee House in New Orleans on July 15, 2006. This video is very dark (just the way Damien likes it).
Auteur : rchamp
Tags:Damien Youth Zoomorphic Kingdom New Orleans
Heavy Metal Cod-Piece - 165 sec
Louis is wearing a ritualistic pagan zoomorphic voodoo shaman cod-piece and rocking heavily in the style of cunty-lingus.
Auteur : JuannyBlueJeans
Tags: ritualistic pagan zoomorphic voodoo shaman heavy metal cod piece foul slouch jumpkick and his 2lb bean bag
Ivy; A Corridor with Light at the End - 336 sec
Zoomorphic forms dominate this journey to enlightenment. A fine Art Short Movie
Auteur : dreamlandscapes
Tags: experimental art anthropomorphic zoomorphic genesis
Loucura - Curta Metragem parte 2 - 337 sec
A primeira curta metragem do duo André Morgado e Miguel Peres. A Loucura faz matar...e morrer.
Auteur : ZooMorphic
Tags: Loucura Curta Metragem parte
Mysterious Artifacts Discovered in West Virginia - 592 sec
The strange ancient artifacts fit no known culture.Many are zoomorphic metal sculptures that include many Paleolithic art and symbols from different parts of the world.The artifacts are made in a negative form and use light to create positive pictures.It is like a ancient form of photography.I am convinced these artifacts were created by a ancient advanced civilization.
Auteur : ancientwv
Tags: advanced civilization Ancient America archaeology Pangea Artifacts Oldest Washitaw Lost Civilization
Romanian traditional art - Romanian pottery - 269 sec
"The Romanians have preserved their national being and their specific civilization and they evolved their own highly original tradition, an ancient tradition, coming down from the Neolithic, developed by the Dacians and then enriched by the Greco-Roman world and the Byzantine one. Outstanding artworks with an archaic decoration featuring anthropomorphic, zoomorphic (the snake, the horse, the bird) and vegetal elements (the wheat ear, the fir tree, the tree of life) or else geometrical elements that once had sacred meanings related to fecundity and fertility rites. In Romania pottery has a millennial tradition, the museums boasting most valuable items dating back to the Neolithic. Evidence are the two anthropomorphic statuettes unearthed at Cernavoda and considered masterpieces, the Thinker and his spouse, as well as the famous Cucuteni painted earthenware. In 40 of the onetime 300 earthenware centers, potters still use traditional techniques to craft glazed or unglazed, red or black ware, decorated with sgraffito or with applied colors, usually red, black, brown, yellow, green and white. It is superb by its simplicity, natural pigments and very ancient, cosmogonic style of decoration (spirals, concentric circles, wavey patterns) steeped in traditions of previous millenia . "
Auteur : realromania
Tags: Romania Romanians pottery ceramica Dacians Cucuteni folk art arta traditionala
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆1-1 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Power Lines Trailer - 137 sec
New way of filmmaking is crazier that the Matrix: how does it look when digital data deviates from the source? You thought of it, now it is time to see it. Toronto Urban Film Festival Award 2007 New York, New York -- Stephania Gambaroff and New York International Independent Film and Video Festival present PowerLines, an award wining ground breaking short film portraying the never before seen: altered patterns of video information. Information is power, especially video information. Computerized surveillance monitors human conduct through video cameras. Our behavior is captured and our identity is converted into pixels representing the changes in chroma and luminance values through time and sent speeding through the information super highway. PowerLines by Stephania Gambaroff present us with raw and provocative vision(s) of the jeopardized digital data. Depriving the digital image of its homogenous structure reveals groundbreaking results. With the new anthropomorphic and zoomorphic features unconstrained by gravity, the human body resembles a pictorial database of atoms and molecules, an imprint from a cyber nuclear flash, a system of abstract elements, a 3d scanner blueprint. PowerLines strongly engages and challenges the viewer to immerse into the alternative universe of video. (Power Lines by Stephania Gambaroff, Music by Pierre Desmarais) http://www.nyfilmvideo.com/2008/ny-feb/filmads/powerlines/index.htm The New York premiere of PowerLines will take place at the legendary Village East Cinemas on Sunday, March 2nd at 2pm . Location: 181 - 189 2nd Ave, New York, NY 10003, phone: 212-529-6799 HOW TO PURCHASE A TICKET To purchase a ticket for Power Lines click here: http://www.ticketweb.com/t3/sale/SaleEventDetail?dispatch=loadSelectionData&pl=itn&eventId=244892 This will take you to the appropriate Ticketweb page. Tickets are $12 in advance. Tickets for the rest of the festival are available by clicking the tickets icon (TKTS) next to your film's title/block on the film schedule at www.nyfilmvideo.com The festival opens on Thursday, February 28th, 2008 OPENING NIGHT RECEPTION will take place on Thursday, February 28th, 2008 Location: China Club NYC 268 West 47th Street NYC, NY 10036 www.chinaclubnyc.com 6-10pm is the opening night event.
Auteur : stgambar
Tags: Tags art trailer digital provocative deviation pixel
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆1-5 - 516 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
TUFF Video: Power Lines - 59 sec
Synopsis: The film explores micro- and macro-universes of the body. The video brings attention to the corporeal landscape. Power Lines portrays the human body wrapped in lace and nets. The fishnet creates a threshold dividing the body into pixels of information.In the new dimension the body acquires zoomorphic features. The medium shots and close ups of the body resemble a moon landscape, eyes of a spider or a pictorial database of atoms and molecules.
Auteur : TUFFyear1
Tags: tuff toronto urban film festival filmfestival ttc transit subway human body fishnet
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆5-5 - 514 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆4-4 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆2-2 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆2-5 - 516 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆2-3 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆2-4 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆3-3 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆1-2 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆1-3 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器
Discovery探索发现-SanXingDui三星堆1-4 - 522 sec
(a total of 6 pieces, every piece 5 parts) Sanxingdui (Chinese: 三星堆; pinyin: Sānxīngduī; literally "Three star mound") (also seen locally spelled as Xanxingdui in Sichuan) is an ancient Chinese city where archaeologists discovered remarkable artifacts that radiocarbon dated circa 12th-11th centuries BCE, and Sanxingdui is the name given to this previously unknown Bronze Age culture. The museum is located near the city Guanghan, China. This ancient culture had remarkably advanced bronze casting technology which was acquired by adding lead to the usual combination of copper and tin creating a stronger substance that could create substantially larger and heavier objects; for instance, the world's oldest life-size standing human statue (260 cm. high, 180 kilograms), and a bronze tree with birds, flowers, and ornaments (396 cm.), which some have identified as renderings of the fusang tree of Chinese mythology. The most striking finds were large bronze masks and bronze heads (some with gold foil masks) represented with angular human features and exaggerated oblique eyes, some with protruding eye pupils and large upper ears. Based upon the design of these heads, archeologists believe they were mounted on wooden supports or totems, perhaps dressed in clothing. Other bronze artefacts include birds with eagle-like bills, tigers, a large snake, zoomorphic masks, bells, and what appears to be a bronze spoked wheel but is more likely to be decoration from an ancient shield. Apart from bronze, Sanxingdui finds included jade artifacts consistent with earlier Chinese neolithic cultures, such as cong and zhang.
Auteur : juanpingz
Tags: China civilization history SanXingDui 三星堆 brone 青铜器