Category Archives: picture
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あしかがフラワーパーク
ilikr.net
Adam Plezer, Doug Perrine
Kunihiko
風景壁紙.com, PlusMinus
北井博也
beltaby
Happy Retirement
中井精也
Christian Ziegler
大山阿夫利神社
pushthemovement
Pierre Terdjman
Steeve Iuncker-Gomez
Guillaume Mégevand
平凡, 陳淑芬
Carsten Peter
Eskimo
环球网
Daily Mail
wallsheer.com
Jeremy Woodhouse
Damon Winter
한효주
breeze
Graham Johnson, Indra Neil Guha, Patrick Davies
Donald M. Goldstein, J. Michael Wenger, Katherine V. Dillon
Raimund Freiherr von Stillfried
祇王寺
Roberto Schmidt
ChinaFotoPress
Mark Lennihan, Carlo Allegri, John Minchillo, Craig Rattle
秋田内陸縦貫鉄道
Japan Web Magazine
iPhone
邵琨
富士山
Andrea Magrin
Garfield, 築地本願寺
bauernkalender.ch
AFP Photo
Norman Parkinson
~HybridPhoto
Kathy Willens
Noriko Hayashi
Darrin Zammit Lupi
tanaka
Stacey Kole
Today, everyone’s a photographer, grabbing their iPhones for a quick snap. Pictures are posted at a moment’s notice on Facebook and Instagram, so there’s never a void of visuals. Perhaps this image saturation is why surreal photo manipulation is particularly intriguing; smartphone cameras and social networking can’t hold a candle to an artist’s vivid imagination.
Thomas Barbèy
Sebastião Salgado
島村信之
昭和の森
Aaron Rapoport, Corbis, Miles Davis
Luciano Aiello, Marco Gallo
Eugene de Salignac
North Carolina Division of Tourism
Ann Iihrsi
muto
Andy Walker
- Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin spent a month in the city, meeting Trotsky and writing Marxism and the National Question, with Nikolay Bukharin
- The neurologist Sigmund Freud moved to Vienna in 1860 as a child and left the city in 1938 after the Nazis annexed Austria
- Nazi leader Adolf Hitler is believed to have lived there between 1908 and 1913 where he struggled to make a living as a painter
- Josip Broz, later Yugoslav leader Marshal Tito, was a metalworker before being drafted into the Austro-Hungarian army
- Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky lived in Vienna from about 1907 to 1914, launching paper Pravda
Cardcow.Com
- Vladimir Lenin published “One Step Forward, Two Steps Back” in Geneva in January 1904. The “Conference of 22 Bolsheviks” met in August 1904 with the initiative of Lenin in Carouge, Geneva.
- Benito Mussolini worked briefly as a stonemason in Geneva in 1902, but was unable to find a permanent job. In 1904, after having been arrested in Geneva for falsifying his papers, he was expelled from the Canton of Geneva.