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the palace by Kris Kros

the palace

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The Palace of Fine Arts was built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition, which was held in San Francisco. None of the buildings were meant to be permanent. However, the Palace of Fine Arts was so beautiful that it was not torn down after the fair. Miraculously, the palace survived the 1989 earthquake with little damage. The Beaux-Arts style structure features and dome and Roman-style curved colonnades. Surrounding the palace is a park with a duck pond. Adjacent to the palace is the San Francisco Exploratorium, which is a discovery museum with hands-on exhibits on science, art and human perception.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE PALACE OF FINE ARTS:
"The Palace was not designed as 'a Valentine for San Francisco.' Maybeck visualized its colonnade streaming with people, finding a reward within the great doors."

The task of creating a Palace of Fine Arts for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition fell to the architect Bernard R. Maybeck, then fifty years old and known for his innovative ideas. Setting to work on this new project, he chose as his theme a Roman ruin, mutilated and overgrown, in the mood of a Piranesi engraving. But this ruin was not to exist solely for itself to show "the mortality of grandeur and the vanity of human wishes .... " Although it was meant to give delight by its exterior beauty, its purpose was also to offer all visitors a stimulating experience within doors.

In playing host to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, The Fair, which opened on February 20, 1915, San Francisco was honoring the discovery of the Pacific Ocean and the completion of the Panama Canal; it was also celebrating its own resurrection after the shattering earthquake and fire of 1906.

The problems of choosing the exact site in the city had finally been overcome and groundwork had been going on for some time. Last of the buildings to be erected, on the lagoon and close by a group of Monterey cypresses, was Maybeck's Palace of Fine Arts. With its exhibition hall to house the work of living artists (dominated by the Impressionists), its colonnade, and its rotunda -- plans for all of which had dazzled the Commissioners when the huge brown-paper sketch was put before them -- it fulfilled the architect's dream: it was as beautiful reflected in the water as it was against the sky. And when the Palace was completed (Roman in style although a freely-interpreted, purely romantic conception, and Greek in decorative treatment) its exceptional harmony gave it instant appeal to the public.

www.exploratorium.edu/palace/

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Uploaded on Apr 29, 2009

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revisit of omega man by Kris Kros

revisit of omega man

#435 Explore / Interestingness

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www.kriskrosphotography.com

You probably noticed my absence. We are moving to a new apartment.

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Uploaded on Apr 28, 2009

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the invisible driver by Kris Kros

the invisible driver

CHECK OUT THE DRIVER.

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www.kriskrosphotography.com

I am still working on my 1st HDR book. Sorry for the delay. I am dealing with some family and financial issues. Thanks for your understanding and patience.

_____

NOTICE:

KK is invisible too. My pro account has expired. So, flickr is hiding most of my pictures.

UPDATE:
A very dear friend, Crawford aka asawaa sent me a flickr gift of pro account. Big thanks, mate.

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Uploaded on Apr 18, 2009

255 comments

need for speed by Kris Kros

need for speed

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Uploaded on Apr 17, 2009

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lanterns by Kris Kros

lanterns

#204 Explore / Interestingness

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My home internet connection is currently offline due to unpaid account. My budget is limited right now and most especially we will be moving to an apartment, money is so tight.

So, I went out to look for a free WIFI in our area. Luckily, I found one but it's very limited and slow. And I cannot upload a hires version of my pictures.

Thanks for your understanding if I can't comment on most of your great looking uploads.

IMAGINE, I am doing this right now at Costco Supelveda inside my van. I wish I can print my pictures and frame them and display them outside so I can sell some.

My laptop battery power is almost gone. I got no way to charge this except through an electrical outlet. I don't know if there are chargers for PCs that you can connect to a DC outlets on cars. (Update: I found a DC to AC charger at Wal-Mart where I can plug my laptop/phones/devices to my car outlet. The price range is from $28 - $55.)

Should you wish to buy some of my pictures, check this link. Thanks.

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Uploaded on Apr 14, 2009

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