A picturesque village in Bell County, Salado is situated near Interstate 35 between Austin and Waco. At Alpha Roofing, we welcome the opportunity to visit Salado and provide our services to local homeowners and business owners. We offer a variety of services, including the installation of commercial roofs, asphalt shingles, metal roofs, gutters, siding and skylights as well as roof and chimney repairs, damage inspections, metal fabrication and maintenance plans. (-- removed HTML --) The History of Salado (-- removed HTML --) Little in Salado's history can be considered customary for a frontier town in Texas.…
I chose to write about Frank Lloyd Wright’s house, Falling Water. At my funeral, I want people to know that I chose this piece of art because it was how I wanted to live my life. Sturdy and firm but lost in a forest of life and nature. The architecture of the house represents the different changes in my life and how the light that shines through the house, tells a story about no matter which way I turned or how bad it was, there was always a way to see through it. The water that rushes underneath represents how I had tranquility with my life as well as almost disconnecting to the outside world.…
The artwork I chose is, The Scream by Edvard Munch, which was created in 1893. This artwork has been described, as a “Mona Lisa for our time.” The composition of The Scream is an oil painting on cardboard. Furthermore, the style of this painting is Expressionism. To emphasize, Edvard Munch used lines, and colors to depict human emotions.…
I chose The Scream by Edvard Munch because I like how he used mostly warm colours to portray a tragic incident. The reddish sky in the background is the artist's memory of the effects of the powerful volcanic eruption of Krakatoa, which deeply tinted sunset skies red in parts of the Western hemisphere for months, about a decade before he painted The Scream. The elements such as line, color, light and shadow, form, and balance are to create the effects of horror, anxiety and endless other unpleasant emotions that the people who look at it may experience while interpreting this painting, just like how I felt when I first saw it.…
The Green Bridge II The Green Bridge II, by Lyonel Feininger, in 1916. It is an asymmetrical abstract piece made from oil paint on a canvas. Within the painting, there are three-dimensional objects, which would appear to tell a story. What appears a very busy street loitered with many people, walking to or from somewhere. The appearance of the buildings, surroundings, and the people are not normal, they have a really blocky or distorted appearance.…
Regardless of where they were, crazy houses, or crazy shelters, have a similar essential elements and capacities. The perspectives of refuge life changed radically through the span of the nineteenth century. The development of the quantity of crazy houses amid the nineteenth century is very amazing. Before 1810, just a couple states had crazy havens.…
Orville and Wilbur Wright were born in Dayton Ohio, they were two of five children of Susan Catherine Koerner, and Milton Wright. They were inventors known for building and flying the first free controlled powered flight in December of 1903. Later they became effective businessmen who not only conducted business with the United States but Europe as well. The Wright brothers invention had a great impact on commerce, travel,and war. (Orville Wright Biography) Planes had an effect on war which created a new style of fighting called aircraft.…
Frank Lloyd Wright designed well over a thousand different buildings during his life, most of which were residential, considering he was a domestic architect who believed that he had a greater impact on society by the structures he designed for people to live in. He believed that the people would benefit if their houses were well designed. Though he is well known for his efforts in residential housing, Wright also made his mark in commercial buildings with some notable projects such as the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, Japan. For Wright, Japan was ancient, unfamiliar, and striking; “A vast city channeled but with wide bare-earth streets swarming with humanity…lined both sides with blue-grey tile roofed two story wooden buildings… Scarlet and gold shuttered sedan-chairs, the kagos…softly brilliant globes or cylinders, red paper lanterns patterned with strange characters…samisen strings…broad ivory…just like the prints!”…
The sliding sash windows were introduced into England in the 1670’s; early versions often had one fixed and one sliding sash, and were written off as by thick glazing bars separating up to two dozen small lights (panes) in each sash. The basic motorized outline of the sash window has hardly changed since its introduction. Many Victorian windows were built-in with internal shutters of the panelled timber that crumpled back into spaces at either side of the window or within the profundity of the window. The nineteenth century was the golden age of the wallpaper.…
The Wright Design The Wright Brothers didn't invent the design of the airplane. In fact, their entire plane was based on how birds fly. They made the aircraft so it would catch some heavy winds that blew. Plus, they needed light weight materials so the plane wouldn't fall from the sky.…
David McCullough’s The Wright Brothers, is a detailed description of the process taken by the Wright brothers to develop, test, and fly the world’s first airplane. David is an award winning author who is dedicated to documenting the people, places and events that have shaped America. David believes that the Wright brothers were a major part of the development of America, and he is right. The Wright brothers had a major influence in the development of flying in America. The Wright brothers were the first people in the world to create and fly an airplane which changed the world forever.…
Every artist has special traits that make them loveable or hateable to some people. The artists that I chose are loveable in my eyes. Their art speaks truthfully and depicts art in unique ways that few understand. The artists I chose are not average artists. They seem to go above and beyond in their work, as well as show their strengths, weaknesses, joys, sorrows, dreams, and nightmares through their work.…
Frank Lloyd Wright During his life, Frank Lloyd Wright designed and produced as many as six hundred buildings (“Frank Lloyd Wright”). Among these, some of his most influential works were made during the 1920s. These works included new, innovative buildings and styles that would mark the turning point between old and modern architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright’s works in the 1920s greatly influenced architecture to come.…
Simplicity vs. Complexity The relationship between simplicity and complexity is a very common discussion that takes place in architecture. Architects are usually inclined to look at either simplicity or complexity separately. There are not many architects who study both of them together as a whole. Some architects or philosophers believe that there is a fine line between complexity and simplicity, while others believe that simplicity and complexity are interchangeable.…
Being able to experience the artwork The Bedroom by Vincent van Gogh was truly incredible. A person should take the opportunity to be able to experience a visit to an art museum because it is incredible to see so many different types of artwork. A person simply can not get everything out of a piece of artwork by simply look at their phone. There are many important visual and design elements that are incorporated to this piece of artwork. Each of them have a specific role on what they achieve to the viewer.…