Dancing Windows
by Ann Horn
Title
Dancing Windows
Artist
Ann Horn
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Designed by architect Frank Gehry and built between 1994-1996, the Dancing House in Prague, Czech Republic is composed of two disparate parts, a tower of glass, which suggests a graceful dancer, and this concrete building with non-aligned windows. An image of the tower, entitled Dancing House, may be found in my Prague gallery. Copyright 2014 Ann Horn. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This copyrighted image does not belong to the public domain and may not be reproduced, copied, altered or manipulated in any way without the written permission of Ann Horn. ann-horn.pixels.com
pixels.com Group Features:
Best of Minimalism. ABC-W Is For Windows. Prague. Balconies Windows and Doors.
Uploaded
January 27th, 2016
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Viewed 364 Times - Last Visitor from Ottawa, ON - Canada on 04/23/2024 at 6:47 PM
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Comments (18)
Bob Lentz
Congratulations! This simple and essential image has been selected by group members as a Featured Image in the Best of Minimalism group.
Ann Horn
Bob, many thanks to you and the group for featuring Dancing Windows in the Best of Minimalism group.
Ann Horn
Many thanks for your kind comment, Diana. I will look forward to your report on the inside of this Dancing House. I spent six days roaming the streets of Prague, loving every minute! Thanks for the POD in the Best of Minimalism group.
Diana Rajala
A great capture! Such an interesting building—seems to be moving! I look forward to spending 4 nights in the Dancing House Hotel when I visit Prague in September. My pod for the Best of Minimalism group.
Ann Horn
Many thanks for your complimentary comment, Gary and also for your POD in the Best of Minimalism group.
Gary Slawsky
More fascinating the closer you look at this. Great title. L and my minimalism group POD for 7/21/19.
Ann Horn
Many thanks for your complimentary and thoughtful comment, Deb. I find the lines and spaces, the geometrical features of the architecture, to be fascinating. I never know precisely what I intend to shoot in advance. I need to look, and look again and again... until I begin to see possibilities in the framing of the subject. And most often I am taken by surprise. Cheers!
Deb Breton
Here you go again Ann - capturing architecture that makes me look twice, no three times and study it! I really am developing a fondness for this - I better be careful, hope it's not contagious :-) Seriously though, I have never "looked" at architecture like this, through 'your eyes' and it's intriguing. Thank you.