Throwback/Happy World Oceans Day 08/06/2021 π¬π¬πππππ¦π¦π§π§ππ Large Aqua paintings by dakini.hu π π¦ π¦ π¦ π¦ π‘ π π π¬ π³ π π¦ π¨ π§ π¦ π
I am honored to be a part of the EcoArtProject since 2020 π¬π¬ Every Day is Earth Day and World Oceans Day π π 2021
World Ocean Day - Uniting Ocean Action Worldwide on 8 June Every Year
European Commission πͺπΊ (@europeancommission) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
The Sapphire Project (@sapphireaustralia) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Ryan Gollan (@ryangollan) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Susan Rockefeller (@susanrockefeller) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Founder of Protect What is Precious, Honorary Chair of The Sapphire Project, Renowned philanthropist and conservationist @susanrockefeller
#protectwhatisprecious #sapphireaustralia #oceanconservation #greatbarrierreef
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Full video:
The Sapphire Project (@sapphireaustralia) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Vogue Australia (@vogueaustralia) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Edwina McCann (@edwinamccann) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
Tiffany & Co. (@tiffanyandco) • Instagram-fΓ©nykΓ©pek Γ©s -videΓ³k
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KRISZTINA ASZTALOS OFFICIAL WEBSITE (dakini.hu)
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Every day is Earth Day
and
Oceans Day
KRISZTINA ASZTALOS OFFICIAL WEBSITE (dakini.hu)
Aqua paintings by dakini.hu
considered as a symbol of ancient wisdom,
cradle of life."
Krisztina Asztalos www.dakini.hu
#krisztinaasztalos #fineart #fineartist #art #elements #blue#painting #canvas #largepainting#symbolic #mixedmedia #space #freedom#joy #shine #ink #aquarelle #energy #water#ocean #sunset #splash #largepaperwork#largepaintings #exhibitions #artgallery#urban #CreateArtForEarth
She received her undergraduate degree from Hampshire College and her master's degree from New York University. Susan lives in New York City with her husband, David Rockefeller Jr. and her children. She met David while filming in Alaska in 2006 and they were married in 2008.
Rockefeller's films have explored a range of contemporary issues such as ocean acidification and the future of ocean health, PTSD and the use of music to heal, the confluence of race, poverty and illness;and global food sustainability. Her films have aired on HBO, PBS, and the Discovery Channel.
Her 2009 film, Sea Change, received the NOAA 2010 Environmental Hero Award.
Susan sits on the boards of Oceana, Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, We Are Family Foundation, and is a member of the Natural Resources Defense Council Global Leadership Council. She also done fundraising work for the South Fork Natural History Museum.
In 2018, Rockefeller was noted in the book, Rescuing Ladybugs by author and animal advocate Jennifer Skiff as “inspiring awareness” and “mobilizing action across a range of environmental and philanthropic causes as a conservationist and ocean advocate.
In the book, Rockefeller credits a “moment of enlightenment inspired by the pteropod” to her passion in “helping others understand the fragility of our ecosystem.”
as
KRISZTINA ASZTALOS EDUCATION: 1997 - 2001 EszterhΓ‘zy KΓ‘roly University, Eger, Hungary, graduated with honour as teacher of graphic art and visual communication, student of: PΓ©ter FΓΆldi painter of Kossuth Prize, LΓ‘szlΓ³ KovΓ‘cs, IstvΓ‘n Nagy B. painters of MunkΓ‘csy Prize 1996 -1997 Private student of Boris Slavenski and Benoist Demoraine contemporary abstract painters, Paris, France 1996 Private student of Γgoston Pusztai, sculptor
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Krisztina Asztalos has been painting since 1989, graduated with honor as graphic art and visual communication teacher in 2001, Hungary. As a fine artist, painter her paintings have been exhibited in solo and international group shows in Europe, Asia, Africa, United States. The main concept of her art: 5 elements - Earth, Fire, Water, Air, Space. Her artworks are inspired by eastern calligraphy, nature, and human nature. Used techniques: paper and ink, gouache, watercolor, ink, acrylic, mixed media on canvas, on wood. Her macro sized 2- 3 m long ink paintings "Aqua" series are bringing a certain feeling of special and great dimensions. "Urban" series are depicting the multicolor vibration of metropolises with humor and a bit of sarcasm, personal responses for happenings of urban society. Each piece of element paintings is like a part of a mosaic, depicting macro (earth- fire-air-water-space) and microelements (human and urban life ). My aim to depict the fabulous diversity and profusion of our universe.
ARTIST STATEMENT "My paintings depicting nature: that surrounds us, the micro- and macrososmos and human nature that is like immense space. Human is like space, forever changing energy fields: atoms as our blood circulation, as galaxies originate and stars decline, floating into ash inside. We are, as ash of stars, transmitting light.... " Krisztina Asztalos, 2004
5 ELEMENTS According to Buddhist philosophy, 5 elements ( energy) build up and create human beings, all living structures, and the whole universe. 5 elements: Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Space aka ether /emptiness/ unconditional love/ light/ compassion. Earth= bone&meat Water= blood&liquids Fire=temperature&body heat Air=breath&wind Space=spirit&mind 5 element created the human body 5 element created the universe The universe lives in us. Inside outside we are ONE. The harmony of the 5 elements makes balance in our inside and outside world. Written: AK, dakini.hu 2006 |
SPACE-CONSCIOUS
(organic)
Solitude of
Nature:
Hiding silence
in
wide rivers
in cool depths of
mountains’s lakes
Venation
of leaves
and
christals’
molecules
following
the light’s
penetrating
dense
beauties
Boundless waters
looming skies
keys of wisdom
opening
accomplisment’s
inner doors
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FISHES(1-3.)
SMALL FISH( Piranhas)
Well-ordered
Serial numbers
Oiled
Machinery
Tiny teeth
of
My chain-loop:
Like
BIG FISHES(Sharks)
Power
Big
Nute-head
Banknotes smelled
Inner wheel’s
roaring
GIANTS(Whales)
Silently
Floating
In immense
Blue
Wave of
Light-water-space’s
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#naturalworld #scienceandenvironment #marketing #innovation #cybersecurity #digitalmarketing #digitaltransformation #ai #artificialintelligence #machinelearning #iot #data #bigdata #analytics #datascience #waterconservation #oceanconservation #clearwater #planetaryhealth #aquaculture #saveearthsavelife #createforearth #ecoartproject
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An inspirational master artist helped the AQUA series to paint by his example:
Hokusai,
when I started to paint the AQUA series
at the beginning of the 2000s.
I would never copy his painting since masterpieces are good for inspiration
my feeling and my inspiration were:
how to pacify
the great waves instead of trigger it artificially
or by geo-engineering.
What is geoengineering—and why should you care? | MIT Technology Review
Where did the idea come from?
It’s not a particularly new idea. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson’s Science Advisory Committee warned it might be necessary to increase the reflectivity of the Earth to offset rising greenhouse-gas emissions. The committee went so far as to suggest sprinkling reflective particles across the oceans. (It’s revealing that in this, the first-ever presidential report on the threat of climate change, the idea of cutting emissions didn’t seem worth mentioning, as author Jeff Goodell notes in How to Cool the Planet and The Water will Come.
But the best-known form of solar geoengineering involves spraying particles into the stratosphere, sometimes known as “stratospheric injection” or “stratospheric aerosol scattering.” (Sorry, we don’t come up with the names.) That’s in part because nature has already demonstrated it’s possible.
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Kanagawa by
Katsushika Hokusai (θι£Ύ εζ, c. 31 October 1760 – 10 May 1849), known simply as Hokusai, was a Japanese artist, ukiyo-e painter and printmaker of the Edo period.[1] Hokusai is best known for the woodblock print series Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji which includes the internationally iconic print The Great Wave off Kanagawa.
Hokusai created the monumental Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji both as a response to a domestic travel boom in Japan and as part of a personal obsession with Mount Fuji.[2] It was this series, specifically The Great Wave off Kanagawa and Fine Wind, Clear Morning, that secured his fame both in Japan and overseas. While Hokusai's work prior to this series is certainly important, it was not until this series that he gained broad recognition.[3]
Hokusai's work transformed the ukiyo-e artform from a style of portraiture largely focused on courtesans and actors into a much broader style of art that focused on landscapes, plants, and animals. Hokusai worked in various fields besides woodblock prints, such as painting and producing designs for book illustrations, including his own educational Hokusai Manga, which consists of thousands of images of every subject imaginable over fifteen volumes. Starting as a young child, he continued working and improving his style until his death, aged 88. In a long and successful career, he produced over 30,000 paintings, sketches, woodblock prints, and images for picture books in total. Innovative in his compositions and exceptional in his drawing technique, Hokusai is considered one of the greatest masters in the in the history of art.
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