Saturday, March 02, 2013

Graceland Chicago - The Place Where The Spirits Roam

If you have ever been over by Clark and Irving Park in Chicago, you have no doubt seen the enormous cemetery, surrounded by high brick walls with wrought iron spikes on top of them. This is Graceland Cemetery, the burying place for many of Chicago's most famous citizens.

Graceland is home to several tales of the supernatural, including the ominous "haunted" monument that graces the final resting place of former hotel owner and businessman Dexter Graves. Created by Lorado Taft, the artist christened the design "Eternal Silence" but the brooding and menacing figure has become more commonly known as the "Statue of Death". The figure was once black in color but over the years, the black has mostly worn away, exposing the green, weathered metal beneath. Only one portion of it remains dark and that is the face, which is hidden in the deepest folds of the figure's robe. It gives the impression that the menacing face is hidden in shadow.

"Eternal Silence" is by far the spookiest statue in Chicago's Graceland Cemetery, and the look of the image has given birth to several legends. It is said that anyone who looks into the face of the statue will get a glimpse of his or her own death to come. Obviously, this is not true, but the statue still gives me the creeps.

Graceland Chicago - The Place Where The Spirits Roam - Christine Till Fine Art Photography
© CT-Graphics - Christine Till

Order your "Graceland Chicago - The Place Where The Spirits Roam"   Print at     Fine Art America
or directly from: CT-Graphics.com
Fine Art quality Photo canvas prints, framed prints, acrylic prints, metal prints, posters and greeting cards - Image Customization - Old or Damaged or Polaroid Photo Restoration - Conversion of Slides and Paper Pictures to Digital (CD/DVD)

Art lovers who liked this also liked:
dexter art
dexter canvas prints
dexter framed prints
dexter acrylic prints
dexter metal prints
dexter prints
dexter posters
dexter greeting cards
dexter photos

creepy art
creepy canvas prints
creepy framed prints
creepy acrylic prints
creepy metal prints
creepy prints
creepy posters
creepy greeting cards
creepy photos

intimidating art
intimidating canvas prints
intimidating framed prints
intimidating acrylic prints
intimidating prints
intimidating posters
intimidating greeting cards
intimidating photos


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Life Is Like A Ferris Wheel

Ferris wheels have the innate ability to remind us of revolutionary times. Society was changing and culture was evolving, all while industry was making its way into large cities.

These changes brought the evolution of the Ferris wheel - a structural upright wheel with gondola like seats. The first Ferris wheel ever seen by the public was at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The Ferris wheel was designed by George Washington Gale Ferris, Jr. who graduated from the prestigious Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Ferris' wheel rivaled the Eiffel Tower, the centerpiece of the 1889 Paris Exposition. Ferris' famous first wheel stood 250 feet tall, held 36 gondola's, and was powered by two steam engines. It took a mind-boggling 20 minutes for the wheel to make two revolutions. When the Columbian Exposition ended, the wheel was moved to the St. Louis 1904 World's Fair.

When George Ferris built his first wheel he probably never dreamed of the trend he was starting. He didn't live to see the advent of his machine's offspring - the first roller coaster, ancestor of the high-tech speed thrillers dominating today's fairs and amusement parks. However, Ferris saw that his great wheel did much more than just compete with the Eiffel Tower. It really did thrust the rider "out into the sky, for the outward curve down" for a mind-boggling vision of reality. Ferris soon took the outward curve down himself, dying the night of Nov. 21, 1896 in Pittsburgh's Mercy Hospital, just 37 years old, a lonely, bankrupt, sickly and broken man, with no one at his side. The original Ferris Wheel soon followed him. The wheel was dynamited on May 11, 1906.

Curiously, it was the French who paid George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. the ultimate posthumous compliment. When planning got under way for the Paris Exposition of 1900, the French decided they wanted a Ferris Wheel of their own, just like George's. The French engineers were given a copy of Ferris's original schematics and reconstructed his Ferris Wheel down to the last rivet. The dead inventor's soaring, shocking technological answer to the Eiffel Tower dazzled France, and dazzled Europe. Today the term Ferris wheel has since been generalized to mean any passenger car spinning wheel ride.

Life Is Like A Ferris Wheel - Christine Till Fine Art Photography
© CT-Graphics - Christine Till

Order your "Life Is Like A Ferris Wheel"   Print at     Fine Art America
or directly from: CT-Graphics.com
Fine Art quality Photo canvas prints, framed prints, acrylic prints, metal prints, posters and greeting cards - Image Customization - Old or Damaged or Polaroid Photo Restoration - Conversion of Slides and Paper Pictures to Digital (CD/DVD)

Art lovers who liked this also liked:
eternal art
eternal canvas prints
eternal framed prints
eternal acrylic prints
eternal metal prints
eternal prints
eternal posters
eternal greeting cards
eternal photos

silence art
silence canvas prints
silence framed prints
silence acrylic prints
silence metal prints
silence prints
silence posters
silence greeting cards
silence photos

sympathy art
sympathy canvas prints
sympathy framed prints
sympathy acrylic prints
sympathy prints
sympathy posters
sympathy greeting cards
sympathy photos