NordicHockey22
Friday, May 18, 2012
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Monday, May 14, 2012
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Monday, May 7, 2012
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Monday, April 30, 2012
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Monday, April 23, 2012
Friday, April 20, 2012
Monday, April 16, 2012
Friday, April 13, 2012
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Monday, April 9, 2012
this is a post
I believe there is music in art because i draw pictures that have music incoprprated into them.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Monday, March 26, 2012
Friday, March 23, 2012
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Monday, March 19, 2012
Andrew Shaw (:
Yesterday the BlackHawk rookie Andrew Shaw scored a wrap around goal and a nice slap shot. He has had an amazing season so far on the Hawks, and he said in his interview yesterday that he feels like a bigger part of the team now. I think Shaw willl be the next young rookie or better yet the next Patrick Kane.
Friday, March 16, 2012
Andrew Shaw Chicago BlackHawks new star
The new forward of the Chicago Andrew Shaw is a new MVP in the making he has the cunning edge of the gorgoeous Patirck Kane andthe smarts of the genius Jonothan Toews :) He is a great addiotion to the Hawks and is the youngest player on the team at the age of 20. He has had a great 2011-2012 season so fat and he will benifit the Hawks greatly.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Monday, March 12, 2012
FIGHT!!!
Heres my man Patrick Kane fighting for the puck against the idk what team that it but Kane is a very violent player from the ice, to the locker room to beating up cab drivers over `15cents Patrick Kane is a boss :) not to mention amazingly hawt tooo
Friday, March 9, 2012
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Monday, March 5, 2012
Yes
Here is the gorgeous Patrick Kane he scored yesterday against the red wings for the game winnning goal :)
Friday, March 2, 2012
STARSSSSS
welp i picked Motley Crue caz i love them idc if there old im in love with their music so they get a 5 outta 5
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
best drink eva :D
monster rehab is the best drink ever it is lemon ice tea flavor :P its awesome go try it
Monday, February 27, 2012
Friday, February 24, 2012
In review: Sucker Punch
I just watched this movie yesterday and i thought it was a really good movie i would recommend it to anyone who likes action and i would actually watch it again thats how i know it was a good movie so it gets a 5OUT OF5 STARS :)
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Friday, February 17, 2012
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Monday, February 13, 2012
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Monday, February 6, 2012
Friday, February 3, 2012
STARS: The Hunger Games
So i believe this May that this movie will be released and i cant wait :D The books were amazing but im just afraid that it may suck becasue the actors are kinda neh so it gets a 4 outta 5 stars <3
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Monday, January 30, 2012
art in the news
over the weekend the all star game for the NHL was hosted in Canda and Chicago BlackHawks players Marain Hossa and Patrick Kane were accepted to play in the allstar game. Here is a photo from the shoot out competitoin of Kanes amazing shot as Super Kane :)
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Monday, January 23, 2012
art in the news
Sitting in his London studio among remnants of past projects—— angling globes, a plinth, a crib——British artist Mark Wallinger chuckles ruefully when he says, “There’s a glorious history of unbuilt things, isn’t there?” The topic arises because his most grandiose project to date, a commission to erect a 170-foot-high white horse sculpture in Kent County, southeastern England, is on hold as efforts to raise the £12 million cost flag.
“It was ‘hooray,’ and then the credit crunch happened,” Wallinger says. Asked if he’s optimistic about whether The White Horse will reach the finishing post, he hesitates: “I’m a half-full, half-empty glass——it varies. I would hope it would, but I’m prepared for disappointment.”
Although he’s an accomplished painter, Wallinger prefers to work in mediums that invite viewer interaction, and his sometimes-outlandish art reflects political, religious, and historical preoccupations, often playing on double meanings. For Sleeper (2004), he spent ten nights in a bear suit prowling around Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie, and in 2007 he won the Turner Prize for State Britain, a re-creation of an antiwar campaigner’s 141-foot-long protest camp outside London’s Houses of Parliament.
However, cost and practicality have thwarted Wallinger before. A new monograph, written by Martin Herbert and published by Thames & Hudson, lists 15 unrealized projects, including a colossal and lurid balloon of a human heart that was to hover over the Kent town of Folkestone to commemorate the 17th-century physician William Harvey, a life-size biblical ark to perch atop a mountain in northern Britain, and a proposal to the Aspen Art Museum to scatter 822,000 coins (worth $15,000) into Colorado’s Roaring Fork River, in reference to Aspen’s wealth and mining history. “I wanted to see at what point people would get their feet wet,” he says of the latter concept.
Wallinger particularly regrets the rejection of his proposal for ten giant white spheres to map the gateways to London’s 2012 Olympics but says The White Horse “will probably top the list” of disappointments if it gets shelved. Making outdoor works in Britain is notoriously challenging. “I think it’s so compromised, doing public sculpture. It’s all that health and safety and not offending anybody,” notes fellow Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry. “It’s a nightmare to make it.”
Horse was the favorite of five short-listed designs in the 2007 competition for a monumental artwork in Ebbsfleet, Kent. Aside from symbolizing Britain’s long tradition of horse racing and fox hunting, equine images are etched in the public imagination, from centuries-old hillside chalk carvings of horse figures to George Stubbs’s paintings of noble mares and stallions.
Wallinger, a former racing aficionado who once bought a racehorse and called it A Real Work of Art, has produced an edition of 30 models of the white thoroughbred to raise money to “reenergize” the project. Ben Ruse, a director of the project, won’t reveal how much has been raised so far, but despite the economic climate he estimates that construction should begin by mid-2013. “Horse is a high-profile, worthwhile, worthy project,” says Ruse. “There’s nothing to say it can’t gallop forward confidently.” ——Elizabeth Fullerton
“It was ‘hooray,’ and then the credit crunch happened,” Wallinger says. Asked if he’s optimistic about whether The White Horse will reach the finishing post, he hesitates: “I’m a half-full, half-empty glass——it varies. I would hope it would, but I’m prepared for disappointment.”
Although he’s an accomplished painter, Wallinger prefers to work in mediums that invite viewer interaction, and his sometimes-outlandish art reflects political, religious, and historical preoccupations, often playing on double meanings. For Sleeper (2004), he spent ten nights in a bear suit prowling around Berlin’s Neue Nationalgalerie, and in 2007 he won the Turner Prize for State Britain, a re-creation of an antiwar campaigner’s 141-foot-long protest camp outside London’s Houses of Parliament.
However, cost and practicality have thwarted Wallinger before. A new monograph, written by Martin Herbert and published by Thames & Hudson, lists 15 unrealized projects, including a colossal and lurid balloon of a human heart that was to hover over the Kent town of Folkestone to commemorate the 17th-century physician William Harvey, a life-size biblical ark to perch atop a mountain in northern Britain, and a proposal to the Aspen Art Museum to scatter 822,000 coins (worth $15,000) into Colorado’s Roaring Fork River, in reference to Aspen’s wealth and mining history. “I wanted to see at what point people would get their feet wet,” he says of the latter concept.
Wallinger particularly regrets the rejection of his proposal for ten giant white spheres to map the gateways to London’s 2012 Olympics but says The White Horse “will probably top the list” of disappointments if it gets shelved. Making outdoor works in Britain is notoriously challenging. “I think it’s so compromised, doing public sculpture. It’s all that health and safety and not offending anybody,” notes fellow Turner Prize winner Grayson Perry. “It’s a nightmare to make it.”
Horse was the favorite of five short-listed designs in the 2007 competition for a monumental artwork in Ebbsfleet, Kent. Aside from symbolizing Britain’s long tradition of horse racing and fox hunting, equine images are etched in the public imagination, from centuries-old hillside chalk carvings of horse figures to George Stubbs’s paintings of noble mares and stallions.
Wallinger, a former racing aficionado who once bought a racehorse and called it A Real Work of Art, has produced an edition of 30 models of the white thoroughbred to raise money to “reenergize” the project. Ben Ruse, a director of the project, won’t reveal how much has been raised so far, but despite the economic climate he estimates that construction should begin by mid-2013. “Horse is a high-profile, worthwhile, worthy project,” says Ruse. “There’s nothing to say it can’t gallop forward confidently.” ——Elizabeth Fullerton
Friday, January 20, 2012
i am number 4
i thought this movie was decent but the ending wasnt to good it cut off and left out alot it could have continued from how it ended but they will prbly never make a swquel 4 out of 5
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Friday, January 13, 2012
stars
this movie was horrible, i thought it was gonna be scary from what i saw in the trailer. it was not pahahahha so it gets no stars for being a horible and not scay movie. I have to say that the movie the last exorcism was much scarier so no stars for this bad movie :p
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Monday, January 9, 2012
art in the news
09/01/2012 | By: Huw Evans Add a Comment
Replacing the now almost invisible Caliber, the 2013 Dart is the car Dodge hopes will reinvigorate its presence in the compact segment. At the 2012 North American International Auto Show, Dodge Brand CEO Reid Bigland unveiled the highly anticipated Dart to a captive audience.
According to Bigland, compact cars currently represent 15 percent of the total US vehicle market and 25 percent in Canada, so a new compact gives Dodge a chance to really compete in a major volume segment.
Given the increasing synergies between Fiat and the Chrysler group, it’s not surprising that the Dart embodies DNA from both. Essentially, it’s based on a modified version of the same architecture used to underpin the Alfa Romeo Giulietta in Europe, though the car has been lengthened and widened to suit North American tastes.
Styling is unmistakably Dodge, in fact the overall look and greenhouse could almost indicate an updated Neon, albeit one that adopts Charger styling cues, notably the “angry” headlight treatment and full width LED illumination out back. Active grille shutters and underbody fairings are also incorporated, in an effort to minimize aerodynamic drag.
Like the last generation Neon, the Dart will only be offered as a four-door sedan, though will be available in no fewer than five trim levels, SE, SXT, Rallye, Limited and R/T.
Engine choices comprise a 2.0-liter normally aspirated “Tigershark” four, rated at 160 horsepower and 145 lb-ft, plus a version of Fiat’s 1.4-liter turbocharged and intercooled Multi-Air four-cylinder, which although rated at the same 160 hp, cranks out significantly more torque: 184 lb-ft. Down the road, a larger displacement 2.4-liter “Tigershark” motor, rated at 184 hp is expected to become available. Transmission choices comprise a six-speed manual, six-speed automatic and also a six-speed dry Dual-Clutch automatic, though the latter will only be available with the Multi-Air 1.4 motor.
Given its Alfa Romeo DNA, the Dart promises to be fun to drive, with good chassis dynamics and responsive steering, aided by aspects such as specially tuned MacPherson struts up front, designed to minimize camber loss and a fully independent rear setup. Four-wheel disc brakes with ABS, are standard on all Darts.
According to Bigland, a major part of the Dart’s appeal lies with the interior, which has been conceived to maximize volume (it reportedly rivals some mid-size cars for space), while the use of upscale materials (including soft touch surfaces), should certainly address some long standing stigmas about low grade cabins on Chrysler built small cars.
A high level of interior equipment (such as an available heated steering wheel, plus Chrysler’s U-Connect media center with 8.4-inch touch screen and voice activatation and no fewer than 14 different trim color options), also provide the 2013 Dart with more trump cards than the old Caliber.
Although pricing has yet to be officially announced, Bigland says the Dart will feature a starting MSRP of around $16,000, which should position it well in the segment, especially against cars like the Chevy Cruze (current MSRP of $16,720), Honda Civic ($15,805) and Hyundai Elantra ($16,445).
Production of the 2013 Dart is scheduled to begin at Chrysler’s Belvidere, Illinois assembly plant in the second quarter of this year, with cars showing up in dealers soon afterwards. In perhaps a homage to the original 1963-76 Dart compact, which morphed into a junior muscle car/youthmobile; Chrysler’s Mopar division will offer some 150 customization options for the new one.
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