Eli Livingston / Tef and Olek's Christmas Party / 20091219.7D.01566.P1.L1.SQ.BW / SML
Image by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML
Eli Livingston at Agata Olek's Christmas party held on 2009-12-19 at Olek's Brooklyn studio in Gowandus.
Eli Livingston is the proprietor of 'Monster House Creations', famous sculptor and fx artist, known for extensive sculpture, prop and FX effects work on feature blockbuster motion picture 'DOGMA' by director Kevin Smith (MIRAMAX), the film 'Modern Vampires' and television H.B.O.'s 'From Earth to the Moon' , M.A.X. F/X TV commercial advertisements and his work for Barany Artists. Eli crafted prosthetic molds on Broadway in NYC for the Paramount Theatre for productions 'Beauty and The Beast',' A Christmas Carol', and 'Wizard of Oz'.
Eli received his B.F.A in Industrial Design Technology in 1995, and has been perfecting his craft for over a decade.
He has sculpted for a variety of fine art, jewelry and display projects, that have gained him recognition in both commercial and fine art fields. Contracts he acquired included custom work for Barany Artists; Viktor Koen, as well as musical clients Celtic Frost, Heaven and Hell, Ibanez Guitars and SilverTone. Also, his stage display fabrications for NBC, Ibanez, Webster Hall NYC, Acid Inc., Toy Fair and Burton Snowboards.
His work has been featured in the Body Art Tattoo Convention 2004 in Woodstock NY, The Dark Arts Festival 2006 in Brooklyn NY, and 2006 Living Dead Doll Art Show and Charity Event where he was interviewed by Fangoria TV and many more.
Eli is also known through his projects sculpting for industry leaders in the comic and toy industry, Art Asylum, Marvel Comics, Fisher Price, Toy Biz, Hasbro, Diamond Select, Mattel, Nintendo, Mezco, Play Along Toys, Living Toys, Chaos Toys, Ningyoushi, Upper Playground, Grey Publishing. He has procured a variety of characters, villains and superheros alike, the most notable being signature-limited edition sculptures for Marvel Comics.
His abilities range from character and creature design, initial concept sketches to final airbrushed product, large or small. Whether the medium be wax and clay sculpts, fiberglass and silicone molds, latex prosthetics: on location, as part of a team or working at in his Brooklyn studio; the articulate precision of Eli's work is second to none. His most sought after skill is his expertise to mimic ones style or likeness into traditional 3D sculptural form. Meticulous about detail and perfection, he does not rest until he is satisfied with the quality product he's creating. Additionally, he is known for delivering quality under deadline. In his spare time he continually searches out new exciting projects and challenges his own imagination to breathe life into the artistic visions of his own reality.
www.elilivingston.com
RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2012
Image by Karen Roe
The Telegraph Garden
Sponsored by The Daily Telegraph
Gold medal winner
Designed by Sarah Price
Built by Crocus.co.uk
The Telegraph Garden evokes the beauty and romance of wild areas of the British countryside.
Perennials, rushes, grasses and meadow flowers grow around an intricate pattern of pools in Chilmark limestone. The copper details draw inspiration from the mineral-rich upland streams and rills of North Wales and Dartmoor.
A stepping-stone walkway leads across an expanse of water to a simple seating area on a group of boulders. At the rear of the garden a glade of tall, graceful, multi-stemmed birch trees frames the scene.
The Chelsea Flower Show has been held in the grounds of the Chelsea Hospital every year since 1913, apart from gaps during the two World Wars.
It used to be Britain’s largest flower show (it has now been overtaken by Hampton Court), but is still the most prestigious. From the beginning it has contained both nursery exhibits and model gardens. Every year there have been exhibits from foreign countries as well as from Britain.
It is the flower show most associated with the Royal family, who attend the opening day every year.
Whatever you love about gardening, there’s something for you at this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
‘Fresh’ is a brand new area that includes modern, inventive gardens with new design ideas, along with tradestands offering ingenious new products.
RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2012
Image by Karen Roe
The Telegraph Garden
Sponsored by The Daily Telegraph
Gold medal winner
Designed by Sarah Price
Built by Crocus.co.uk
The Telegraph Garden evokes the beauty and romance of wild areas of the British countryside.
Perennials, rushes, grasses and meadow flowers grow around an intricate pattern of pools in Chilmark limestone. The copper details draw inspiration from the mineral-rich upland streams and rills of North Wales and Dartmoor.
A stepping-stone walkway leads across an expanse of water to a simple seating area on a group of boulders. At the rear of the garden a glade of tall, graceful, multi-stemmed birch trees frames the scene.
The Chelsea Flower Show has been held in the grounds of the Chelsea Hospital every year since 1913, apart from gaps during the two World Wars.
It used to be Britain’s largest flower show (it has now been overtaken by Hampton Court), but is still the most prestigious. From the beginning it has contained both nursery exhibits and model gardens. Every year there have been exhibits from foreign countries as well as from Britain.
It is the flower show most associated with the Royal family, who attend the opening day every year.
Whatever you love about gardening, there’s something for you at this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
‘Fresh’ is a brand new area that includes modern, inventive gardens with new design ideas, along with tradestands offering ingenious new products.
RHS Chelsea Flower Show 2012
Image by Karen Roe
The Telegraph Garden
Sponsored by The Daily Telegraph
Gold medal winner
Designed by Sarah Price
Built by Crocus.co.uk
The Telegraph Garden evokes the beauty and romance of wild areas of the British countryside.
Perennials, rushes, grasses and meadow flowers grow around an intricate pattern of pools in Chilmark limestone. The copper details draw inspiration from the mineral-rich upland streams and rills of North Wales and Dartmoor.
A stepping-stone walkway leads across an expanse of water to a simple seating area on a group of boulders. At the rear of the garden a glade of tall, graceful, multi-stemmed birch trees frames the scene.
The Chelsea Flower Show has been held in the grounds of the Chelsea Hospital every year since 1913, apart from gaps during the two World Wars.
It used to be Britain’s largest flower show (it has now been overtaken by Hampton Court), but is still the most prestigious. From the beginning it has contained both nursery exhibits and model gardens. Every year there have been exhibits from foreign countries as well as from Britain.
It is the flower show most associated with the Royal family, who attend the opening day every year.
Whatever you love about gardening, there’s something for you at this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show.
‘Fresh’ is a brand new area that includes modern, inventive gardens with new design ideas, along with tradestands offering ingenious new products.
Day 131 - The Wide-Eyed Lady
Image by Keenen Brown
So aside from the iPhone 4 being announced yesterday, I decided that my camera backpack is once again, not supportive enough when I lug my full gear for a gig. I browsed and researched for something that can accommodate not just space, but the comfort of having that perfect camera backpack.
Welcome Lowepro Primus AW. I was able to snag this sack for (original price at 9.99) at Adorama. Besides the bargain, the backpack is made of recycled materials so knowing that, it makes me feel all nice and fuzzy inside :-D
Now, enjoy this one large
Camera info
D90 | Nikkor 105mm VR Micro (f/2.8) | f/10.0 | 1/60th sec
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