Thread on alternative views of iconic landmarks you (probably) haven’t seen before 🧵
1. The worn steps of the Tower of Pisa
2. A backside view of the Great Sphinx that features its giant tail.
3. The view from the outstretched arms of Christ The Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
This 30-meter (98-foot) tall statue is the largest Art Deco-style sculpture in the world.
4. Photographer Alexander Ladanivskyy, in collaboration with the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism, captured an extraordinary drone shot of the Great Pyramid of Giza from an unusual perspective.
5. The Shanhai Pass, where the Great Wall of China meets the ocean.
6. The back panel of Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa
7. A view of the Taj Mahal that you do not usually see, highlighting the stark contrast between opulence and poverty divided by a single wall.
8. The Eiffel tower from below
9. Top down view of the Statue of Liberty
10. The dome of St. Peter’s Basilica seen through Rome's most famous keyhole.
11. The backside of Tutankhamun's burial mask
12. Inside the Colosseum, Rome
13. Mont Saint-Michel at low tide
14. View from the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa, Italy.
The tower began leaning during 12th-century construction due to soft ground. By 1990, the tilt was 5.5 degrees. Stabilization from 1993 to 2001 reduced it to 3.97 degrees.
15. Arc de Triomphe, Paris
16. A rare view of the Statue of Liberty from the balcony on its torch. People can be seen looking out from the crown.
Public access to the torch has been barred since 1916.
17. Central Park, New-York
18. Sydney Opera House from top
19. Aerial view of Cloud Gate, also known as The Bean. Perhaps not an "iconic landmark", but an exceptionally unique perspective nonetheless.
20. The ceiling of the Sagrada Família
21. The back of Mount Rushmore
22. The back of the iconic "Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas" sign
23. Lincoln Memorial before the reflecting pool
24. Inside the Tower of Pisa
25. Mount Fuji from a plane window
26. Aerial view of Kaaba, Mecca
27. View from El Castillo to the Temple of the Warriors, Chichen Itza
28. Aerial View of Angkor Wat
Recognized as the largest religious structure in the world by Guinness World Records, the temple of Angkor Wat is encircled by a 190-meter-wide man-made moat, which forms a massive rectangle measuring 1.5 kilometers by 1.3 kilometers.
29. Oculus: the eye of the Pantheon
30. Stonehenge seems disorderly up close, but this aerial view show its magnificent circular design.
Beginning as a basic wooden circle with a ditch and bank circa 3100 B.C., it developed over 1,500 years integrating massive stones, some transported across hundreds of miles.
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People matching artworks by Stefan Draschan - a thread 🧵
"We admire what we are."
Since 2015, Austrian photographer Stefan Draschan has spent countless hours in European museums, seeking out the perfect synergy between art pieces and their observers.
Thread of photographers who patiently waited to capture the shot of a lifetime 🧵
1. Leonardo Sens (3 years)
After three years of observing celestial patterns and tracking the satellite’s position, Brazilian photographer Leonardo Sens was finally able to take this breathtaking photo of Christ the Redeemer "holding" the Moon.
2. Six months ago, Italian photographer Valerio Minato captured an astonishing shot of the Basilica of Superga and Monviso Mountain perfectly aligned with the Moon. After six years of failed attempts, he finally achieved the shot he had been envisioning since 2017.
Van Gogh defined a painter as "someone who knows how to find the greys of nature on the palette."
Through Matthias Schaller's lens, the palettes in this thread come to life, reflecting the unique style of each artist through their use of color and brushstroke.
2. Claude Monet
When asked in 1905 what colors he used, the French impressionist said: "The point is to know how to use the colors, the choice of which is a matter of habit. I use flake white, cadmium yellow, vermilion, deep madder, cobalt blue, emerald green, and that’s all."