فقط با یک کلیک چهارشنبه سوری را به خانه «گوگل» ببرید

گوگل براي اغلب مناسبتهاي جهاني، لوگوي ويژه اي را بهجاي لوگوي هميشگي اش قرار ميدهد. نوروز سال (1381) هم لوگوي نوروزي اين سايت در صفحه اولش قرار گرفت اما بعدازآن ديگر اين كار تكرار نشد و حتا اين لوگو روي آرشيو لوگوهاي مناسبتي گوگل هم قرار نگرفت. ولي دو سال بعد با تلاش همه ايرانيان مخصوصا وبلاگ نويسان و سايتها اينترنتي و فرستادن ايميل وکامنت به سايت گوگل موفق شدن لوگوي اين جشن باستاني را در صفحه گوگل جا دهند واين رسم را به جهانيان معرفي کنند.وحال نوروزايراني هم مانند كريسمس و مراسم سالنوي چينيها بهرسميت بشناسد.بیایید امسال نیز از گوگل درخواست کنیم تا برای اولین بار لوگوی خود را در شب چهار شنبه سوری عوض کندوتاثییر این کار را دست کم نگیرید فقط با یک ایمیل ساده که چند دقیقه وقت نمی گیرد ودیگران درتویتر و فیس بوک و فرند فید و انجمنهای اینترنتی راتشویق به این کار کنید پس اگر می خواهید چهارشنبه سوری امسال وقتی کاربران صفحه گوگل را باز می کنند یک لوگو همانند این ببینند زودتر دست بکار شوید.

متن زیر را به

press@google.com ویا help@google.com ای-میل بزنید

Logo For Persian Celebration
Dear Google Team We will be grateful if Google put a special logo for
the Iranian celebration (Chaharshanbe Suri) on its main page on March
16th and 17th . Suri is the last Wednesday of solar year( Persian
Calendar) and is the most important celebration for many nations
including Iranians, Kurds, Azeris, and some other nations …and I am
sure all of them will be impressed and appreciated by this act of
Google.
Appreciated,
please refer to this address : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaharshanbe_Suri

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هنر مجسمه سازی

Ron Mueck

is one of the premier names in the photorealistic sculpture field. He used some of his talent to create visual effects for the 1986 movie Labyrinth

.

After that he opened up a studio to produce visual effects for the advertising industry, which he was successful at for some time. In 1996 he transitioned completely into fine art, devoting all of his time to photorealistic sculpture.

He is best known for faithfully reproducing all aspects of the human body in either a larger or smaller than life scale. His work has been featured in art galleries all over the world, including the Tate in London .

Evan Penny

Age spots, wrinkles, and every detail of a face are featured in the work of Toronto artist Evan Penny

.

He generally produces head-and-shoulders busts larger than life size, and implants each hair one strand at a time while creating his sculptures.

Like Mueck, Penny has an extensive background in special effects for film, and his effects have been featured in X-Men and Johnny Mnemonic.

Jamie Salmon

Vancouver sculptor Jamie Salmon

uses human hair to help accentuate his photorealistic sculptures..

Together with fellow artist Jackie K. Seo, they form Avatar Sculpture Works. Salmon uses a complex, multi-stage process to create each piece that can take weeks to months to acheive the realistic details that he is known for.

Duane Hanson

Hanson

was one of the pioneers of photorealistic sculpture..

After acheiving a Masters of Fine Arts and teaching high school art, he created his first photorealistic sculpture in 1966.

He specialized in horrific tableaus, such as his first work, Hanson’s Abortion, which documented a “backroom” abortion. He started producing more simplistic, single-person sculptures in the 1970’s.

Sam Jinks

Australian sculptor Sam Jinks

creates hyperrealistic sculptures from silicone.

He too has been a film and television special effects wizard for 11 years, having spent the last 5 years primarily on his own art. His works feature oddities such as a fox’s head on a man’s body and a man hanging by the armpits on pegs.

He names renaissance artists such as Bosch as his inspiration.

Adam Beane

Beane

only began sculpting in 2002 and developed his own material, called CX5, to lend even more detail to his hyperrealistic action figure sculptures.

The material handles like clay when warm, but is as hard as plastic when it is cool. He is known primarily for his posed action figures..

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