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I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. I’m a great place for you to tell a story and let your users knowRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, galleryI'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. I’m a great place for you to tell a story and let your users knowRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, gallery, fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, gallery, fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, gallery, fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line a little more about you., fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, gallery, fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line Galleries. From Stroud Gloucester in the Cotswolds Rita Fenning Stroud Gloucestershire Cotswolds sculpture,artist, installations,painting, gallery, fabric,drawing, commissionsRita Fenning Sculptor and Installation Artist On-Line a little more about you.

 

Artist Books 

Can be books, art, sculptures, installations, 

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This book is called Last Letters. Its for Steve, an old friend who died and so ceased to be.

It has been selected for the Shefield Artist Book Exhibition 2015 

Estuary Visit and Ebb and Flow

are fabric books that respond to the differing Cornish shores.

The Doors of Gloucester Cathedral.

Uluru

Horizens

A First Meeting

  Images by Maria Butunoi http://mariabutunoi.com/

The Redoubtable

 

 

'Now I am become the death the destroyer of worlds ...'We knew the world would not be the same. A few people laughed, a few people cried, most people were silent. I remembered the line from the Hindu scripture, the Bhagavad-Gita; Vishnu is trying to persuade the Prince that he should do his duty and, to impress him, takes on his multi-armed form and says, "Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds. I suppose we all thought that, one way or another'.

 

Interview about the Trinity explosion, first broadcast as part of the television documentary The Decision to Drop the Bomb (1965), produced by Fred Freed, NBC White Paper; Oppenheimer is quoting from the 1944 Prabhavananda and Isherwood translation of the Bhagavad Gita. The line quoted is spoken by Krishna, one of the major avatars of Vishnu; some assert that the passage would be better translated "I am becomeTime, the destroyer of worlds." · online video at atomicarchive.com

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The Redoutable (S 611) was the lead ship of her class of ballistic missile submarine in the French Marine Nationale.

Commissioned on 1 December 1971, she was the first French SNLE (Sous-marin Nucléaire Lanceur d'Engins, "Device-Launching Nuclear Submarine"). She was fitted with 16 M1 ballistic missiles, delivering 450 kt at 2000 kilometres. In 1974, she was refitted with the M2 missile, and later with the M20, each delivering a one-megaton warhead at a range over 3000 kilometres. The Redoutable ("formidable" or "fearsome" in French language) was the only ship of her class not to be refitted with the M4 missile.

The Redoutable had a 20-year duty history, with 51 patrols of 70 days each, totalling an estimated 90,000 hours of diving and 1.27 million kilometers of distance, the equivalent of travelling 32 times around the Earth.[1] She was decommissioned in 1991. 

 

 

            The Observable Universe

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This is the text on the inside in tiny writing so you need a lens to see as we have done to discover this much......

 

Light and Dark, a documentary 18 Nov 2013 on BBC Four Professor Jim Al-Khalili tells the story of how we went from thinking we were close to a complete understanding of the universe to realising we had seen almost none of it. Today, our best estimate is that more than 99 per cent of the cosmos is hidden in the dark, invisible to our telescopes and beyond our comprehension.The first hints that there might be more out there than meets the eye emerged from the gloom in 1846 with the discovery of the planet Neptune. It was hard to find, because at four billion kilometres from the sun there was precious little light to illuminate it and, like 89 per cent of all the atoms in the universe, it gives off almost no light.In the middle of the 20th Century scientists discovered something even stranger—dark matter—stuff that wasn't just unseen, it was fundamentally useable. In fact, to explain how galaxies are held together and how they formed in the first place, There needed to be four times as much dark matter as there was normal atomic matter. In the late 1990s scientists trying to measure precisely how much dark matter there was in the universe discovered something even more elusive out there– dark energy, a mysterious new force driving the universe apart that is thought to make up a colossal 73 per cent of it. 

 

 The Lens

 

Scanned  images combining the ‘Family Circle'  Installation photographs and  lenses.

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