By hearing the name, it is understood that they are seen in the open field. Their body is also gray in color but slightly different from the above birds. They have striped spots on their wings and their lips are pink in color. They are found in the eastern part of America. But their number is decreasing day by day. Their place in the list of almost extinct animals or birds is rising from the bottom to the top.
Username: Bongsong Published on 2024-10-26 13:09:33 ID NUMBER: 124354
At the very eastern end of the garden is the rice paddy, or inada. The rice paddy area has an abundance of plum trees, irises and wisterias. Mitsukuni decided to place a rice paddy within his garden grounds to teach his wife and child the hardships of farming and peasant life.
By hearing the name, it is understood that they are seen in the open field. Their body is also gray in color but slightly different from the above birds. They have striped spots on their wings and their lips are pink in color. They are found in the eastern part of America. But their number is decreasing day by day. Their place in the list of almost extinct animals or birds is rising from the bottom to the top.
This piece was inspired by Charleston's symbolic iconography, the most famous symbol being the pineapple. I have been visiting Charleston since I was little, and every time I have been, I loved looking at all of the pineapple sculptures, paintings, and images. At the time I was 15 and just bought my first Prismacolor colored pencils. I saw other artists creating hyper realistic images of food and other objects. I was intrigued to try to make something realistic myself, so I choose none other than what I looked forward to seeing when I went to Charleston. When I realized every spike on the pineapple was taking hours at a time, I gradually fell back and stopped working on it. It was not until I decided to enter it into the Celebrating Arts competition to finish what I had started two years ago.