Ammonite bronze sculpture with verdigris patination
Royal Arch Trail Boulder
Entering a portal to a pathway of possibilities
Portals are highly symbolic of the numerous channels of discovery we can follow to experience our desired fulfilment.
Every day we are reminded of their presence by the glorious spectacle of the sunrise, the light filtering through the countless natural portals, heralding the emergance of another dawn. The shifting shadows and colours creating a dancing dynamic for the perpetual movement of life’s chi. Portals represent possibilites and the pursuit of our vehicles to upliftment. Cuisines, fragrances, creativity, love, travel, imagination, fantasy, inspiration, spirituality are all portals we can encounter.
Natures portals that naturally exist sometimes become objects of worship, ceremony and reverance. A symbol of permanace and endurance, openess and belief , transition and initiation. Doors, gates, dreams and conscioussness also can act as portals. They can also represent a magical pathway as a test of strength, courage, or wisdom.
A plethora of visual inspiration and interaction, inviting intrigue and mystique with this thought provoking phenomena.
Barbara Hepworth’s ‘Three Obliques’
Sheryl Zacharia- ‘Rocking Triangle’
‘Eclpise Basket’ – Dragonfly Pottery
‘Tenuous Membrane’ – improvisational, intuitive approach to bead embroidery
Thom Atkins
Barbara Hepworth ‘Single Form’
1961
Barbara Hepworth ‘Single Form’
‘Eye of the beholder’ – Mary Ann Prack
Minoan Labyrinth Wall Plaque
Midnight Moon-Celtic
This seven- circuit labyrinth dates back to 1200BC in Greece. A single continuous pathway winds into its centre. This same design has been found in Europe (Ireland, Denmark, Finland and Sweden) and South American Indian Tribes as well as India, Pakistan, Africa and Australia. Tracing the circuit with ones finger was used to calm the mind.
Peter Bremers
‘Holey Stone’ — I found this rock while swimming in the sea at Half Moon Bay, a Feng Shui enriched location.
Any stone that features a natural hole in it was regarded in the past to be a sacred object because it was created over extended time and is made by moving water. This makes it capable of holding the powers of the earth. The inherent strength of this gives it the ability for being a protection amulet and was used for attraction to the Elemental worlds. Magic can’t be cast on moving waters.
Worn in ancient times as charms for banishing illness, protection for pets, avoiding bad dreams and nightmares, good luck on the water, protection for the home.
‘Rearranging the dots’ — John Newdigate, Ian Garrett
Red Glass Vilano Sculpture by KatzGlassDesign
‘Richard Stratton’ — 1000 for Roses
Rigo Rivas
Abstraction and knowledge represent great portals
Samarkand ovoid neriage vase — Matsui Kosai
André Aleth Masson – French ceramicist
John Huggins sculpture
Blackhole-less Galaxy
Cupid and Psyche–Edward-burne Jones
1876
The Poet by Ossip Zadkine is a musician who is half tree and half person
Eastern spinebill,-Nelson, Victoria—-John Eley
Emptying the pottery kiln portal
Erik Johansson — .’Reverberate’
Femke Muntz- Goddess Selene
Fortune Teller Art Deco Lamp
Fresh Cut Physalis
The Flower Hub
‘Rider of the flower moon’ – Michelle Blade
Gustavo Perez
Granite sculpture by Matthew Maddocks
Fat Mama by Alex Fekete ‘Translucent, fragile, fluid yet hard, free blown Glass and its magical depths ‘
Akio Takamori
Glass sculpture — Peter Mandl
Greg Johns – transfigure 2
Shellcove Sculpture Walk
Hand sculpted ceramic lamp base, sculpture ‘Clémentine’ stylized face, stoneware with orange enamel
Janaina Tschäpe — ‘ Chorale’
Aleluia Factory, Aveiro Art Deco
Intricately carved wooden doors in a temple in Kathmandu, Nepal
Koroit Nut Boulder Opal
Mid Century Bertoncello Vase
Italy
Suzeiki Moonscape stone
Necklace counterpoise with aegis of Sakhmet
Manufacture of Muranese base tablel lamp depicting aquarium
Marzena Szczepanska ceramic vase
MC Dancers — Michael Vaynman
Mên an Tol, known locally as the Crick Stone, in Cornwall England.
Photograph Paul Williams
My amazing Ginger cat ‘Messiah’ spent several days chewing on the cardboard, maybe inspired by the portals on the box. A commendable feline sculptural attempt.
He’s also very creative vocally.
Chichen Itza Kukulcan Pyramid during Spring Equinox. During this time, a shadow phenomenon draws the outline shape of the Mayan deity Kukulcan, responsible of creation and prosperity, can be witnessed.
Bamboo walk at the Crystal Castle
QLD
‘Lighting the Candle Within’ — Suzy Birstein
Mette Maya Ceramics
Peter Pincus
‘Portal to Another Time and Place’ — Deborah Halpern
Rose Quartz Crystal embrace
Vicke Lindstrand for Kosta, pierced black glass vase
1955
Indigenous Wandjina cave flanked left and right by the tail and head of a guardian Dragon
Grampians , Victoria
Vintage vase, Faience Factory Włocławek
Ming green “Vitrium” sculpture by glass artist Larry Pile
Kessler Craftsman
Zanetti Murano Glass Chalcedony bimorphic sculpture
Zeng Gang
Shard Fragments — Patrick Crabb
Suzeiki natural portal
Miss Costa Rica — Paola Chacón Fuentes
‘PastTimeRemembered’ vase – Douglas J Fisher
The Fountain of Life—17th Century Greek icon
Tony Laverick
Morning sunrise tulip portal
Tullio Crali (Italian, Futurism, “In Free Fall (In Caduta Libera)”
1964
Turkish ceramic figure
Arachnids follow certain patterns to build their webs. Excellent meditation portal
for breaking from past restrictions.
Kan Yasuda — Myomu (Key to a Dream),
2008
Michael Lucero — ‘North American Dreamer’
Slip glazed, earthenware
1960’s Red vase, West German pottery by Becht
Melike Bag Ceramics — Terra Cotta handmade Vase
Moroccan Black Marble on an Oak and Perspex Plinth
Oumuamua
Desert Pueblo wedding pottery
Daio Dharma Suiseki stone
Cinque Torri Mountain -The Five Towers
BRAZIER—‘Holding Fire’ — T Barny
Indigenous inspired art on a manhole cover in Perth, Australia by Ole Reidar Johansen
Magnolia bloom September Spring portal, 2024
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5 Comments
Glad to see your still doing it, thanks for sharing 🛠️
Thanks Robbie for a delightful collection of fascinating and intrigueing images……..LP
Inspiring works!
Always inspiring. Thank you, thats a lot of work.
Wonderful, thank you!