ATLANTIC CITY 

 

 When Donald Trump was elected in November 2016, I knew immediately that I needed to do something as an artist and photographer. My work has always focused on the urban/social landscape, but I've generally avoided politics. Trump's election, however, signaled a grave emergency, a threat to democracy and the freedom we take for granted as Americans. 


Within days after the election, I drove down to Atlantic City on a hunch that this place, the epitome of Trumpian dystopia, would serve as a metaphor for the overall state of affairs in the United States.


I started by photographing Trump's failed casinos, and then moved to the ravaged neighborhoods adjacent to these architectural behemoths, these internalized money machines. Rather than saving a faded Atlantic City, they have sucked the life blood out of its veins and enriched grifters like Donald Trump. And the reopening of the former Trump Taj Mahal by Hard Rock International changes nothing for Atlantic City in the long term.


 I am pleased to be working with Circa Press, a distinguished publisher of books on architecture and culture. And I am especially honored that Paul Goldberger, the Pulitzer Prize winning critic, has written the introduction.

 

 -- Brian Rose 


An award-winning newspaper photographer and wine industry executive, George Rose is devoted to to documenting the natural environment of the county as well as top vineyard estates up and down the coast of California.


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KELSEY ANN ROSE is a lifestyle and interior design photographer based in Brooklyn, New York. Kelsey specializes in digital marketing and social media imagery for commercial brands. Her work has been featured on Homepolish, Apartment Therapy, One Fine Stay, Houzz and Brownstoner.

Sarah-Rose Photography is a Brighton, Lansing, Ann Arbor, Novi and Metro Detroit Photographer, Family Photographer, Maternity Photographer, Newborn Photographer, Baby Photographer, Lifestyle Photographer specializing in lifestyle and portrait sessions.

Based in Livingston County Michigan, and serving Brighton | Howell | South Lyon | Jackson | Pinckney | Wixom | Novi | Northville | West Bloomfield | Rochester Hills| Royal Oak | Canton | Birmingham | Farmington Hills | Flint | Lansing| Okemos | Williamston | East Lansing | Ingham county | Oakland county | Washtenaw county and all surrounding areas.

Hey! I'm Sarah.I am a portrait and lifestyle family, maternity, newborn and senior photographer based in Livingston County Michigan but serving all of the Lansing, Metro Detroit, Novi, and Ann Arbor areas. I am a wife to an amazing husband and a mama READ MORE

Rose Law Partners represents clients across the country in a wide variety of litigation matters. Our Boston litigation attorneys handlebusiness and commercial litigation,college and university law,defense of governmental investigations and prosecutions,employment law and litigation,financial services regulatory investigations,real estate litigation,representation of law firms,securities and financial services litigation, andenvironmental and land use permitting and litigation.

The Rose Art Museum has been dedicated to the exhibition of modern and contemporary art since 1961. Its curatorial mission has included major thematic exhibitions, surveys of leading contemporary artists, and new commissions. In addition, the museum has served as a launchpad for emerging artists providing first-ever solo museum shows.

For his first solo exhibition in New England, Indigenous Mexican artist No Martnez invokes his Huastecan forebears, histories, and traumas using body, sound, and movement, offering shamanistic healing for past and present wounds.

This intimate display of a self-portrait by the iconic Mexican artist, along with photographs of the artist, highlights Kahlo's devotion to Mexico, her unique sartorial flair, and her bold and transgressive ways of being.

The permanent collection show, "re: collections, Six Decades at the Rose Art Museum," casts a critical eye in two directions: highlighting the museum's radical roots, while showcasing its potential for future transformations.

Wood paneled and furnished with the trappings of a 1961 collector's den, "The Undisciplined Collector" evokes the year of the Rose Art Museum's founding and serves as an introduction to the rich history of collecting at Brandeis University.

An integral part of the image of the Rose Art Museum, the antique Victorian lampposts and concrete benches of Chris Burden's sculpture "Light of Reason" serves as an inviting gateway to the museum and a dynamic outdoor space for the Brandeis community.

Please note that the Rose pasture, the location for the following photo comparisons, is closed to all visitation from April 1 to October 31 as this area is an active horse pasture (via a Special Use Permit) during this time. Horse grazing helps maintain the historic nature of this clearing.

This species is found in a similar habitat to pasture rose but is less common on sandy, dry, open areas like roadsides and fencerows. This species is native farther west, and it is considered escaped in New England.

Swamp rose (R. plaustris) is a rare occurrence in marshes and swamps across Pennsylvania. As its name implies, swamp rose only grows in wet soil. It can be two to eight feet tall and often forms colonies or clusters.

Wild rose (R. virginiana) is commonly found in pastures, roadsides, and other open places or thickets on moist soils. It can grow up to around six feet tall and has larger, pink flowers two to three inches wide that are not found in clusters.

Most of the long-stemmed roses purchased in the U.S. come from South America, particularly Ecuador, where roses can grow to achieve long, straight stems by reaching toward the sun directly over the equator.

More than 10,000 individual rose bushes bloom in the International Rose Test Garden (IRTG) from late May through October, representing over 610 different rose varieties. The majority of roses in the Garden are commercially available. About 10 to 20 varieties are replaced each year with some of the best new roses released onto the market. Roses bloom from late May to October depending on the weather.

Car prowls occur throughout the City of Portland including within Washington Park. Please see Tips For a Safe Park visit to learn more how you can help reduce the chance of your vehicle becoming a target.

Guided tours for groups of are available seasonally starting in the spring, for a nominal fee per person. Contact ParksCommercialUse@portlandoregon.gov to make arrangements. Please allow four weeks for planning. Memorial Day through Labor day individuals, families and small groups can take a daily tour at 1 pm which meets at the Rose Garden Store. Visit the Rose Garden Store website.

Volunteer opportunities are available in both garden and non-garden work. Garden tasks include deadheading, planting, pruning, sign painting, and garden improvement projects. Non-garden tasks include strategic planning, fundraising, updating educational materials, leading garden tours, maintaining inventory records, and coordinating volunteer efforts. Contact the Rose Garden at 503-823-3636 or Volunteer Services at 503-823-5121.

Founded in 1889, the Portland Rose Society is a nonprofit organization offering educational programs on rose culture and encouraging the use of roses in the landscape. For information on Rose Society programs or membership, write or call Portland Rose Society, PO Box 515, Portland, 97207, voice mail: 503-777-4311.

The Washington Park International Rose Test Garden celebrated its Centennial anniversary in 2017. With funding from the Parks Replacement Bond, this project removed ADA accessibility barriers from the main promenade within the Rose Garden and improved the connection to the parking lot, so that all Portland residents and visitors can equally enjoy this space for the next 100 years. Read more about these improvements on our Parks Replacement Bond page.

Accessible parking is located on SW Rose Garden Way and SW Kingston Ave. Visitors may park in these spaces and follow signs to the ramp access into the garden. Note that parking is very limited in Washington Park on sunny weekends and most days during the summer months. The Washington Park free shuttle is fully accessible and connects to the Washington Park TriMet MAX Station and various parking areas in Washington Park. Learn more at Explore Washington Park.

Portland has long had a love affair with roses. In 1888, Georgiana Burton Pittock, wife of publisher Henry Pittock, invited her friends and neighbors to exhibit their roses in a tent set up in her garden; thus the Portland Rose Society was established.

Madame Caroline Testout was a late 19th-century French dressmaker from Grenoble, the proprietor of fashionable salons in London and Paris. She regularly purchased silks from Lyon, which was an important center for rose breeding. The nurseryman Joseph Pernet-Ducher was called 'The Wizard of Lyon' due to his success in developing hybrid tea roses. Madame Testout was an astute businesswoman and understood the value of good publicity. She asked Perner-Ducher to name one of his new roses after her. He agreed but considered her choice of seedling to be mediocre. The 'Madame Caroline Testout' rose made its debut at the salon's 1890 spring fashion show. It was not strong on scent, but became an immediate success with Madame Testout's well-to-do customers as well as the gardening public for its abundant silky, rose-pink flowers. The new variety's popularity spread to America, and in Portland, nearly half a million bushes of 'Caroline Testout' were planted along the sidewalks. By 1905 Portland had 200 miles of rose-bordered streets which helped attract visitors to the Lewis and Clark Centennial celebration. Portland came to be known as the 'City of Roses'. 152ee80cbc

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