Stephen Russell Shilling

  • Featured Work
  • Bio + Contact
  • Fine Art Prints
  • Printing Services
  • Video
  • Blog
  • More +
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 9 images found }
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • The Garden Outside My Grandmother’s Apartment, 2017
    SRS_Grndma_2017-BW-004.tif
  • Ferns at Chanticleer, PA, 2019
  • I think I could spend a lifetime photographing koi. Their vibrant forms gliding and darting underneath the surface of the water, its ripples reflecting the sky above. The clouds that make the fish seem as though their flying through a hazy mist of an overcast sky. On sunny days that blue lends bright color to an otherwise dull or murky water. Their scales reflecting, an iridescent glow accentuates both their charm and their mystique, and those whiskers which suggest an ancient wisdom.
    Koi at Chanticleer, PA, 2019
  • My Grandmother’s Neighbor’s Bench, 2017
    SRS_Grndma_2017-BW-003.tif
  • New Jersey, 2015
  • Paterson_Great_Falls-New_Jersey.jpg
  • Shofuso (Pine Breeze Villa), (Japanese: 松風荘) also known as Japanese House and Garden, is a traditional 17th century-style Japanese house and garden now located in Philadelphia's West Fairmount Park on the site of the Centennial Exposition of 1876.
    _DSF1391.jpg
  • Narcissus "Pink Charm" - Sayen Gardens, 2020
    Poet's Narcissus
  • Ikebana at Shofuso Japanese Tea House and Garden. Ikebana is the Japanese art of arranging flowers. One translation of the word Ikebana (活け花) is "making flowers alive." It is also known as Kadō (華道, "way of flowers"). The tradition dates back to Heian period, when floral offerings were made at altars. Later, flower arrangements were instead used to adorn the tokonoma (alcove) of a traditional Japanese home. Ikebana reached its first zenith in the 16th century under the influence of Buddhist tea masters and has grown over the centuries, with numerous distinct schools extant today. Ikebana is counted as one of the three classical Japanese arts of refinement, along with kōdō for incense appreciation and chadō for tea and the tea ceremony.<br />
<br />
2016-08-16_SRS_Shfs_D_DSF2060
    Ikebana at Shofuso, 2016