MOON, VENUS, SUN (Bucharest, August 23, 2020) Astro-photo-poem (cosmopoem) by Andrei Dorian Gheorghe Sometimes the people look like leaves, But a difference between a man and a leaf Is that the first Can choose a leitmotif. Comments You need JavaScript to be able to post comments You need to be logged in to leave a comment Click Here to Login

TWILIGHT AT SARM'S “ASTRO & PHOTO 2020” Astro-photo-poem (cosmopoem) by Valentin Grigore The Sun, our friend who colors us in warm nuances, sometimes dramatic every time in the moments of the transition from day to night or from night to day. Here, through a thin curtain of rain, between the Sun and observers. Comments You need JavaScript to be able to post comments You need to be logged in to leave a comment Click Here to Login

KILOMETER ZERO (Bucharest, July 2020) Astro-photo-poem (cosmopoem) by Andrei Dorian Gheorghe Right in the yard of Saint George's Church (made by the martyr ruler Constantin Brancoveanu in the 1700s), Constantin Baraschi built the “Kilometer 0” monument in 1938, including a vision of the ecliptic with the zodiac constellations, a sphere, a solar symbol and a wind rose. In doing this artwork he was so radical that I'm sure he received just the Sun's approval. Comments You need JavaScript to be able to post comments You need to be logged in to leave a comment Click Here to Login

CENTRAL “SUNDIAL” Astro-photo-poem (cosmopoem) by Andrei Dorian Gheorghe On July 27, 2020, I walked on a central boulevard and I saw an interesting cloud that seemed like an imperfect map of the European Union. On September 1, 2020, I returned to that zone, this time to tell you about a monument which shocked me in 7 steps a few years ago. 1. It's great, the municipality made a sundial with pillars as hours on a major artery of Bucharest! 2. But… why in a place shadowed by trees and blocks, with so little sunlight? 3. OK, it seems to be...

QUOTING SHAKESPEARE Astro-photo-poem (cosmopoem) by Valentin Grigore Venus the Morning Star just walking with the Hyades, Aldebaran and the Pleiades (“the Hen and Her Chickens” in Romanian folklore). Without diffusion filter (on the left) and with a diffusion filter (on the right). “As you like it!” Comments You need JavaScript to be able to post comments You need to be logged in to leave a comment Click Here to Login