A community in the Brazilian Amazon is transforming fallen trunks and dead trees into everyday items and art pieces.
David Edward Byrd, an artist whose swirling, psychedelic, instantly entrancing illustrations gave the rock mecca Fillmore ...
Watch as skilled craftsmen bring dead trees back to life through the art of wood cutting. The process begins with massive logs being chopped into precise pieces, each revealing unique patterns and ...
Beleaguered commuters on the T4 Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra line are beset by a complete service shutdown due to not one, but two fallen trees on the track on wild weather. Services were delayed ...
A Cambridgeshire man has described the A14 as the place "where trees come to die". John Lindsell, from Brampton, has criticised a National Highways planting scheme on the road between Cambridge ...
Surrealist director and filmmaker David Lynch, known for classics such as "Eraserhead," "Mulholland Drive," and his work on the iconic television show "Twin Peaks" with Mark Frost, has died.
Damaging winds and severe thunderstorms have caused chaos across eastern Australia as emergency services respond to hundreds of calls for help in NSW and ACT. Anna Houlahan reports on crime and ...
He began his filmmaking career in the 1960s. His first feature-length movie was the 1977 art film “Eraserhead.” David Lynch on the set of 1980’s “The Elephant Man.” ZUMAPRESS.com Lynch ...
David Lynch, the stylish director behind mega-hits like Twin Peaks, Blue Velvet and Eraserhead, has died. He was 78. Variety reported the news today, citing a Facebook post from Lynch’s family ...
In the 2016 documentary, "David Lynch: The Art Life," Lynch says that he hated studying with "a powerful hate," and that the only thing that was important was what happened outside of school ...
Lynch would have been 79 on January 20. Photo: Michael Kovac/FilmMagic In an interview with Sight & Sound in 2024, Lynch revealed that he could no longer work on a film set, as he was suffering ...
Ahead of Christmas Day, Santa says it's the people that are important, not what's under the tree. Govia Thameslink Railway is urging people to be safe on trains and at stations this Christmas.