CHRIS CASE Photography

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  • A couple in Rome, Italy, enjoy gazing out the window of their building.
    ITA-Couple-in-Window.tif
  • Dunlewey Church, County Donegal, Ireland. Dunlewey is an abandoned church overlooking the Poisoned Glen at the foot of Errigal.
    IRL-Dunlewey Church-3.jpg
  • Dunlewey Church, County Donegal, Ireland. Dunlewey is an abandoned church overlooking the Poisoned Glen at the foot of Errigal.
    IRL-Dunlewey Church-2.jpg
  • Near Dunlewey Church, County Donegal, Ireland. Dunlewey is an abandoned church overlooking the Poisoned Glen at the foot of Errigal.
    IRL-Dunlewey Bridge.jpg
  • Remnants of a structure, Gleniff Horseshoe, County Sligo, Ireland
    IRL-Gleniff Horseshoe-1.jpg
  • Dunlewey Church, County Donegal, Ireland. Dunlewey is an abandoned church overlooking the Poisoned Glen at the foot of Errigal.
    IRL-Dunlewey Church-1.jpg
  • Ruins in Big Bend National Park, Texas.
    TX-BigBendNP-Ruins.tif
  • A gigantic suspended tuned mass damper, or hanging ball, takes up four stories inside Taipei 101 (the world's third tallest building) and works to prevent the building from swaying and/or falling over. The 730-ton sphere is visible from the observation deck level of the tower, formerly the world's tallest building.
    Taiwan-Taipei101.jpg
  • The metal work on the doors of the Florence Baptistery are world renowned. Also known as the Battistero di San Giovanni (Baptistery  of St. John) this religious building in Florence  (Tuscany), Italy, has the status of a minor basilica.
    ITA-OrnateDoors.tif
  • Roger Storer and his wife, Lark, retired from the technology industry in Austin. When deciding to build a new home on Lake Travis, the couple wanted to do something unique. At five stories high, their lighthouse-house in Jonestown is certainly that.
    TX-AguaModerna-Lighthouse-House.tif
  • Storms build over Florence, Italy.
    ITA-FlorenceStorm.tif
  • The cryptoporticus of Arles was built during the first century BC as a foundation for the forum at the center of the Roman town. The forum has been replaced by two modern buildings: the Chapel of the Jesuit College and the City Hall. The cryptoporticus consists of three parallel tunnels arranged in a 'U' shape, which are supported by fifty pillars. Stonemasons' marks at the site suggest it was probably the work of Greeks living in Marseille at the time.<br />
<br />
Arles was first inhabited in the seventh century BC as a Phoenician trading center on the Rhone River, and shows signs of Greek influence owing to archaeological evidence and pottery of Greek design. Arles later became a Celtic-Ligurian town in the third century BC and, then in the first century BC, a Gallo-Roman city.<br />
<br />
The Roman-era arena similar to Rome's Coliseum is so well preserved that it is still the major arena of the city and is used for bullfighting and other traditional festivals.
    FR-Arles-Cryptoporticus_4.tif
  • The cryptoporticus of Arles was built during the first century BC as a foundation for the forum at the center of the Roman town. The forum has been replaced by two modern buildings: the Chapel of the Jesuit College and the City Hall. The cryptoporticus consists of three parallel tunnels arranged in a 'U' shape, which are supported by fifty pillars. Stonemasons' marks at the site suggest it was probably the work of Greeks living in Marseille at the time.<br />
<br />
Arles was first inhabited in the seventh century BC as a Phoenician trading center on the Rhone River, and shows signs of Greek influence owing to archaeological evidence and pottery of Greek design. Arles later became a Celtic-Ligurian town in the third century BC and, then in the first century BC, a Gallo-Roman city.<br />
<br />
The Roman-era arena similar to Rome's Coliseum is so well preserved that it is still the major arena of the city and is used for bullfighting and other traditional festivals.
    FR-Arles-Cryptoporticus_3.tif
  • The cryptoporticus of Arles was built during the first century BC as a foundation for the forum at the center of the Roman town. The forum has been replaced by two modern buildings: the Chapel of the Jesuit College and the City Hall. The cryptoporticus consists of three parallel tunnels arranged in a 'U' shape, which are supported by fifty pillars. Stonemasons' marks at the site suggest it was probably the work of Greeks living in Marseille at the time.<br />
<br />
Arles was first inhabited in the seventh century BC as a Phoenician trading center on the Rhone River, and shows signs of Greek influence owing to archaeological evidence and pottery of Greek design. Arles later became a Celtic-Ligurian town in the third century BC and, then in the first century BC, a Gallo-Roman city.<br />
<br />
The Roman-era arena similar to Rome's Coliseum is so well preserved that it is still the major arena of the city and is used for bullfighting and other traditional festivals.
    FR-Arles-Cryptoporticus_2.tif
  • An old bicycle rests inside one of the old buildings of the Garnet Ghost Town, outside of Missoula, Montana.
    MT-GhostTown-bike.tif
  • Old pots and pans rests inside one of the old buildings of the Garnet Ghost Town, outside of Missoula, Montana.
    MT-GhostTown-stovetop.tif
  • An old tailor's dress form rests inside one of the old buildings of the Garnet Ghost Town, outside of Missoula, Montana.
    MT-GhostTown-dresser.tif
  • The cryptoporticus of Arles was built during the first century BC as a foundation for the forum at the center of the Roman town. The forum has been replaced by two modern buildings: the Chapel of the Jesuit College and the City Hall. The cryptoporticus consists of three parallel tunnels arranged in a 'U' shape, which are supported by fifty pillars. Stonemasons' marks at the site suggest it was probably the work of Greeks living in Marseille at the time.<br />
<br />
Arles was first inhabited in the seventh century BC as a Phoenician trading center on the Rhone River, and shows signs of Greek influence owing to archaeological evidence and pottery of Greek design. Arles later became a Celtic-Ligurian town in the third century BC and, then in the first century BC, a Gallo-Roman city.<br />
<br />
The Roman-era arena similar to Rome's Coliseum is so well preserved that it is still the major arena of the city and is used for bullfighting and other traditional festivals.
    FR-Arles-Cryptoporticus_1.tif
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