The copyright in this website and the material on this website (including without limitation the text, computer code, artwork, photographs, images, music, audio material, video material and audio-visual material on this website) is owned by Moriah LaChapell and Susie Sweetland Garay and the contributing artists and writers.
Copyright license
We grant you a worldwide non-exclusive royalty-free revocable license to:
view this website and the material on this website on a computer or mobile device via a web browser;
copy and store this website and the material on this website in your web browser cache memory; and
print pages from this website for your own [personal and non-commercial] use.
Share on facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites.
Data mining
The automated and/or systematic collection of data from this website is prohibited.
Permissions
You may request permission to use the copyright materials on this website by writing to bluehourmagazine@gmail.com
Enforcement of copyright
We take the protection of its copyright very seriously.
If we discovers that you have used its copyright materials in contravention of the license above, The Blue Hour magazine may bring legal proceedings against you seeking monetary damages and an injunction to stop you using those materials. You could also be ordered to pay legal costs.
If you become aware of any use of The Blue Hour Magazine's copyright materials that contravenes or may contravene the license above, please report this by email to bluehourmagazine@gmail.com.
Infringing material
If you become aware of any material on the website that you believe infringes your or any other person's copyright, please report this by email.
What powerful pieces, Jessica. Poetry in bronze! Thank you!
thank you so much – that is very kind of you.
Reblogged this on jess miller and commented:
The blue hour art and literary magazine have very kindly published this post on my work.
Jess Miller is an artist and freelance graphic designer based in the UK. For the last few years the focus of her work has been clay figure and portrait sculpture taken directly from life. She spends most of her spare time making or learning about art. To find out more please visit jessmillerart.com.