In the sequence, Rickhoff has placed vehicle parking metres along a row of tombstones in a graveyard; he has photoshopped a volleyball judge into the center of a highway; and he has placed a kid's play area glide at the advantage of a street, from which kids would have to come down straight into a street of onset vehicles. The seductively of Rickhoff's manipulations need audiences to look twice before acknowledging the very amazing circumstances, but he has an incredibly brilliant creativity and the images are definitely value the second look!
Between Godalming and Haslemere, in Surrey, near the English village of Witley, once stood one of the most lavish private residences in the world —the Witley Park. Originally called Lea Park, it belonged to a man named Whitaker Wright who made his fortune by defrauding shareholders of hundreds of million pounds —not once, but twice in two different continents. At the peak of his financial crimes, Wright bought the vast 1,400-acre Victorian estate from the 15th Earl of Derby and built an extravagant 32-bedroom mansion, among other things like a racecourse, a theater and a private hospital.