
Not many flowers yet in the Arnold Arboretum …

but many beautiful branches.

Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged Arnold Arboretum, beauty, blue, Branches, colors, Inspiration, Photography, trees, urban landscape on March 21, 2016| 1 Comment »
Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged beauty, blue, colors, Inspiration, Mystic River, nature, Photography, urban landscape on March 19, 2016| 1 Comment »
Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged beauty, colors, Inspiration, nature, Photography, red, urban landscape on March 17, 2016| 2 Comments »
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged abstract, beauty, Inspiration, landscapes, mussels, nature, Photography, shells on March 15, 2016| 1 Comment »
Posted in Inspiration, tagged beaches, beauty, Inspiration, nature, Photography, Revere Beach, shells, sunlight, urban landscape, water on March 14, 2016| 2 Comments »
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged beauty, colors, day lily, flowers, gardening, Inspiration, Photography on March 12, 2016| Leave a Comment »
Posted in Inspiration, tagged albino, art, beauty, books, colors, creativity, fashion, fashion illustration, handmade books, humanity, illustration, imagination, Inspiration, nature, Photography, Zoe Langosy on March 12, 2016| 1 Comment »

fashion illustration by zoe langosy
In the Shadow of the Sun is a 2013 documentary directed and produced by Harry Freeland. I saw it for the first time a few weeks ago on PBS. As described on the film’s website, it was filmed over six years and tells the story of two albino people, one a successful older man and one a young boy, both living in Tanzania. The viewer learns of the myths that have come to be associated with these white people, the taunts endured, and in recent years the ritualized mutilations and murders. You also see people overcoming oppression, children striving to learn and to be seen as equal and indeed beautiful, and parents doing all they can to make their dreams reality.
While researching the film and trying to learn more about albinism, a condition that can affect people of all ethnicities, I came across recent articles about albino fashion models. There were a sequence of images of young people with an absence of melanin in their skin, ghostly, different and fiercely defiant in their attitude to be labeled as anything but beautiful. Fashion has been on my mind a great deal given the collaboration taking place with Zoe Langosy, so I sent her a random note asking, without really expecting an answer, how would an artist illustrate an albino. She sent a note back sharing she had done so as part of her honors thesis where she had produced a book, The Marriage of Fashion and Nature.

fashion illustration by zoe langosy
“It was a year long project. I decided to do a series of images depicting fashion made out of nature. At that stage, as a young student, my purpose was to create a perfect character and for this scene I just instinctively chose an albino and dressed him in a kimono made of pussy willows.”
With each image, including that of the albino is lyrical text. While yet unpublished, following are a few glimpses of this beautiful handmade book.




Sources & Additional Reading
The Marriage of Fashion and Nature by Zoe Langosy (unpublished)
In the Shadow of the Sun (2012)
Posted in Inspiration, Kitchen Inspirations, tagged beauty, colors, flowers, indoor gardening, Inspiration, petals, Photography, primrose, yellow on March 7, 2016| 3 Comments »

My $1.98 primrose plant. I was on the lookout for herbs but those yellow petals caught my attention.
Posted in Inspiration, tagged african violet, beauty, colors, flower, gardening, indoor gardening, Inspiration, Photography, white on March 6, 2016| 4 Comments »
Posted in Inspiration, tagged architecture, art, beauty, Charles E. Mills, design, Edwin Ford, faith, Francis Lathrop, Frederick Brooks, Frederick Crowninshield, history, illustration, Inspiration, Photography, religion, research, stained glass windows, Trinity Church on March 3, 2016| Leave a Comment »

details from st. paul’s life, by henry holiday of london, 1878
During my time visiting Trinity Church in the City of Boston, I have focused my camera on the details of the stained glass windows and the stories behind their creation. Within the church itself there are over 30 windows visible to the public and, less accessible to the public, there are additional windows in the parish house that I refer to as “hidden gems.”

detail from ephphatha by burlison and grylls
Significant changes have occurred to the church over time, which you can learn about on the excellent guided tours. It’s the changes that took place in the parish house during the 1940s and 1950s that recently intrigued me. As the parish house was being reconfigured, three stained glass windows were removed. My curiosity was sparked. What was the story of those “lost” windows? Here’s what I found on my search, not much that wasn’t already known but for me it was a wonderful journey.
An 1888 history of the church describes in detail The Harmon Window. Designed by Frederick Crowninshield, the window was created in memory of Cordelia Harmon. Harmon was “Almoner of Trinity Church for many years, and through her good deeds was well known by all the poor connected in any way with the Parish.” The window depicted Charity composed of “a woman and two half-clothed children in the centre, and a figure with bowed head at the left. Behind is the figure of Christ, with his hand extended over them. Above is the text — Inasmuch As Ye Have Done It Unto One Of The Least Of These, My Brethren, Ye Have Done It Unto Me.” You can read more about Miss Harmon in this previous post Enduring Legacies.

1920s photo of Charity, courtesy of Trinity Archives
In a 1910 history of the church there is a description of The Tuckerman Window. Designed by artist Francis Lathrop, most well known for his work with John La Farge on the murals of Trinity Church, the window depicted a woman surrounded by her four sons and instructing them from the bible. According to the history, the woman and the boy at her right are the ones commemorated by the window. They were Florence Tuckerman and her son Brooks Fenno Tuckerman. The design includes the words, Seek Ye Out The Book Of The Lord And Read. The window was given by Mr. and Mrs. John Brooks Fenno who also gave the window, The Storm on the Lake, located inside the church.

And finally there is The Suter Window. Designed by Charles E. Mills, it was executed by Edwin Ford and Frederick Brooks. It was a gift by Hales W. Suter in memory of his daughter, Gertrude Bingham Suter. “In the lower part of the window is the figure of a young girl, holding a sheaf of wheat. On the ground before her, there lies a cross, while the path is strewn with roses. Her face is turned upward toward a vision – an angel who points out the New Jerusalem above. The New Jerusalem is further represented in the smaller window above by the figures of two angels holding between them a crown.”

The cartoon above I was able to find in the Catalog for the Boston Architectural Exhibition, 1891. Such catalogs and similar art and architectural publications from the late 19th and early 20th centuries are increasingly being digitized and made available online. I love online research but it has been a pleasure interacting with archivists and stained glass experts too to learn as much as I did about these windows, the artists and their studios. While my search for now has come to an end, I hope you enjoy this brief glimpse of something beautiful that once was but is now no more except in stories. 😉