
the seasons are changing wonderfully





Posted in Branches, Inspiration, Nature Notes, On the Road, tagged beauty, dragonflies, insects, Inspiration, landscape, nature, nature photography, Photography, South Carolina, spiders, Sumter, swans, travel, waterfowl on October 2, 2016| 3 Comments »
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged flowers, gardening, Inspiration, nature, Photography, travel on September 27, 2016| Leave a Comment »
Posted in Inspiration, tagged architecture, art, beauty, colors, creativity, hope, Inspiration, Photography, stained glass windows, travel on September 25, 2016| Leave a Comment »

I don’t just challenge others and reap the culinary rewards, I also try to challenge myself and so in the coming weeks I am challenging myself to photograph and research two different sets of stained glass windows (at least). The first will involve some travel as I make my way to South Carolina to visit with relatives and en route may have the opportunity to photograph stained glass windows in a historic synagogue. The other involves researching this window (above) I noticed in a building while walking in the Back Bay of Boston. Stay tuned for future updates, and meanwhile, here’s a window located in a place I write about often, Trinity Church in the City of Boston. It is Hope by Burlison & Grylls.

Posted in Branches, Nature Notes, tagged acorns, autumn, Inspiration, nature, oak, Photography, trees on September 22, 2016| Leave a Comment »
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged beauty, color, flowers, gardens, growth, Inspiration, nature, Photography, roses, urban landscape on September 18, 2016| 3 Comments »

It is the end of the season but …

… the roses are still beautiful and …

… still growing.

Posted in Inspiration, tagged art, beauty, faith, fine art, Inspiration, painting, Photography, Raphael, religion, transfiguration on September 15, 2016| Leave a Comment »

to photograph its stained glass windows and along the way I stumbled upon Raphael’s Transfiguration (1516-1520). Not the original of course. That’s in the Vatican. This painting, which my guide at the time knew little about, appears to be a 19th century reproduction. The history of this particular painting – its creation and who gave it to the church – may be lost to history. However, I’ve since learned from a research fellow at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts that such reproductions were popular and prints being produced as early as the 16th century.

Transfiguration was Raphael’s last painting. He died at the age of 37 leaving the painting incomplete. It is considered one of his most beautiful works out of a very large body of work. It was a treat to chance upon the reproduction and perhaps one day I will see the actual painting in person. Meanwhile, below is a photograph of Raphael’s handiwork and you can read details on the Vatican Museums website here.

Raphael’s Transfiguration, photo by Alvesgaspar, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=43522641
Additional Reading
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/the-transfiguration-of-christ-31006
Posted in Inspiration, Nature Notes, tagged beauty, colors, Inspiration, nature, Photography, sky, storytelling, sun, sunset on September 14, 2016| 4 Comments »

At this time of year I chase the sun even if that only means I race up the spiral staircase in my home to the highest window to see how the light changes over time in the distant sky.


And just as I thought I was done and walked back down the stairs to download images and such, I looked out the lower window and saw that the sky had turned from gold to orange.


And then, yes once more, when I thought I was done and had walked back down the stairs to download images and compose this post, I looked up. The sky was a wonderful pinkish-red. I decided to watch the sky grow dark instead of racing back up those stairs.
Posted in Inspiration, tagged architecture, art, colors, creativity, Inspiration, John La Farge, Photography, stained glass on September 14, 2016| 2 Comments »

detail from stained glass window christ preaching by john la farge (1883)
Christ Preaching is a three story clerestory window located on the west end of Trinity Church in the City of Boston. Beautiful at any time of day, because of its location, it especially comes to life as the sun begins to set.

Sometimes when tourists enter Trinity the first words they literally ask is, “Are there any Tiffany windows here?” When they learn that the answer is no, they will shrug, albeit politely, and walk away. And I can only shake my head, knowing firsthand what they are walking away from.

Learn more …
http://trinitychurchboston.org/art-history/windows-slideshow
http://library.bc.edu/lafargeglass/exhibits/show/descriptions/all-saints/trinity-boston
Posted in Uncategorized, tagged art, beauty, Bouguereau, creativity, Donald Langosy, Inspiration, Nymphs and Satyr, painting, poetry on September 12, 2016| Leave a Comment »
“i keep sitting down to write you about this painting… and each time i draw a blank… it is a favorite of mine… a poster of it welcomes you into my studio …” — Donald Langosy, 2016

detail from nymphs and satyr by bouguereau
Of late I’ve become quite bold in asking people to share with me in words and sometimes images the beauty that they experience. I want to understand why a certain piece of music heard, a poem read, or a moment in a certain field can move them so deeply. In painter Donald Langosy’s case, I wanted to know why he was so moved by Bouguereau’s Nymphs and Satyr (1873), a painting held in the collection of the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, MA. I’d learned from Langosy’s daughter that, as with Titian, it was a work of art Langosy might like to see in person one day. And so I asked him to please tell me why, and as I waited for his words, I did a little bit of my own research into this Bouguereau.
Adolphe William Bouguereau (1825-1905) was a French figurative painter noted for producing rather luminous works with Classical, mythological and religious themes. His work was very popular with the European and American public during his lifetime. He received top prices for his work. He not only painted portraits, but he also decorated private homes, churches and public buildings.

pieta, 1876
Quite prolific, he apparently produced over 800 finished paintings. In addition, beginning in the 1860s he taught at the Academie Julian in Paris. Among his many students over the years he would teach Henry Ossawa Tanner and Ellen Day Hale. As I read criticism about his work from across the different decades, both the words beautiful and escapist were applied. During the height of Bouguereau’s career there was a new movement starting in the French art scene, Impressionism. Many within this new school were not enamored of Bouguereau’s work and actively belittled it. Despite the controversy surrounding his subject matter, so polished and dreamy during an age of great turmoil, few denied the mastery of his technique.

“sadly,” notes Langosy, “Bouguereau is remembered for his unending number of paintings of little girls and poetically posed young virginal women…. which is unfortunate… for it distracts from his many accomplishments…like this one, which is among the finest masterpieces ever painted…”
“…compositionally outstanding…. but outstanding because of the remarkable brush work… which is brilliant because of his command of color and line….. the sensual twirl feeling of the nymphs… the satyr in a diagonal angle attempting to brace himself against their attempts to over power him… Bouguereau’s subtle sense of line accenting the individual rhythms of the different poses…”
“…rhythm of line is what creates three dimension on a two dimensional plane…. and then there are the leaves and grass and the water… egads!….i’m speechless… i haven’t written enough about this painting… but now you will understand why it took me this long to write”
And that is how I came to learn of nymphs, satyrs and appreciate the work of Bouguereau through the words of Donald Langosy.
Additional Readings & Images
http://www.clarkart.edu/Art-Pieces/6158
http://www.getty.edu/art/collection/artists/780/william-adolphe-bouguereau-french-1825-1905/
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/William-Adolphe_Bouguereau