Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘light’

Detail from Purity by John La Farge, 1885

Detail from Purity by John La Farge

Designed and executed by artists and stained glass manufacturers like John La Farge, Clayton and Bell, Burlison and Grylls, and others, these particular stained glass windows at Trinity Church in the City of Boston are “hidden gems.”

Detail 2 from Purity by John La Farge, 1885

Detail 2 from Purity by John La Farge

They are located in the Parish House. In part, due to renovation activities at different times over the past 100 years, some of the windows are now in stairwells, like Purity as well as John Hardman and Company’s Woods Window

The Woods Window, executed by John Hardman and Company

The Woods Window, executed by John Hardman and Company

others are in restricted areas like Ephphatha by Burlison and Grylls …

Detail from Ephphatha by Burlison and Grylls

Detail from Ephphatha by Burlison and Grylls

 

and others in areas dedicated to use by parishoners of all ages like The Sunday-School Windows by Clayton & Bell.  

They are not windows accessible as part of a traditional art and architecture tour of the sanctuary, but it has been my pleasure this summer to roam the halls a bit with my camera and to share this glimpse of details from some of the windows. Postcards and prints, and information about tours, are available at the Trinity Book Shop.

Interior of Trinity Church in the City of Boston, Copley Square

Interior of Trinity Church in the City of Boston, Copley Square

 

Read Full Post »

a view of the window with curtain sunlit …

and leaves, green and gold, through the rippled glass.

Read Full Post »

Read Full Post »

there was an amazing sky.

Read Full Post »

last ray's of sunlight falling on the kitchen table

last rays of sunlight falling on the kitchen table

Well, in my walk through history with Mr. Horne, I’ve been introduced to a number of people who have stirred my imagination.  One of those people is Adolphe Appia.  Like Edward Gordon Craig (for whom I did post an interlude extra), Adolphe Appia (1862-1928) transformed set design in the theater world by developing and exploring, among other ideas, new theories of using light and shadows as a way to unify productions.

Adolphe Appia and his set design for Parsifal (1896)

Adolphe Appia and his set design for Parsifal

Appia’s (and Craig’s) dark illustrations struck a chord.  As if I didn’t love shadows before, but now, more so than ever, when I see shadows lengthening upon a table or wall, I wonder:  what scene is being set for what story?  Thus, the reason why I photographed sunlight on a kitchen table.  😉

more light falls on the kitchen table

more light falls on the kitchen table

Perhaps, one day I will sit with these images and write a story.  Meanwhile, if you’d like to learn more about Appia, in December 2013 an architectural group produced this great visual overview of Appia’s work.  Here is his Wikipedia page listing works and references.  And highly recommend this brief read by Pericles Lewis of Yale.  Below are more of Appia’s drawings from the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Read Full Post »

Read Full Post »

Read Full Post »

… somehow, the scenes always take my breath away.  With moving water, in this case a freshwater spring running into the sea, there is no one right photo.  It’s just capturing fluid moments as the sun shines down, reflecting, refracting and all those other wonderful things light does in and on the water.

Read Full Post »

One day, one of  my brothers called and it was clear that he was in need of immediate assistance.  Not for physical trauma.  He needed someone to lean against, as we all do at some time.  I was thousands of miles away.  I could not get to him so I called a person that my brother had mentioned in recent years, an older gentleman who’d been an important figure in high school but I had not seen or spoken with him in over two decades.  That day I used the online white pages to track down his home number.  With barely a greeting, I told him I was sending my brother to him.  He simply said, in a lovely warm voice, “Okay, Cynthia.  I’ll be waiting.”  And then I called my brother and I told him that he needed to get to that gentleman’s house and when he did he was to call me.  He said, “Okay, Cynthia. I’m going.”  Time did pass but then the phone did ring.  My brother said, “It’s me.  Hold on.” Then he passed the phone to the gentleman who said, “Don’t worry.  I’ve got him under my wing.”

Why does that story come to mind today?  Years have passed.  My brother is fine. He and the gentleman remain close friends.  I think the story surfaces because over this past week I have been witness to other acts of kindness, and reminded of people like this gentleman, willing to spread their wings over those in need, without question and without expectation.  They are bits of brightness in the sometime dark, men and women who are often not recognized by others or even by themselves for the beauty they add to the world.  By the way, I have not seen the gentleman in this story, or spoken to him, since that day.  I did send him a postcard saying thank you.  And, he sent me a card back saying you’re welcome.

Read Full Post »

the sun shone bright upon the clouds.  I thought a storm might come, but it passed.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »