art
Be it Old Masters or local craftsmen, where there's art, there's travel.
The Observer
/// Midnight cerulean emerges from the dark. Spasmodically, pigment seeps into form, smothering the vacancy with structure and relation. In boisterous, jocund harmony, matter collaborates into organism. From nothingness, arrives life.
Priyanka ThomasPublished 3 years ago in WanderA Tragedy Treasured
The high-pitched chime of the thrift store's entryway sensor marked the start of my typical Saturday morning. Row after row of beautiful clothing stretched before me, donated by LA's upper class after being worn just once or twice. Typical of Pavlov conditioning, I felt a surge of dopamine as I entered one of the few places in LA that didn’t require me to create a façade. Ironic, since the treasures I found here played a major role in my ability to maintain said façade. None of my daddy's-money peers at Los Angeles' Escuela de Arte had figured out that I was a scholarship-dependent kid from poverty-stricken Mendota. Spending $10 here each weekend had allowed me to maintain the desired persona of a vintage-loving wall flower: looking the part while not interacting with anyone enough to let my secret slip. I was careful to keep most conversations focused on critiquing my oil paintings, redirecting anytime personal details began surfacing. The last thing I wanted was for someone to find out about my sob story- a druggie dad who walked out when I was 10 and left my mother and I to scrape by in our 1-bedroom condo resembling Rio de Genaro shanties. Artists had to reach a certain level of fame before tragic back stories were considered interesting.
Amber TerrellPublished 3 years ago in WanderCity Scenes
Although he had run this route a hundred times, running along the waterfront in Vancouver was a highlight of his day. Some days the setting sun lit the city in gold and the clouds were a vibrant pink dotting the sky. Today it was overcast and threatening rain – but the cool, almost electric feel in the October air made him run harder.
"Crawling" in Berkeley Square
BERKELEY SQUARE IN central London belies geometry and ornithology. Despite its name it is not a square but a rectangle or an oblong whose length is approximately north to south and width east to west. Berkeley “Oblong” or Berkeley “Rectangle” just lack the elegance and romance that “square” conveys. And just imagine how the song “A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square” would sound if was based on real geometry. “A nightingale sang in Berkeley Oblong” or “A nightingale sang in Berkeley rectangle. It just wouldn’t have worked. The romantic song about nightingales is based entirely on lyrical and ornithological licence. Over the 250 years since the square was originally laid out there have been no recorded sightings of nightingales inhabiting the square, passing through or even stopping off to do a gig for romantic couples.
Alan RussellPublished 3 years ago in WanderSE Portland: Seen Through Photos, Street Art, and Haiku
When you hear the name, Portland, I wonder what you think? If you are a social media fan or a news hound you have likely viewed many stories about my hometown this past year. Did you buy the message that Portland was burning to the ground and that riotous masses were taking over? I'm not going to deny that it has been a tough year. This city has some serious issues that must be addressed, and soon, but it remains one of my favorite cities, especially in the Pacific Northwest. We are known for our bridges, coffee, beer, visible snow capped mountains, tattoos, and so much more! Portland was designed around neighborhoods and planned for walkability. This makes it easy to explore on foot which in turn makes capturing the essense of an area on camera accessible and fun.
Peggy McDanielPublished 3 years ago in WanderSerendipity Arts Festival 2020- One of the Largest South Asian Virtual Events
Events always excite us. Unfortunately, 2020 was one of the most monotonous years in mankind's history because a lot of events had cancelled looking at the spread of the pandemic COVID-19. However, some events were conducted online to engage audiences from the comfort of their home. One such event was the Serendipity Arts Festival 2020. Serendipity Arts Foundation, a non-profit organization in South Asia, took the event online instead of cancelling it. It resulted in one of the most successful virtual events in 2020.
Serendipity ArtsPublished 3 years ago in WanderThe Final Portrait (part 2)
A True Las Vegas story, told in episodes. Part 2: The Ghost and the Midnight Special Read Part 1 "I knew Bob Deiro years ago."
Jonathan WarrenPublished 3 years ago in WanderTHE TEN HIDDEN GEMS OF FRIULI ON GOOGLE ARTS & CULTURE
As it turns out, Giovanni Morassutti, Italian actor, theatre director and long time student and collaborator of John Strasberg who has just finished filming Italian movie Fra due battiti alongside Remo Girone, has an art related project in the pipeline, too. His cultural center, Art Aia - Creatives / In / Residence, in collaboration with Google Arts & Culture, is launching an online exhibition entitled "The Ten hidden gems of Friuli" , a journey through the streams, the mountain peaks, and the biodiversity of intriguing Italian borderland Friuli-Venezia Giulia, and its fairytale places such as Arzino and the Karst spring of Vinchiaruzzo just to name a few.
Fred GoldmanPublished 3 years ago in WanderA roadmap to my soul
The day we wake up, is the day we realise our souls have been guiding our journey with such grace and art that it takes a few breaths to sink it in. Whispering to us our entire lives, waiting for us to be ready to listen, becoming louder as we do. Preparing us to embrace who we are and live in alignment with It. My body is the canvas my soul chose to create the roadmap that led me to her. To me. One and the same.
Raquel TeixeiraPublished 4 years ago in WanderFishes, wishes, boats and hopes
It started with a fish. And a wish. Then a boat of hope. And, gradually, a stretch of the Durham Heritage Coast turned into an unlikely art gallery – conceived and curated by anyone who was inspired to contribute to a growing collection of transient creations using the flotsam and jetsam on the shores of the North Sea.
Andy PottsPublished 4 years ago in WanderChinese Art In The Modern World
I like the fact that in Chinese art the great painters always included a deliberate flaw in their work: human creation is never perfect.
Anna klawitterPublished 4 years ago in WanderDulwich Picture Gallery
There is something very special about the Dulwich Picture Gallery. For one thing, it is well away from the artistic hub of central London and requires an extra effort for anyone who wishes to visit it. That said, the effort is not an enormous one if the visitor is willing to hop on board a suburban overground train at Victoria Station, travel three stops to West Dulwich station and then take a 10-15 minute walk.
John WelfordPublished 4 years ago in Wander