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  • Lens Artists Challenge # 155 – On the Water

    Lens Artists Challenge # 155 – On the Water

    I’ve been tempted to submit to this challenge after looking at Ann-Christine’s lovely photos, not that I think mine come up to her standard, but it has pushed me to look through my own folio and see what I could come up with. Too many, it turns out, but here are a few of my favourites, mostly here because they remind me of some long gone precious days.

    Elephants need water for washing and, if possible, a mahout to do the work with a scrubbing brush, which they love. Here is one I took in northern Thailand at a time when elephants were still used in farming.

    He’s just had a good scrub down and now it’s off to the corral for rest.

    While with the animals here’s one from Cambodia where the water buffaloes were enjoying the water.

    Next we move on to canals and to the very first summit level canal built in Great Britain. Built in N. Ireland in 1742, it is the Newry Canal which pre-dated the more famous Bridgewater Canal by nearly thirty years and it was built to link the Tyrone coalfields (via Lough Neagh and the River Bann) to the Irish Sea at Carlingford Lough near Newry.

    Newry canal flows through the town past what were once mills and lumber yards

    And still with canals, my favourite canal trip of all time, the 6-day journey on board a historic ship along the Gota canal, from Gothenburg to Stockholm across one river, eight lakes and two seas. The ships have scarcely been altered since they were first used to take immigrants from Stockholm to the departure port for America and few concessions are made to tourists, i.e. no en-suite rooms, communal showers only and, it must be said, rather cramped quarters (so luggage must be kept to a minimum). Yet what a magical journey that was, across a black lake and a dark sea with stops along the way to visit historic sites. I went in midsummer, almost permanent daylight and that had its own magic, eating cherries and wild strawberries and drinking hot chocolate at 3.00 am on deck as the beautiful Swedish landscape glided by.

    The William Tham negotiates a lock.

    Just a few more watery memories and then I’m done:

    Rivers, Oceans, Lakes and Marshes.

  • Silent Sunday

    Somewhere, it’s going to be a beautiful day, so hush, it’s Sunday.

  • Saturday Sulpture:

    Outside the Caen-Normandie Museum of WWll in Caen, France.

    That joyful moment in 1945.

    Based on a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt which appeared in an issue of Life magazine in 1945, this sculpture has been much criticised by women’s rights groups since it was erected at the city-owned Mémorial de Caen. The French group, Osez le Féminisme, said at the time “we cannot accept that the Mémorial de Caen holds up a sexual assault as a symbol of peace,” but the city-owned Memorial de Caen refused to take it down. They based their objection on the fact that the sailor had been observed kissing ‘all he met, young and old’.

    There are many copies of this sculpture (by Seward Johnson) in other parts of the world.

  • Silent  Sunday

    Silent Sunday

    It was a silent Sunday until something stirred in the water: a fish, an insect, a thing from the deep? Whatever it was, it caused a ring of ripples in the water.

  • Life im Colour: White/Silver

    Life im Colour: White/Silver

    I didn’t think I’d have another picture to add to Jude’s White/Silver challenge but I suddenly remembered the whiteness of lovely Stavanger in Norway, and I offer a selection to link to Jude here.

    A hilly, colourful street in Stavanger

    Link to Jude here.

  • Life in Colour – White/Silver

    Life in Colour – White/Silver

    I never thought I’d find a photograph that would show something in silver but guess what? I found one that I took a couple of years ago on quick trip from Vienna to Bratislava. I was looking for something else entirely and voila – there it was. So, my silver statue of a dapper, man-about-town off to the theatre, is my offering for Life in Colour – Silver.

    Silver statue in main square in Bratislava

    Linked to Life in Colour at Jude’s here

  • Sculpture Saturday

    In Spain for this Baroque Sculpture at the Casa de los dos Aguas in Valencia, the home of the Marquises of the same name. This mansion is now the home of the National Museum of Ceramics and Decorative Arts, and is located in one of the most central locations in the city, a Rococo nobility palace.

    The interior is equally impressive, if not quite so ornate but I am always overwhelmed by the entrance which was made in 1745 and has reference to the two rivers of the Valencian community, the Turia and Jucar which are represented by two naked figures and the two urns of water at their feet, reference to the title of the Marquises (los dos aguas).

    On one side are two crocodiles, a quiver of arrows and the water pouring from the vessel. On the other side is a reclining lion, another quiver of arrows and the representative vessel pouring water. I’ve enlarged only one of them (see below) just to show some of the detail without you having to click on the enlarging feature.

    In the centre of the entrance is an image to the Virgin of the Rosary, patron saint of the House of Dos Aguas and at her foot kneel two women, one with a cornucopia of fruits and the other with a vessel from which pours coins. The whole is a riot of voluptuousness in true Rococo style. The virgin is a plaster copy made in 1855 as the original work disappeared at the end of the century previous.

    The Museum is a worthwhile place to visit but if there is no time, the building of the Palacio de los dos Aguas is right in the centre of town and you can stand outside and look at it for free!

    If you are into the Baroque – this is an impressive entrance.

    And one of the side panels in all its glory:

  • Summer was Yesterday

    Summer was yesterday, today reverts to normal English June weather. But click on the image and look there in the distance, two ladies sitting on deckchairs, the wind being deflected by a windbreak. Say what they like, but we’ve got grit in bucketfuls in the UK: it takes more than grey skies and chill winds to put us off sitting on the beach.
  • Life in Colour 21

    Life in Colour 21

    Link to Jude here. Jude has asked for White or Silver this month.

    First up, a couple of Spain’s White Villages, whose whiteness demands sunglasses at all times to cut the glare.

    Snow on the Italian Alps as I last flew over (1918)
    Isle of Wight Garlic. The IoW farm also grows and sells the rarer black garlic.
    View to the Jungfrau from Rigi in Switzerland with snow in between.

  • Life in Colour – 21

    Life in Colour – 21

    This month, Jude has asked us to find examples of White, so here are a few images taken today in my garden. Perhaps some, less botanical, during the week.

    White Clematis

    Link to Jude here.