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Chrysler Museum of Art – Norfolk VA

I took the one and a half hour drive to Norfolk to see a couple of exhibits that I saw in the Times-Dispatch. The temperature was 61 degrees and there was zero traffic on the 64. The drive was absolutely lovely.

The first exhibit was Edward Burtynsky: Water. I found it mesmerizing. He used drones, helicopters, and rigged cameras on industrial equipment to get these shots.

These are part of a series titled Pivot Irrigation. I had to google it…it is a method of crop irrigation in which equipment rotates around a pivot and crops are watered with sprinklers. If you look closely at the tall picture, that is a house in the bottom left corner.

This one reminded me of an M.C. Escher sketch.DSCN8448

I took this at Brown’s Island several years ago. It’s some toxic sludge or another that collected near the shore of the James River. Gross, but there is some beauty in it. DSCN1598

The next exhibit I was interested in seeing was William Trost Richards: Seascapes. It wasn’t quite what I was expecting, but still interesting.

I then wandered around checking out the rest of the galleries. The Chrysler has some really fascinating items.

These are from the 18th and 19th century.

They also had quite an extensive collection of Contemporary art…I just don’t get it. This projector illuminated a video of someone’s eye…blinking, looking around, staring…I just don’t get it.

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These two pieces were interesting though. The wooden one (which I had to look up because I didn’t see a plaque) is a sculpture made of Baltic birch plywood mounted on a white pedestal. It is horizontally layered birch plywood illustrating a three-dimensional representation of the Caspian Sea.DSCN8465

The light bulbs are glass radiometers (had to look that up) which consists of an airtight glass bulb, containing a partial vacuum. Inside are a set of vanes which are mounted on a spindle. The vanes rotate when exposed to light, with faster rotation for more intense light, providing a quantitative measurement of electromagnetic radiation intensity. Today the device is mainly used in physics education as a demonstration of a heat engine run by light energy, or in this case, as a piece of art.DSCN8463

They also had some neat pieces from the South Asia, Himalayas and Islamic World. I found this one particularly interesting. While it looks ferocious, it is meant to protect Buddhists from distractions on their path to enlightenment.

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These were from the ancient Greek and Roman art collection.

The Chrysler also has an extensive collection of Glass art.

This is a Chihuly!

There were two mirrored sculptures outside that were intriguing.

The traffic was bad on the way home, but I will definitely be returning to this museum!

Speaking of traffic, I was able to snap this picture of a hot pink, Hummer limousine, because…why not?

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Rodin – VMFA Jan 2016

Rodin: Evolution of a Genius exhibit was at VMFA and I had the pleasure of seeing it a few weeks ago. The exhibit examines his techniques, materials, models and assistants, and explores the extraordinary working process behind some of his best known works.
(Read more at http://vmfa.museum/exhibitions/exhibitions/auguste-rodin/#8wzdDt6vYG6xPVGK.99).

It was one of the few exhibits the VMFA allowed photography in so I, of course, snapped away!

One of the first rooms held Rodin’s study of hands, including his work Hand of God as well as a cast of his own hand.

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In the background is a photograph of the Gates of Hell and depicts a scene from “The Inferno,” the first section of Dante’s Divine Comedy. Even though the museum it was commissioned for was never fully realized, Rodin spent over 30 years reworking it. Several pieces in this exhibit were originally conceived for this piece, including The Thinker, The Three Shades and The Kiss.

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The Minotaur

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The Centaur

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The history of The Monument to Balzac

The Three Shades

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I first remember seeing “The Thinker” outside The Legion of Honor, part of the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco, when we lived there in the early 2000s. Here is a monumental plaster cast version.

Rodin liked to use photography both as a means of documenting his work and later as a way to edit his compositions.

 The Sirens

The Kiss

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The Call to Arms

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Adam

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Eternal Springtime

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One of his most famous pieces is the Burghers of Calais. Here are three of the six men depicted in that grouping.

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A weekend full of art

On Friday, I went to the Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art on the University of Richmond campus to see the Anti-Grand exhibit, a contemporary perspective on landscape. I didn’t take pictures of everything because I had done a little pre-viewing online and they had a wonderful site of all of the artists http://www.antigrand.com/artists/, so I just took a few shots.

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My favorite was the Grand Library installation by Guy Laramée. It was made of roughly 80 old Encyclopedia Britannica books stacked and then carved to look like canyons. It reminded me of my time in Arizona. And what an ingenious use of outdated printed material!

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On Saturday, I visited the Muscarelle Museum of Art on the campus of William & Mary in Williamsburg. They had an exhibit on Leonardo da Vinci and the Idea of Beauty. It included drawings and studies from da Vinci and Michelangelo. I studied art history in college and it is always thrilling to be face to face with an artists’ creation that I read about in a classroom.

Alas, photography was not allowed in this exhibit; the below are photos from the brochure.

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Finally, my own “art.” The snow, ice and freezing cold were burning off this weekend and I took a few shots of snow melting off of the roof, creating icicles on the plants in the shade. Hopefully Spring is on time this year, I’m so over Winter!

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Tacky Lights take II (or twelve?)

Another year, another night of driving around and seeing all of the twinkly, sparkly lights! I decided to check out some of the houses that weren’t maddeningly busy.

For a look at the lights in years past, please see https://anyonecantakeapicture.com/2013/12/22/some-call-them-tacky-lights/.

2014

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Some neighborhoods decided to spread the Christmas cheer by joining together and whole cul-de-sacs decorated their homes.

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