Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Kashmiri Boaters and a beautiful blog

The images from 'Search Kashmir' are so beautiful and rich- so emotional. The post compares the shots of Henri Cartier-Bresson and Brian Brake, a decade apart, and then Brian Braks with Steve McCurry, four decades apart.
I feel like a need to go there and see these bodies in motion.





San Giovanni Battista by Mario Botta

I am really moved to go here:

Switzerland : Ticino Mogno village church San Giovanni Battista designed by Mario Botta




more great images here
and the architect Mario Botta's other funky work
including this: 
WELLNESS CENTRE “BERGOASE”, AROSA, SWITZERLAND 2003-2006
see some of his sketches here
I've also been dying to go to Lausanne. This is what the journey looks like by bicycle:

Cathedral Candles

I thought I had a quarter in my pocket.
I wanted to light a candle
They're majestic aren't they?

Get a picture with me right in front while I light the candle
oh but damn I don't have a quarter.
Get the whole thing, all the way up to the top.

Are you getting the whole thing?
That very tippy-top candle?
_

What do we visit a church for?
A cathedral built for the worship of a God we regard skeptically
and whose name we take in vain.

If you get a shiver of emotion upon entring,
which heart string is being pulled?
Is it a testament to Man who built it?
Faith that inspired it?
Self congratulation for being there?
Gratitude for that moment?

Awe.
Boredom.
Flippancy.
Nostalgia.
Curiosity.
_

What would the men who built it think of the world surrounding today.

photo Jean Gaumy: October 1980. Pilgrims standing in front of the cave. Lourdes, France

Lille France Day Trip

Day trip from Paris to Lille en images







nostalgic for Belgium





a series of photos form a weekend in Brussels and Antwerp - TEXTURE

Airport Behind the Scenes


Well, not really behind the scenes as they are out in plain sight, but I love watching the people who orchestrate our departures and arrivals, without whom we would not have fuel, baggage, beverage, or any idea where to park the damn thing. Not to mention I'm a sucker for a uniform.

These two are from my recent layover in Brussels on my way back to Paris from Hartford, Connecticut.

Wintertime on A lake in Norway

four times per year
the provisions are delivered
four times a year 
once in dead cold

the roads are closed
and a boat's not an option
the lake is now ice
with a coating of snow

travel 'cross ice 
leaving tracks not to follow
they are a caution 
someone's passed here before
 
the sack on a sled
efficient and agile
at the start you say
I could have taken more

In the refuge oasis
 the island of tress
you can't stay too long
you feel safe, you won't leave

the wind may be biting
advance past the tree line
just think of arriving
on the far side

it seems too distant
with your heavy load
but you've done it before
knowing that's all you need

take the first step
where the ice isn't worn down
across to the clearing
with the old crooked tree
 
deliver the wares
warm up your feet
start plans for next time
prepare once again to leave 

Color in the Arctic

Frank Hurley photographs the British Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition led by Sir Ernest Shackleton’s on the ill fated 'Endurance.'





little trips

I am planning my summer weekend trips,
Luxembourg, Antwerp, Prato, and the west of France to two little knitwear factories. And maybe Switzerland (Zurich? Lausanne?).

So I have been looking at train tickets, and also at itineraries.
In Luxembourg I know I want to see the MUDAM (modern art museum) for the John Stezaker and Mac Adams Exhibits. And then see a couple of shops, I hope. But basically discover this amazing little place.
Here is a one day NYTimes itinerary
So I basically want to make sure that I make the most of it. You know?

But train tickets also gave me the idea that I could rent a car and do Antwerp, Luxembourg, and Metz (to see the new Centre Pompidou branch) all in one efficient go. And see the country side.

I need to buy a video camera. And an SLR.
Oh man.