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

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Night Beach: The Last of the Cape Cod Series

Night Beach
oil on canvas 16 x 20 inch
sold
This is the sixth and last painting in my Cape Cod series.  As I wrote before, I painted the first painting last year which was sold.  All the others were painted this Fall.  I could probably keep going with this, but I think I am ready to paint other ideas.  Maybe I will come back to it.  Maybe not.  I change my mind often, so who knows what will happen.  I've learned not to promise anything because that way the ideas flow more freely.

I can't believe Thursday is Thanksgiving.  We will be traveling back to Kansas to visit our family and friends.  I am really looking forward to it.

Happy Thanksgiving to you all who live here in USA!

Until next time!
♥ Lisa

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Arles House 24 and Traveling to Europe


Arles House 24
acrylic on board 6 x 8 inch
purchase
While on a double date with our good friends last year, we were invited to join them on a high school group tour to France and Spain.  They have gone on these European trips for several years now, both as parents and chaperones, and they said there was always room for extras in the group and that we should consider joining them this time. We could attend as guests rather than chaperones, and the price would include airfare, hotels, two meals a day and most of the activities.  On the itinerary was PARIS, the LOUVRE, and the PICASSO MUSEUM.  Say no more.  I'm in! My husband was just as excited about the itinerary as I was, so we set up our payment plan and paid on the trip all year, paying it off just before departure day.

Our tour was ten days long and time was spread thinly in Paris, Provence and Barcelona, however we were able to see so much.  The Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame Cathedral, Versailles, and the Louvre were all covered in 2 1/2 days, mixed in with a bus tour of the city.  Our favorite activity was just being there and walking around taking in the all the beautiful architecture.

Provence was my favorite by far, slower and quieter than Paris,  and this is my little Arles-inspired piece.  It was a tiny house I noticed while walking in the historic area.  Arles is where Van Gogh was hospitalized for a year, producing over 300 paintings and drawings in that period of time.

home in Arles

We also visited the city of Avignon, as well as Pont du Gard and Carrcassone before ending our time in the incredible city of Barcelona.  When we got home, friends and family were eager to hear about our trip, so I spent time combing through pictures to post on Facebook, writing detailed descriptions of all that we saw.  It took a lot of time to do, but it was time well spent because it helped me absorb more of all that we saw on our journey.  I am so inspired now,  not just to paint, but to visit some wonderful museums and towns close to home.  The world is a wonderful beautiful place.

I hope you are well and thank you for visiting!
♥Lisa

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Traveling New York City


Hello everyone!  I have just returned from the beautiful city of New York...an amazing place that leaves you feeling inspired, exhilarated, and exhausted all at the same time.  My husband and I spent six days there and we went non-stop...meeting up with members of my family...all of us thankful it was a happy occasion for a change.

We saw so much and knowing there are so many people who love New York or would like to see it some day, I have put this post together with you in mind.  I have nearly 40 photos to share, so you can just scroll through them if you don't want the details.  Remember, you can enlarge them by clicking on them. I am keeping most of the details brief since anything I share here can be researched so easily on the internet.

So here we go...

above is the view from the top of the One World Trade Center and below is the outside of it.  It is a beautiful building and the whole area around it is dedicated to the memory of the victims of the attacks in 2001 and also the bombing in 1993.


The memorial pools can be seen from the top.  These are where the original twin towers once stood.


The  names of every victim in 1993 and 2001 are engraved around the edges of the pools.  It is sobering to see all the names.



We stepped into St. Patrick's Cathedral for a few minutes. 



At night we saw Time's Square.  If you like lights and noise and overwhelming crowds, this is the place to be.  It's like a perpetual party day and night.


You can't see New York at Christmas Time and not visit the window displays at Macy's.  This one excited me so much because I was a huge Peanuts fan growing up.



The Empire State Building!  We tried to see it at night, but the visibility was so poor we decided to save our tickets and see it in the day when things were cleared up.  I've been on the observation deck at night before and the views are stunning.



The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree was lit while we were there.  We tried to attend the lighting ceremony, but the crowd was so huge we were two blocks away and around the corner from it.  So we waited until the next evening to visit.  The tree is massive!



We didn't see any shows this trip, but Radio City always excites!



Bryant Park was charming with lighted glass huts...all of them individual shops full of gifts and art.



Here is one of the huts up close.  The entire park was so lovely nestled in the middle of all the illuminated city buildings.



Washington Square!  If you like live street performers and playing chess, this is the place to be.  This is also the place where Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan part ways in the beginning of the movie When Harry Met Sally.



One of my favorite things to look at...homes and apartments.  This is the Upper West side.  Can you see where the inspiration for my cityscape paintings comes from?



Also in the Upper West side is Lolo Cafe where a scene in You've Got Mail was filmed.  



We spent nearly ten hours at The Metropolitan Museum of Art...and still didn't see it all!



But some of what we did see  is ...

Madame Arthur Fontaine
Odilon Redon
1901 pastel on paper



A lot of gorgeous glass beautifully displayed
against the backdrop of Central Park.



Amazing furniture and ceramics.




Big open spaces filled with sculptures of every shape and size.



Degas' beloved Little Dancer.




Picasso's Woman in White
oil on canvas 1923.



I was mesmerized by this Sir David Wilkie oil on wood painting called The Highland Family.




The details of the dogs!  The socks!  The shoes!! All of it!  Exciting!




I watched in awe as this woman painted a rendering.  She had the colors exact.  I know many of you can name the painting she is copying, but I have forgotten already and did not snap a photo of the placard.



Purple rooms really DO exist!  Absolutely love the period rooms at The Met.



Guess which artist did this sculpture called Woman's Head in 1912.




I got lost in the colors of this piece by Paul Klee called Redgreen and Violet-Yellow Rhythms, 1920, oil and ink on cardboard.  
(Who says you can't paint on anything and still end up in a museum?)  :)




Marc Chagall
Lovers Among Lilacs, 1930, oil on canvas



What I loved most about this Chagall piece was getting to see the actual texture up close!  Again...exciting!



We spent a few hours at The Cloisters in Harlem as well.  It is part of The Met Museum and it's full of very old (1100-1600) architecture, sculptures, tapestries, paintings and more.  Worth every minute!  Below is a room at The Cloisters filled with tapestries.  The size of them were a sight...hard to imagine the time it took to make such a thing so long ago.



More than anything at The Cloisters, was the elaborate architecture, still intact and huge and heavy...all created in a day where everything was done without machines.  I found myself wishing I could travel back in time to see the real people and the real sites where all this was created.  Art is SO a part of our history...it's in every culture and in every church...across the generations.  Kind of amazing really.  It is so easy to forget that sometimes.



Speaking of amazing...this is a small ivory sculpture from around 1260 to 1270.  It is about 6 x 6 inches!



Here's a close-up.  How did they do that?



This was a wood sculpture from 1480 and towered above the floor.  It grabbed my attention for quite some time...the emotion in it was moving.  



We finished our last moments in New York City at Central Park on a gorgeous 55 degree day.  It was sunny, yet ice skaters were on the rink, horse and carriage rides jingled all over the place, the buzz and excitement of Christmas was everywhere.



  Here's one last view...taken from the top of the Empire State Building...this is my favorite photo of all that I took.




Well..except for this one...which we had taken at Rockefeller Center.  Our tour group...from left to right...me, hubby, brother, sister in-law, sister and nephew...all with grateful hearts for another joyful memory made in this grand city.


I hope you enjoyed this highlight post!  
Have a great rest of the week!

♥ Lisa

Friday, September 5, 2014

Where Have You Been?



I have been away on a road trip.


We headed northeast through the Flint Hills of Kansas, then Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and New York.


We ate lunch on Lake Erie.


We marveled over early signs of fall near Kalamazoo, Michigan.


We spent most of our time in the western part of New York...about one hour from Niagra Falls...visiting my family.


We watched sunsets on Lake Ontario and walked on the pier under the stars.


We dined near the boat docks.


We visited a sweet carousel of the past.


We walked the trails in Corbett's Glen.


And got excited at the lushness of it...and the smell of it.



We enjoyed walks in quaint neighborhoods.


We felt jealous of George Eastman...the founder of Kodak.  He actually lived in this house.  Does anyone really need all that space?



Really jealous.


We celebrated Labor Day picnicking at Hamlin Beach. We didn't feel jealous anymore.


We watched the skies a lot.


We visited family a lot.


And posed for pictures a lot.


There were some quiet moments...


...during a lovely visit at the DuPont Mansion in Louisville, Kentucky...a detour we took on the way home.


We had the whole mansion to ourselves! It is their slow season. Now George Eastman would be jealous of us. :)


We took in one last sunset...in Louisville over the Ohio River.


We stopped by a very famous place to horse racing enthusiasts (just to say we saw it).



Then we clicked our heals and headed home to Kansas.

It is true, there really is no place like home.

I hope all of you are well.  See you soon!