Showing posts with label stone carving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stone carving. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

A Walk in Nantes: July 24, 2012

angel fresco in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, Nantes, France
Walking is something I do a lot of, wherever I may find myself. Not only does it get me where I need to go in a guilt free, non polluting manner, the route provides an endless stream of beautiful and fascinating things to observe and is a calming form of moving meditation. Whenever I feel agitated my daily walks pacify me and help to put my life in perspective. Most of all I love to share the things I observe along the way, mainly recording impressions through photos. 

On this particular sunny day in late July my first stop was the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception, a small Gothic edifice tucked into a cobbled side street nearby. The interior provides views of  fresco fragments, decorative wall treatments in various states of decay, small carvings tucked up high in the arches and a glimpse down through a window in the floor to a late medieval tomb crypt.
late afternoon sun throws stained glass colours on the floor tiles

and on a rather graceless, over life size and badly eroded Virgin trampling a serpent underfoot
so many centuries of change have left their mark, however fragmented
carved wall panels with biblical scenes
a detail view of purgatory from a large painting
a fresco wall inscription
a carved stone figure curls in a corner, high up among the arches


a neglected side chapel with lovely, decaying decorative painting
chapel detail
 a memorial with winged vanitas skull
a niche behind the altar bears the scar of a sculpture base
close up of a stone dragon on high
another side chapel with lovely gold stars across the vault of blue "heaven"
the base of an ornately carved pulpit
votive plaques offered in gratitude for answered prayers
another empty sculpture niche among votive offerings
view of a side chapel and the main altar to the left
another memorial and reminder of mortality
on my way out I spotted this charming fox-like creature at the termination of an arch high on the wall
 on a back street--- for me this image tells a story that changes each time I look
I like to take a back route to the Jardin des Plantes and this flowered summer dress drying on a tiny balcony caught my eye...
Arriving at the Jardin was a complete change of gears--from frozen stone and death's heads to young animals and the warmth of hundreds of miniature suns sharing their bounty with a full court of bees in attendance...
coot chick
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
carnivorous pitcher plants in the afternoon sun
turtles soaking up the sun
a fairy waterfall in the Jardin des Plantes

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Ancient City of Arles





detail of Roman theatre


Roman coliseum interior view


Van Gogh's asylum courtyard

view with Van Gogh's night time rendition of the same site




exterior detail Roman coliseum




early Christian sarcophagus side detail

Arles is one of my favorite stops in the south (or anywhere, for that matter) in France--- so much beauty and history within easy grasp. Its Roman roots are in clear evidence in the well preserved and magnificent coliseum and theatre at the heart of the city, where they are surrounded by other outstanding monuments from the medieval and renaissance eras. A host of carved figures sigh and grimace from weathered facades among a labyrinth of winding, narrow streets that bloom here and there with lavish blues and the hot colors of the south. Here, also,Van Gogh painted a significant number of masterworks both within and without the asylum walls, a shelter that still stands in mute testament to his images' power to insinuate themselves into our collective conscious. The Arlesian churches boast some of the most extensive collections of saints' relics I have encountered--a macabre juxtaposition of dark cranium fragments and shattered long bones resting on scarlet velvet within elaborate Gothic style reliquaries of gold and rock crystal. Hope you enjoy this small taste of Arles' riches as much as I have...

Roman columns




reliquaries

reliquaries









Roman coliseum

Van Gogh's asylum