"Mommy, why is that lady staring at the ceiling?"
Because it's really, really pretty.
In the National Gallery of Art,
there's plenty of beauty that is not hanging on a wall,
or perched on a pedestal, protected by plexiglass.
Some of it is photosynthesizing.
I took very few photographs while in the museum;
they
were expressly allowed in one particular exhibit.
Most of the images that inspired me to photograph them involved nature, the outdoors.
Mind you, I
love portraits. Of people. Love.
However, two artists had captured ocean scenes
so perfectly,
I had to photograph them so I could learn more about their work.
This* is "A Quiet Day in Manchester" by
Alfred Thompson Bricher (1837-1908)**
I read about Mr. Bricher, and he lived much of his life by the ocean; not surprising.
This next one is "The Stranded Ship" by
Asher Brown Durand (1796-1886).
The green in these waves?
So true and real. Awesome. I just stare at it.
The pull of the Pacific
When in the NPS, one of my jobs, and its associated walking commute,
allowed me to see the Pacific Ocean four hours a day, five days a week.
The first birds I had to identify as a professional biologist were shorebirds.
The first natural resource monitoring I did was of the rocky intertidal community.
I was born in a beach town.
I still remember walking on the beach with my dad when I was four,
plastic baggy in hand to store all the shells I'd collect.
So, I feel bonded to that big, cold, powerful thing.
Which might explain why, when these painters really captured the ocean,
it stopped me in my tracks.
Love at first sight
Back at the gallery, I turn a corner and BAM,
there is one of my favorite paintings of all time.
I was instantly smitten the moment I saw it (in a book in high school).
And it's never diminished.
I had no idea it was at the NGA.
To direct you to it (since it's still under copyright, via another site),
I had to look up its name (just now,
after writing about the Pacific),
which I had not known at all.
"Wind from the sea."
uh...
that's freaky.
You can see it
here (and click on it to see it larger).
Art is everywhere
Then, leaving the NGA, stepping out the doorway, I see this:

The beauty doesn't stop when you leave the gallery, and step into nature.
=)
It just keeps going.
Hence my giddy, swoony, continuing love for nature.
It's fairly magical, always inspiring,
and, like so many of the amazing DC museums, it's free.
xo
bb
*I did not straighten this photograph (via post-processing) because that'd reduce the clarity a lot.
**Public domain = 100 years after artist's death (says Wiki),
so these seascapes sail in that marvelous legal sharing space. =)