Tuesday, November 26, 2013

THE PEOPLE OF DRUNK BAY


The Drunk Bay Trail is .3 mile beginning on the left (east) at the end of the Salt Pond Bay beach.
It follows along the north side of Salt Pond, and over to the shoreline where waves are always crashing.

The entire beach area is a spectacle in and of itself with rock art scattered across the entire beach.




Apparently, it’s become quite a tradition to create people and animal art out of coral, shells, driftwood and anything else washed up on shore.






The name ‘Drunk’ is taken from the Dutch Creole word for ‘drowned’ 











I could not find anything about the origin of this popular art form,just people expressing themselves with flotsam and other debris washed ashore...





A bientôt,
Pierre Candra

Friday, November 15, 2013

THE HUNTINGTON Art Gallery


The Huntington Art Gallery houses the European art collection and includes one of the most distinguished collections of 18th- and 19th-century British paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts outside London, including Thomas Gainsborough’s Blue Boy, Joshua Reynolds’ Sarah Siddons as the Tragic Muse, and John Constable’s View on the Stour near Dedham. Also part of the European collection, The Arabella D. Huntington Memorial Art Collection contains Renaissance paintings and sculpture along with a collection of 18th-century French sculpture, tapestries, porcelain, and furniture.



 Once the house of Henry E. Huntington (1850–1927) and his second wife, Arabella (1850–1924), the Huntington Art Gallery opened in 1928 displaying one of the greatest collections of 18th-century British art in the country. When the finishing touches were put on Henry E. Huntington’s San Marino villa in 1911, it was proclaimed one of the finest in Southern California, and a major achievement by architects Myron Hunt and Elmer Grey.










Since then the collections have grown enormously and now contain many great works of art of the Italian, French and Netherlandish schools, as well as a broader range of British art and design. 







A bientôt,
Pierre Candra