Showing posts with label yellow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yellow. Show all posts

Thursday, September 21, 2023

THE LAST TIME I SAW PARIS, AND OTHER MUSING

 


Ooh, la la, doesn't Queen Camilla look incredible, on Their Majesties first official visit to France since the Coronation...

Pictured outside the Palace of Versailles, with Prime Minister Macron and Madame Macron before the official dinner...

Camilla looks regal and glamorous in navy Dior, with the fabulous King George VI Sapphire Suite of jewels.   Her hair looks different, and I think it suits her well.


On arrival in Paris, Camilla was chic in pastel pink, with a sweet beret-style matching hat..


I think every woman feels a desire to be chic when in Paris...



Springtime bees among the flowers outside the Red Cardinal Chateau...

It was 36C here this afternoon, a record breaking all-time high temperature for a September Spring..

Fortunately, a cool wind has blown up tonight....


I went looking for old pictures of myself in Paris.
This was in 2008.  I no longer recognize this woman...


2014: With Mona Lisa.
Clearly having a Bad Hair day...


Maybe having a thing for French stripes...


Buying hats in Nice, 2019.  We did not see Paris on that trip.


Dinner on the beach, Nice.


It seems unlikely we will ever travel to France again, but you never know.  Airfares from Australia to anywhere are now astronomical, and we are planning to close our family business and retire completely next year.  It is both exciting and a bit daunting.  Mr. Red Cardinal is already decluttering his office....


Keep cool, wherever you are.  
It seems the world is quite the hot place these days.

XXXXX


















Sunday, August 1, 2021

WHAT IS GOING ON WITH BLOGGER?

 


Hello, is anybody out there?

I have been unable to access my Reading List on Blogger for several days.

Something has happened, I cannot find and check in on your blogs.

Looking under 'Help' I find a few others with the same problem, but no answers provided.  


So this is a little test blog, just to see if it still works.

Is this the end of the Red Cardinal blog?

It feels weird operating in a vacuum....


We are in lockdown again, and this time the dreaded Delta variant is in our local area.  A list of sites visited by unknowing victims reveals many of my usual haunts:  Supermarket, Petrol Station, K Mart, Country Road....

I will have to shop online for food for a while.

So let's just have a look around the garden:


Can you see the little blue birdie?

He is a Superb Fairy Wren, also called the Blue Wren.

I spotted him frolicking in the garden early one morning with his two little brown hen wives fluttering about.  These tiny birds like to hide and nest in low shrubs or bushes where they are safe from predators.  It has been a few years since they visited, and they are a delight to watch.  And quite difficult to photograph: they are very quick and easily startled.  I stood very still for quite some time, turned off the sound on my phone to prevent a 'click' then slowly followed them until I got a few shots.

Superb Fairy Wren - Google image

While we are locked down and avoiding company for a while, after a very long and difficult year, our daughter and her family in Canada have been able to take a little Summer holiday.  Things really have improved over there - as more and more people are immunized.



Guess where they went?  Niagara Falls - like all children, the boys loved their visit.

How interesting to see the Falls at night.


I am keeping busy catching up with my photo albums of and for our Twin grandsons.  Lord knows when we will see them again, but Facetime meetings are a real treat.  The little ones are standing up and trying to walk.  Their first birthday is still over a month away.  Such talent...

I hope this post reaches someone!

There is a cryptic message from Blogger about changes in Readers' access to email alerts about blog posts.  It is as clear as mud to me.  Help!

Keep well and stay safe.

XXXXX







Thursday, October 11, 2018

YELLOW AND PURPLE: ART AND THE ROYALS



Thank you all for your sweet comments on my last post -
I do appreciate and love every one of my Readers: 
you bring joy to my life.



Qld Art Gallery has recently opened 
'A fleeting bloom: Japanese art from the Collection'.
The exhibition focuses on moments of distinct and transient beauty found in portrayals of nature, history and spirituality in Japanese art.

Folding screens (byobu), a painting format at its peak during the Edo period (1603-1868) allowed artists to create ambitious landscapes of changing seasons and literary scenes across a series of panels:



Pair of six‑fold screens with pine trees c.1650



A wonderful pair of screens is consistent with the yamato-e tradition of showing change of seasons.  A depiction of Winter changing to Spring includes symbolic elements: the evergreen pine, associated with New Year, bamboo, and a blooming plum tree, seen late in the winter season, signalling Spring.
Birdlife includes pheasants, and behind the largest pin a silver moon, now black with age, can be seen.  How stunning it must have looked in its original silver state.


Six‑fold screen with nobleman's cart under a flowering cherry tree c.1650
This image of a cart under cherry blossoms against a gold background, may be an abstracted reference to a scene in a novel, play or poem set in the Heian period (794-1185), often referred to as Japan's 'Golden Age'.  
The cart, called a goshoguruma, was reserved for members of the imperial court, and would have been pulled by an ox, with attendants walking alongside.
The cart also became a textile motif often paired with flowers and streams.



This young lady will be going for a very special carriage ride later today.
Best wishes to Princess Eugenie of York, as she marries Jack Brooksbank at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.


Richard Buckner: Portrait of Princess Eugenie.
Eugenie was named after Princess Victoria Eugenie (1887-1969), a granddaughter of Queen Victoria, who became Queen consort of Spain.



After her maternity leave following the birth of Prince Louis, Duchess Kate is back on the royal circuit, stepping out at the Victoria and Albert Museum this week.
Love the long, swishy skirt, wide shoulder line, and these fabulous earrings:




Some gratuitous shots of the V&A from our last visit in 2016....





Long-term readers of the blog will know we always celebrate Jacaranda Season as the purple carpet spreads its charm over Brisbane each October.

R Godfrey Rivers (1858-1925) 'Under the Jacaranda', 1903.

Key to this is our annual sighting of the public's favourite painting at QAGoMA,
'Under the Jacaranda', 1903.



This year the gallery has mounted a special installation in the Children's Art Centre, with interactive activities designed around our purple patch..


And here one can pose for family photos ...

'Under the Jacaranda'

XXXX








Monday, April 24, 2017

LEGENDS AND OTHER FINE THINGS

'Banumbirr: Morning Star Poles', artists from Galiwin'ku (Elcho Island), NT, Australia
Hello there,
time to look at some more Indigenous Australian art...

Currently on display at GoMA are these unique ceremonial Morning Star Poles,
made by artists from Galiwin'ku (Elcho Island) which is a small island off Arnhem land along the northern shores of Australia.
The poles are beautiful, as is the story which accompanies them.


There are over 70 poles, but several different artists, each series showing different clan designs and features.  Though made for public exhibition, these poles are still held sacred by their makers.

The Yolngu people call the planet Venus 'Banumbirr' and tell how she came across the sea from the east, naming and creating animals and lands as she crossed the shoreline, travelling westwards across the country.

It is told that each day at sunset spirits on Burralku, an island to the east hold a morning star ceremony.  As dancing intensifies the rising dust creates the twilight which gradually becomes darkness.
During the day the star is hidden by an old woman in a special feathered bag, and just before dawn she releases the star on a long string.


First it ascends to the top of a tall pandanus tree to survey all the places it will visit, then flies over Arnhem Land heralding the dawn, pausing over each of the clans related to it.  As the sun rises the old woman reels in Banumbirr by its feathered string to be hidden again until the next evening.

The Yolngu people had observed that Venus never strays far from the Sun, which they explain in terms of the rope binding the two bodies together (gravity).  The Morning Star ceremony has to be planned well in advance since Venus rises a few hours before dawn only at certain times of the year, which vary from year to year.  So we know that the Yolngu people also track the complex motion of Venus well enough to predict when to hold the Morning Star Ceremony.

Raki (string) spiritually central to the Banumbirr story, is made from bark fibres and human hair wrapped around the poles and then painted with clan designs.  Great lengths of feathered strings, pul pul, and feather tufts representing the bright star are attached to achieve the transcendent beauty the Banumbirr poles require.



Meanwhile, the garden is having a great time with the slightly cooler temperatures and managing to produce some blooms...




Our Peace rose is in bud - watch this space....


Cute new Palm Beach basket from a great online store: Ladychatterleysaffair
and Wanda Panda yellow shoes - because I don't have to live in sandals every day, now that Autumn's here...


Happy 91st Birthday to Her Majesty, who sensibly spent the day at The Races.
Doesn't she look wonderfully alert and happy...


Tomorrow is Anzac Day, when we Australians remember those who served our country in times of war..

Google image 
My Grandfather and his two brothers joined the Australian Imperial Forces during World War I, and served in Flanders and The Somme.
En route to Europe, the Australians trained in Egypt and the Australian War Memorial preserves many photos of them, pictured near the Pyramids and the Sphinx.  Young Australian men saw it as a great adventure, but as we know, many did not return.


Fortunately my Grandfather survived his time in the trenches of Flanders and returned to Australia to have a family which included my Dad, who passed away last year at 95.

Lest we Forget.


Sydneysider Son and Little Aussie are coming this weekend.

Yay!!

Have a great week.

XXXXX