Denver Botanic Gardens with Chihuly Glass

Chihuly at DBG 2014 -  Ikebana Boat (14)
Iris blooming in the Japanese garden around the 4th of July. The colors are repeated in the Chihuly Ikebana boat. Iris are believe to have the power to purify and protect.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 -  Ikebana Boat (5)
Lotus are also a very important Japanese flower. There is usually one plant flowering in the garden to show the season. The Sho Fu En (Wind in Pines) is dominated by 135 character Ponderosa Pines, native plants originally from Arapaho National Forest.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 -  Ikebana Boat (31)
Floating Walla Wallas by Chihuly to give homage to his native Washington State.The snow lantern was a gift from Takayama, Japan – Denver’s sister city.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 -  Ikebana Boat (49)
This stream leads to the Japanese tea house (constructed in Nagano, Japan), surrounded by fall color. Reichenbach Balls, mirrored inside are like bubbles.
14-08-07 Chihuly at DBG (5)
It is docent time. I was awarded a national Presidential pin for volunteering over 250 hours in 2013. The real reward is spending time at the gardens surrounded by good friends and mentors as well as fascinating visitors.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Monet Pool Fiori (11)
A beautiful summer evening.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Monet Pool Fiori (9)
Do you have a favorite? The fascinating aspect is that the sculptures change with the light, with the surrounding plants and with all the other climate factors. The sculptures were usually always fun to photograph. I would treat myself by arriving early before leading a tour to have the early morning light and the solitude of the garden to prepare myself.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Neodymium Reeds (14)
Consistently the Rock Alpine Garden was captivating with the changes of blooms. These Neodymium Reeds seem to meander like a stream through the garden.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Neodymium Reeds (28)
Outstanding: rising above the pink muhuly grass! I had to take this picture in the middle of leading a tour.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Neodymium Reeds (1)
The bee resting on the cone flower seems oblivious to the reeds.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Niijima Float Boat (11)
Niijima floats was the most colorful installation. For me it evoked smiles, beach balls and summer fun. The reflections were fantastic and the water lilies added so much interest.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Niijima Float Boat (3)
A picnic dinner with wine and friends in the garden made for a perfect and memorable September evening.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Perennial Fiori (3)
Poppies and Perennial Fiori
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Perennial Fiori (10)
Ornamental Alliums and Perennial Fiori
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Polyvitro Crystal Tower (3)
Polyvitro Crystal Tower seemed to change colors – this time to mimic that Colorado blue sky.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Polyvitro Crystal Tower (13)
The Polyvitro reflections
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Red Reeds (1)
The Red Reeds in the Porter Plains Garden seem to evoke the vast distances of the prairie and sky in this photo.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Red Reeds (2)
The Red Reeds with native Mexican cone flower. This garden is burnt every 3 or 4 years to rejuvenate the seeds. The Red Reeds represent that to me.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Red Reeds (9)
Love the color contrast!
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Saffron tower and Cattails (6)
The new Ellipse Garden by the Waring House with the cattails, reeds, and floats.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Saffron tower and Cattails (20)
Serenity
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Blue Icicle Tower (2)
Blue Icicles before a summer storm
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Summer Sun (9)
As long as we are looking up – the Yuccas were looking so magical.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Summer Sun (4)
Yucca Rama with Chihuly glass Saguaros and reeds.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Summer Sun (8)
Yuccas and Summer Sun go together!
This was my post for the opening night gala and I could not believe my luck…I only had the phone but still got the coveted picture: Dale Chihuly and his wife. Gotta love the boots!

 

 

Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Summer Sun (19)
This sun really glowed at night! Over 1900 pieces of glass, 14 foot diameter, over 20 feet tall and weighs more than the MINI.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - White tower (3)
White Tower in the Romantic Garden with the conservatory. Chihuly loves glass houses – well he loves glass!
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Turquoise Reeds and marlins with Persian tower (4)
Turquoise Reeds mounted in Douglas Pine from Baily and Marlins in between. The long vista, reflections, and shadows on the Luis Barragon style red wall were always interesting.
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Turquoise Reeds and marlins with Persian tower (3)
Persians in el Pomar Waterway
Chihuly at DBG 2014 - Turquoise Reeds and marlins with Persian tower (7)
Reaching for the sky…What will the future bring?

 

Kizuna: East Meets West bamboo site installation at Denver Botanic Gardens

Working with Steven Talsnik to set up his Floating World Bamboo installation in Monet Pond. There was an art to attaching all the white cable ties to evoke the haiku wishes left in Japanese gardens.
Working with Stephen Talasnik to set up his Floating World Bamboo installation in Monet Pond. Part of my role was to attach the white cable ties, they move in the wind looking similar to haiku wishes tied to trees in Japanese gardens. The team did a fun time lapse video of the water flooding back into the pond which you can see on this link.

http://www.stephentalasnik.com/video_floating.html

this tower of black bamboo was to add da bit of the New York moment to our western plains.
This tower of black bamboo adds a bit of the New York moment to our western plains. It was really fun to help build this and to watch it grow in the gardens.
Fun to try to capture the spirits, reflections and just to contemplate the changing patterns of the ripples in the water. A bit of Wabi Sabi in the gardens.
Fun to try to capture the spirits, reflections, and just to contemplate the changing patterns of the ripples in the water. A bit of Wabi Sabi in the gardens.
I was inspired to write this haikuArtist Talasnik - Chaos meets Serenity: Float, Surrealist world
I was inspired to write this haiku
Artist Talasnik – Chaos meets Serenity: Float, Surrealist world
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The opening of the expanded Sho-Fu-En Japanese garden added a new area to view the floating sculptures.
Tetsunori Kawana also created green bamboo sculptures that aged to a golden aptina. The sculptures engaged all five senses: Sight, Smell, Sound, Taste, and Touch.
Tetsunori Kawana also created green bamboo sculptures that aged to a golden patina. The sculptures engaged all five senses: Sight, Smell, Sound, Taste, and Touch.
When the 5 senses are united with the 5 elements (Easrth, Wind, Fire, Water, Sky) there is harmony.
When the 5 senses are united with the 5 elements (Earth, Wind, Fire, Water, Sky) there is harmony.
These sculptures changed each time they were viewed. It was fun to experience and to photograph.
These sculptures changed each time they were viewed. It was fun to experience and to photograph.
Kizuna means bonds between People, Art and Plants. It was great to give tours and hear people's reactions. I appreciateded working with the other 80 plus volunteers which helped install, the artisits who brought their visions, the staff and other tour guides who supported the exhibit, the horticulturists for the gorgeous plantings, and the public for visiting.
Kizuna means bonds between People, Art and Plants. It was great to give tours and hear people’s reactions. I appreciated working with the other 80 plus volunteers which helped install, the artists with their visions, the staff/volunteers who supported the exhibit, the horticulturists/volunteers for the gorgeous plantings, and the public for visiting.

Allan Houser Sculpture at Denver Botanic Gardens

An American Modernist,  Allan Houser was the first Native American artist who broke the boundaries and didn’t follow the traditional styles. His Warm Springs Chiricahua Apache heritage, his love of nature, his inspiration from Henry Moore and other contemporaries are shown in his bronze works. On loan from the Allan Houser, Inc. south of Santa Fe, New Mexico, this wonderful exhibit is very interesting to view after having the Henry Moore sculptures here last year. These sculptures are smaller and more intimate but still hold their own with beautiful form, texture, and symbolism.

Sacred Rain Arrow by Allan Houser, Bronze 1988

Imagine Allan’s father Sam telling this story that was passed to him by his uncle Geronimo: A long time ago, the Apache suffered during a drought. After much discussion, they chose a young man – not the biggest or strongest, but the purest of heart – to take the  special blessed arrow to the top of the highest peak. There into the darkness of night, he shot the arrow asking for rains to sustain his people, the plants and the animals. The rains came and the Apaches survived.

Really powerful and beautiful sculpture. Notice the arm is out of proportion giving emphasis to the act of shooting the arrow. There is a special edition of this at the Smithsonian. An edition was at the entry to the Olympic Village in Salt Lake City in 2002, and the image has graced the license plates for Oklahoma since 2004. This edition is owned by Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center – but for some reason we had an exceptionally rainy May and July so it is working its magic in this location on Anna’s Overlook.

Singing Heart by Allan Houser, Bronze 1994

This is perhaps a self portrait of Allan in his mother Blossom’s arms. I think it speaks to the nurturing needed for all of us, the plants and the earth – this is the essence of life especially to the native American cultures. It was originally carved in stone and he used that to make this bronze casting. It has wonderful texture and dual colors of patina. I love the smoothness and shape of the hair in the back as well.

This Was Our Home by Allan Houser, Fabricated Bronze, 1993

This piece is made out of flat bronze, shaped with darts as you would make a dress. It is so smooth it is impossible to find any “seams”. You can really see his modernism showing, how he has simplified the figures  of a Mother and Child theme. The gardens were really spectacular after all of the May rains especially this day in the Rock Garden.

Mountain Echoes by Allan Houser, Cast Bronze, 1986

This is a small piece with a beautiful reflection in the pond at Sacred Earth Garden. There is much to wonder about what they are calling, singing, shouting that is echoed repeatedly off the canyon walls. A wonderful mixture of nature and culture – the reflection reminding us to reflect on the stories and songs of our history.

Morning Solitude by Allan Houser, Cast Bronze, 1989

This reclining figure has walked away, left her blanket with a void that shows us her form. The exterior is very smooth but the interior is textured like we would see in the biomorphic (bones) examples of the Modernists. In the early morning before the gardens are fully opened, you can very much feel the Solitude and peacefulness in this Romantic Garden.

Raindrops by Allan Houser, Cast Bronze, 1994

The storm clouds were brewing and gave this sculpture some great lighting as well as a formidable back drop. This is a Dineh (Navajo) shepherdess depicting the first drops of light rain on her face. I love the green patina which looks like it was created with natural moisture. The angled lines give a nice definition, to make you pay attention to the art.

Spirit of the Wind-Allan Houser, Fabricated Bronze,1992

I caught this eagle eye looking back at me from the shadows and thought maybe this was a sculpture about the flight of birds? Or is it a couple dancing? Or a dust devil spinning across the plains? Here we feel the force of the wind but this sculpture is constructed of flat pieces of bronze, expertly put together, polished smooth. This sculpture fascinates me and is probably my very favorite. I think I could live with it every day and enjoy all the variations of light, shadow and mood. I really am enjoying all of these sculptures and experiencing them at the Gardens. Hope you get the chance to enjoy them somewhere in your wanderings.

The Getty Center and Gardens in LA

On 20 January we had the pleasure of seeing the public art documentary “Robert Irwin: The Beauty of Questions” at UCR Palm Desert Graduate Center. With more knowledge of the artist and designer of the central gardens, we particularly enjoyed a docent led garden tour on 25 January.

View of Getty from Power Location in Garden

This was our fourth visit to The Getty Center and it is really such a treat to savor: one of our favorite built environments. It is an incredible site and there is so much attention to detail. We marveled at Richard Meier‘s attention to design from the overall to the minute. Robert Irwin‘s art-garden has matured very pleasantly over the years, and it was great fun to see in the winter without the leaves of the sycamores blocking some of the sight lines.

The building connecting to the garden

It was quite amazing how much color was in the Central Garden (The link takes you to the Getty Center Plant list).  Gorgeous succulents and grasses of all shades. There was subtle playing of shades of green, textures, and heights. The docent reminded us that this was planned as a work of art first, not as a garden: rather the plants are the medium to express the art.  I appreciate this approach!

Robert Irwin's iron Bougainvillea trees

The design features a “natural” ravine and tree-lined walkway that led us through an experience of sights, sounds, and scents. Everything in the garden was selected to accentuate the interplay of light, color, and reflection. Irwin’s statement, “Always changing, never twice the same,” is carved into the plaza floor, to remind us of the ever-changing nature of this living work of art.

Water connects all of the Getty gardens
Water terminates in Azalea planted reflecting pond
Balcony at Getty with Breeze Soleil

After lunch in the excellent “cafeteria” and the garden tour, we enjoyed exploring the buildings and the art collections. What a collection! Everything from tiny illuminated manuscripts to large sculptures. After having the Henry Moore sculptures in Denver, this one particularly caught my attention. This relationship between the mother and child represents so much of the essence of this architecture – the undulating form that reflects an exaggerated landscape, a shallow cave carved in the side of a rock to shelter her child, creating a haven and nestling place. So it is with the Getty as it gazes out at LA – an independent physical form but so much a part of the spirit of the city. Thanks J.Paul for sharing with all of us!

Henry Moore's Draped Reclining Mother & Baby - Getty

Having Fun around Palm Desert

Chatting with Sonny Bono in downtown Palm Springs
I've Got You Babe -- Sonny Bono

At the pool lounging, Ruth mentioned she thought she had seen Michael Douglas shopping the El Paseo. He was honored at the film festival so he was in the neighborhood. So hey Mike – congratulations 😉

We know Sonny Bono accomplished much for the valley but was Einstein really here? We found him sitting at The Gardens – isn’t that an awesome name for a shopping mall…although they did have a nice outdoor garden.

contemplating with Einstein
Now about that Theory of Relativity...

Colorful Bighorn at The Gardens

What does it take to make a bighorn pose like this!

Hey Bob, mind if I play through?

After hiking near La Quinta looking for the ancient shore line and fish traps, we stopped to wander through Art Under the Umbrellas in La Quinta. Bob didn’t mind posing as it was the opening weekend for the Bob Hope Classic golf tournament.

Dusk at the Empire Polo Grounds

A gorgeous view after we watched our third Sunday afternoon polo match.

Palm Springs International Film Festival

With 7 PM tickets to see the documentary “How Much Does Your Building Weigh, Mr Foster”, we headed into Palm Springs for lunch at Spencer’s, a sponsor of the the event. We enjoyed the piano music while savoring our meal – Yum! We walked off a few calories to the convention center to cheer on the celebrities as they came to the awards gala.

Waiting by the Red Carpet Jan 8, 2011

The sun was warm as was the crowd of fans – full of excitement and anticipation. We claimed a spot and waited for the limos to arrive.

The red carpet area Jan 8, 2011

The new crews and coordinators getting everything set up. We stuck around and saw Wendie Malick, Mary Hart, and JesseEisenburg. Here is a link from the local Channel 2 with all the coverage and the official Film Fest web site And yes we both enjoyed the documentary about Norman Foster.

Henry Moore sculptures at Denver Botanic Gardens

The Henry Moore sculptures at Denver Botanic Gardens have been a joy. Photographing them with different moods under various lighting, plant colors and weather conditions. So I was armed with the camera to see if we could capture some fall color and look what stole the show: the elusive foxy lady was out for a Sunday stroll.

Large Reclining Figure is a white fiberglass – which is how they were able to locate it on top of this hill in the center of the garden. But look at how the primary colors of yellow and blue pop with their combination makes an awesome hunter green.

One of my favorites in the Goslar Warrior – could it be more perfectly sited to by the fallen soldier reflected in the pond? This is named after a town in Saxony Germany and they named Henry Moore the first recipient of the Kaissering Award in 1974 – a prestigeous modern art award that continues to this day.

The reflections of Hill Arch add to the depth and mystery of this piece. The installation is such that the concrete platform it sits on is just below the water level. this is the only bronze sculpture that is allowed to continue to patina naturally – all the others are fixed with a wax to keep the finish from changing.

This Reclining Figure Angles is perhaps inspired by the Mayan Chacmool – the Rain Spirit at Chichen Itza which was discoverd in 1875. Even though this bronze dates to 1979, the style is similar to ones he was carving in the 1920.

These wonderful sculptures are on display until 31 January 2011 – and then they get trucked across country to be shipped back to England. Hope you get to enjoy them and take some of your own photos.