Berlin’s Museum Island
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in Berlin, Germany, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel, urban
09 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in Berlin, Germany, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel, urban
08 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in art, Calgary, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, urban
From time to time, interactive message boards like this one appear on one of the posting walls in Calgary’s Kensington neighbourhood. Two thumbs up to whoever conceived of this engaging piece of interactive art — and the same to all who left a part of themselves behind in the form of a sticky note. These messages were posted back in the spring.
07 Monday Nov 2016
Posted in art, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel, urban
06 Sunday Nov 2016
Posted in London, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel, urban
Tags
England, HDR, iPhoneography, London, night, photography, photowalk, random, Travel, urban
05 Saturday Nov 2016
Posted in London, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel
The previous time I visited London’s Tate Modern museum of international modern and contemporary art, the view you see pictured above wasn’t possible. That’s because the museum only recently opened a building to provide more room for exhibitions, more spaces for other uses, a restaurant and an observation deck allowing for sweeping, 360-degree views of London. (If you plan to go, bring a sweater, as it can get gusty up there.)
Back inside, warm and cosy, I wandered into an exhibition called Living Cities, which explores how urban dwellers live. It uses photographs, paintings, interactive art and such displays as the construction you see above — a scale model city made of couscous. (I wondered what it was made of when I smelled it. I was surprised to learn my guess was correct.)
02 Wednesday Nov 2016
Posted in art, history, London, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, Travel, urban
This is art outside the British Library in London memorializing Sir Isaac Newton.
The British Library isn’t the most obvious tourist attraction but there are a few noteworthy things to see in the parts of its permanent collection that don’t require a membership.
On the ground floor is a huge room containing dozens of historical documents, including a copy of the Magna Carta, ancient bibles and Qur’ans, books containing the first-known copies of beloved works of fiction, and manuscripts from celebrated classical music composers.
For the philately-minded among you, there is a collection of century-old stamps built into the walls of the ground floor, toward the back of the building.
And of course, there’s a revolving roster of temporary exhibitions. I visited too early to catch this forthcoming exhibition on cartography, which runs from Friday, Nov. 2, 2016 until Monday, March 1, 2017.
There is a lot of seating for reading and studying, as you would imagine.
And if none of those things interest you, you might consider popping in anyway: the facility has a cafeteria/café and there is public wifi (naturally).
01 Tuesday Nov 2016
Posted in London, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, urban
01 Wednesday Jun 2016
Posted in architecture, Calgary, design, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, transit, urban
Tags
alberta, architecture, bridge, calgary, canada, design, photography, photowalk, random, transit, transportation, urban
30 Monday May 2016
Posted in Alberta, Calgary, Canada, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, urban
29 Sunday May 2016
Posted in architecture, Calgary, design, photography, photowalk, photowalking, random, urban
Tags
alberta, architecture, art, bridge, Calatrava, calgary, canada, design, photography, photowalk, random, Santiago Calatrava, urban