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~ Reflections on Beauty

Satin & Sand

Category Archives: Travel

Niterói…

11 Saturday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections, Travel

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Architecture, beautiful, Beauty, Brazil, Guanabara Bay, MAC, Musea da Arte Comtemporânea, Niteroi, Oscar Niemeyer, Photography, Rio, Travel

© Joan Currie - MAC

Reason is the enemy of imagination.
A razão é inimiga da imaginação.
Oscar Niemeyer

When I visited my daughter in Brazil, she promised to show me the wonders of Rio de Janeiro. Although I adored that city, another city across Guanabara Bay, called Niterói, was even more enchanting. Oscar Niemeyer’s flying saucer-like Museu da Arte Comtemporânea (MAC) dominated the skyline. Its location overlooking the Bay toward Rio reminded me of the view of San Francisco from Sausalito. After examining several art exhibits, we strolled along the shore from the MAC to the bustling ferry building.

On the second floor balcony we feasted on Bob’s hamburgers and Guaraná sodas and watched the sunset. As darkness fell, the riot of Rio’s neon lights began to obliterate Sugarloaf and the other volcanic mountains, save for a patch of white light atop Corcovado mountain that illuminated the statue of Christ the Redeemer. The ferry ride back to Rio was magical, even for the locals. We crossed the Bay in silence enchanted by the beauty all around us.

© Joan Currie - Guanabara Bay

Half Moon Bay…

04 Saturday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Travel

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Anna Landa, Beach, beautiful, Beauty, Fashion Photography, Half Moon Bay, Heart, Isak Dinesen, Kelp, Lauren DiMarco, Photography

© Anna Landa

The cure for anything is salt – water, tears, or the sea.
Isak Dinesen

When I arrived in Half Moon Bay this morning it was shrouded in fog.

© Joan Currie

Model – Lauren DiMarco

Lower Photos – Joan Currie

Sea and Sky…

29 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Travel

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Beach, beautiful, Big Basin State Park, Kiteboarders, Photography

© Joan Currie

Don’t grow up too quickly, lest you forget how much you love the beach. – Michelle Held

I was captivated by the kiteboarders at Big Basin State Park – the speed, the colors, the raw energy! The closest I have come to this excitement is using a trapeze and spinnaker on an International 14 sailboat and waterskiing with a Delta Wing kite.

© Joan Currie

Road Trip…

22 Sunday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections, Travel

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beautiful, Photography, Road Trip, Truck, Willie Nelson

© Joan Currie

On the road again,
Just can’t wait to get on the road again…
Willie Nelson (song)

Today I set out for Southern California from San Francisco armed with maps, compilation CDs (Howlin’ Wolf  – Built for Comfort, Stevie Ray Vaughan – The Sky is Crying, and Johnny Cash – Walk the Line), and a cooler packed with fried chicken, buttermilk biscuits, and lemonade.

The photograph of the biomorphic undulations near Bakersfield is reminiscent of Gottardo Piazzoni and Arthur Mathews’ landscape paintings. The other images were shot at Pyramid Lake where I would have liked to water-ski!

Torschlusspanik…

14 Saturday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Design, Garden, Photography, Reflections, Travel

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beautiful, Beauty, Bucket List, Courtyard, Fountain, Middle Age, Morocco, Photography, Torschlusspanik

© Joan Currie

The hourglass is almost empty.
L. Frank Baum – The Wizard of Oz

The literal translation of the German word torschlusspanik is door-shut panic. It is an anxiety that time will run out before we can achieve our life goals. The word was first used in reference to young women who were nearing an age where they were no longer considered marriageable and then, more recently, to women whose biological clocks were winding down.

I associate torschlusspanik with a middle aged angst and aging in general. In my view, time is not the Wicked Witch of the West with hourglass in hand and we are not the terrified Dorothy Gale, rather I envision the word written on a neon Post-it note from the universe reminding us that there is still time to realize our dreams.

It is true that what was once a life of limitless opportunities and horizons has become, for many, a life in which many doors have been tightly shut. Bucket list items such as trekking deep into darkest Africa, skydiving,  and earning a Ph.D. in the Icelandic language may no longer be realistic for many reasons. However, there is no need to panic as the door is still wide, wide open to many possibilities.

There are countless other wonderful activities that we might chose to make the most of our remaining years that do not require us to be alone, spend inordinate amounts of time and money, travel or even to be in perfect health. The point is, torschlusspanik can keep us fully engaged in our lives – lives filled with beauty, passion, pleasure, curiosity, and gratitude for all that is still available to us.

I remember what my father said when he was about my age now, “I’ve had a great life. If I were to die tomorrow, I would have no regrets. It’s just icing on the cake from here on out.”

Unexpected Sightings: Seawall

07 Saturday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Photography, Reflections, Travel

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beautiful, British Columbia, Burrard Inlet, coiled rope, Photography, Seawall, Vancouver, Vancouver North Shore, West Vancouver

© Joan Currie

If you truly love Nature, you will find beauty everywhere. – Vincent van Gogh

Vancouver’s North Shore Seawall is one of my favorite (“favourite” if you are a Canuck) places to walk. The amazing views of the city of Vancouver, Vancouver Island, and the Burrard Inlet are always a little different depending on the weather, tide, and time of day. I try to remember to take in the beauty at my feet along the shoreline. The sea offers up ropes, driftwood, and sea glass to those who take the time to notice.

Gaze Upwards…

03 Tuesday Aug 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Design, Photography, Travel

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Architecture, Beauty, Pena Palace, Photography, Portugal, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Sintra

© Joan Currie – Pena Palace in Sintra, Portugal

Beauty without grace is the hook without the bait. – Ralph Waldo Emerson

Look for beauty in unexpected places.

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