Chihuly Garden and Glass

Dale Chihuly is a glass artist whose work has redefined art glass for decades. Although his work is exhibited worldwide, he is a Pacific Northwesterner and has exhibits in both Seattle and Tacoma. I was excited to visit his Garden and Glass collection last week at the Seattle Center. Works are exhibited indoors, beautifully lit in low light and open atrium rooms, and outdoors where they sparkle and reflect the natural light around them. The shot above was taken in the outdoor garden. The garden is filled with large, glossy globes, free form leaves and tubular shapes arching in spirals and reaching outward for the sun.

This image is from the Glasshouse, as was one I posted in a collage yesterday that showed the Space Needle. Huge “vines” of glass poppies explode in a sinuous conga dance across the top of the arched glass roof of this building.

In the Macchia Forest room oversized “bowls” filled with color lean inward to surround visitors in a riot spun of glossy colors. Stunning!

Tomorrow I’ll show a few more highlights from my visit to Chihuly.

Playing tourist in Seattle

Last week we turned a trip to the doctor in Seattle into an opportunity to be tourists again after an absence of many years. As we approached the Space Needle at Seattle Center I realized that I didn’t have any shots of this icon. So here’s a collage of several views, including reflections and images taken at Chihuly Garden and Glass, a spot I’ll highlight for you soon. (Yep. That’s a selfie of me on the bottom right.)

Theme Day: People on the Street

This month’s City Daily Photo theme day challenge was taken in a three hour window as I visited Seattle last week. Although people everywhere are interesting I doubt if I’d have found a cross section like this as quickly in Sequim. Click here to see other interpretations of “People on the Street” from around the world.

Taxidermy musing

Animal heads – or skins – or whole animals as décor aren’t my cup of tea. For hunters it’s a trophy, a source of pride. I get that. I eat meat and I understand how food chains work. I certainly can’t be sanctimonious about it. But I do love to see live animals in the wild. And it’s kind of sad to see them coming out of walls.