Sunday, February 4, 2018

Beauty in the Oakland Hills & an Active January

We continue to be treated to lovely winter sunsets and sun and moon rises here on the ridge. And we had a decent amount of rain for which we're grateful.

(Most photos taken with my Olympus SH-1, a few with my iPhone 7's camera.  Click on a photo to see a larger version.)

A raining morning, canyon side
Rain on a spider web
Rainbow tinted cloud
Mt Diablo with cloud cap
"City in the Sky" - clouds over the ridge
Full moon January 1
Mist in the canyon
Mt Diablo mid-afternoon (first iPhone 7 photo)
Mt Diablo mist and clouds
Sunset reflected on the bay
Sunset in pinks and blues
Glowing mists at sunset
Sunset with wispy clouds
Sunset with mackerel clouds
Sunset with unusual cloud patterns
Crescent moon at sunset
"Supermoon" rising January 30
Supermoon details, using  full zoom

There's always something in bloom here - outdoors and in.

Narcissus and rosemary bush next door 
Paperwhites in our front yard
Jade tree in bloom on the living room balcony
Dark red orchid beginning to bloom
Dark red orchid flower spike
Close up of dark red orchid flowers
Blooms are ~ 2 inches
Dark red orchid near full bloom
Light purple, fragrant orchid
Light purple orchid close up
Blooms are ~ 3/4 inch



A lot of activity around our house is generated by our soon to be 14 month old grandson.

Riding on Gramps
Getting taller by the minute
More interested in the fork than the lasagna
Experimenting with using a spoon
Stepping out in his "Chaos Monkey - nothing is safe" T-shirt

Erick and I continued our volunteer work - outdoors on the Montclair RR Trail and indoors at the Montclair branch of the Oakland public library.


January's Friends of the Montclair RR Trail
work day featured post-rain planing 
Yes, that's deer fencing in the foreground

Photos of the finished lighting project  at the library -
replacement of florescent fixtures with new lighting in
the historic style of the 1930's when the library was built.
Erick provided labor during the installation. 

We recently finished three jigsaw puzzles, numbers 25, 26 & 27.

This was our first "What If" puzzle. 
The box has a clue to the finished puzzle. 
But there's no picture to work from.
A very special puzzle - a custom-made Ravensburger
from a photo of our Thanksgiving dinner table.
A gift from Carol & John.
This charming puzzle was passed along to us
 by our friends Kathy and Bob.

We hope that, wherever you are, you're enjoying the local beauty and your daily activities.


Saturday, December 30, 2017

A Visit to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Visiting SFMOMA during the Christmas holidays was suggested by a friend who also provided us tickets through their membership.  The day after Christmas, the weather was perfect - mild and sunny - which is not always the case in San Francisco in December.

(All photos taken with my iPhone 5c. Click on a photo to see a larger version.)

That's SFMOMA in the center.
Photo taken from the Yerba Buena Gardens.
We focused on exhibits that were time sensitive, not part of the permanent collection.  Soundtracks on the 7th floor was one of these.

Cloud was one of my favorites. 
I put on headphones and walked around the sculpture
feeling I could dance to the changes in sound.

Here's an explanation of the piece and information about the artist,
followed by a sketch showing the wiring.

Both Erick and I agreed that this one was our very favorite from the Soundtracks exhibit:


The porcelain bowls float and chime when they bump into each other.
It's a restful place amid the bustle of the other installations.
Information about the artist and the work is below. 

Here are some of the mechanical "orchestras" and "instruments" that we saw and heard in another section of the exhibit:


They were on timers and played periodically
as people walked through.

On the 5th floor, we encountered:



As you can tell, neither Erick nor I are arachnophobes. 

The smallest one

The Robert Rauschenberg exhibit, Erasing the Rules, was on the 4rd floor. The amount and variety of media he worked in is amazing.  This one, Monogram, is among his most famous pieces. Created in the late 1950's, Monogram belongs to the series of Combines that Rauschenberg made between 1954 and 1964. A term coined by Rauschenberg, Combines merged aspects of painting and sculpture to become an entirely new artistic category. (Source: www.rauschenbergfoundation.org)

Called Monogram because it reminded the artist of
the interweaving letters of a monogram.

My interest in photography and in Alexander Calder's sculpture drew me to the 3rd floor. 

A Walker Evans retrospective included portraits of everyday people, roadside attractions, postcards and tool catalog items.  Evans was born in 1903 and died in 1975.  He photographed in black & white, and later in color.

Photo portraits at the entrance to Part 2 of the exhibit

Evans photo of a circus wagon 
Alexander Calder (1898 - 1976) was an American sculptor known as the originator of the mobile, a type of moving sculpture made with delicately balanced or suspended shapes that move in response to touch or air currents. He also created stabiles, non-moving pieces, some of monumental scale.


Small mobiles
Small stabiles
Indoor and outdoor stabiles
and a mobile

Another of the temporary exhibits featured political posters from 1960's to now. If you are of a certain age, you'll likely remember some of the older ones.





As we passed through some of the ongoing exhibits, I took just a few photos.


Furniture as art 

Andy Warhol's Jackie
The museum has a living art installation, the living wall, and areas of outdoor sculpture, as well as terraces that provide some great views of local buildings.

The habitat horticulture artist
Me reflected in the glass taking a photo of the wall
from of one of the upper floor
Erick examining the wall at ground level



The Snowman -
real snow in a freezer
Erick taking in the SF skyline
Center building is the new Salesforce building
One of the older buildings against the day's deep blue sky

We left SFMOMA for a walk through Yerba Buena Gardens and lunch at Buckhorn in the Metreon. 

The crowd entering as we were leaving SFMOMA
Fountains at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
St Patrick's Church in the center
The Marriott on Mission St
Plantings and lighted tree in the Gardens

Our vote for most unusual food service set up in the Metreon, CafeX.  Yes, robotic coffee service.
CafeX
 Photo taken just after the robot waved goodbye to the customer
To wrap up our excursion to the big city, Erick took me to see the new offices of a customer where he occasionally goes for meetings. It has all the essentials.


 


A short walk to the Montgomery St BART stop and we were on our way home.