Charles anderson winter garden biography
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Photography in New Zealand – Interview with Charles Anderson
Charles: I made a point to walk down to the church, walk back around it to the springs and then meet up with some of my travel mates for dinner. So I always kind of had an agenda. If we were at a place more than one night you know, what’s the group doing a lot of time because we went down to dinner together. And trying to work in a couple of places where I could take a couple of photos. I like art. I think you see a lot of pictures of buildings. I find architecture and mosaic fascinating.
Andrew: And so how would you sum up… You know, from the perspective of someone wanting to take lots of photographs, how would you sum up your experience on the tour, on the MoaTrek tour?
Charles: Well, I think if you counted the number of photos I took and posted on my website, those are the ones I liked, was close to 900 photos. Because it’s obvious that I take a lot of photos. And I must have found the time to
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Inspired by de stijl mästare Piet Mondrian’s early drawing Pier and Ocean (1915), the Tables of vatten at the Lake Washington Art House define lugn, geometric planes that stretch beyond themselves to integrate interior, exterior, and natural spaces into a seamless whole. These earth-embedded plinths evocatively capture the classic modernist conceit by breaking down the membrane between indoors and out, yet the Tables of vatten go beyond to medla between the land, lake, and sky to harmonize and funnel each into the home’s interior. As the ultimate experience of the ankomst sequence, the Tables of Water distill the visitor’s experience into one unified gesture of connecting ankomst, entry, and expansive release.
Like the arcs of Mondrian’s internal color field, the rigid rectangularity of the Tables of Water are balanced bygd softer, organic edges, where the designer’s hand in the garden is less modern and more painterly, harkening to the roots of o
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Robert Charles Anderson's Tour Talks
The Winthrop Fleet Great Migration Tour took place August 15-25, 2012 with leaders Robert Charles Anderson and Sandi Hewlett. Tour Talk was a series of newsletters sent to tour participants during the year preceeding the tour, detailing the history of the Winthrop Fleet and the historic sites in England connected to their eventual migration to New England.
Issue #1, September 2011
Greetings!
Our Great Migration tour to Suffolk and environs is now less than a year away. As we approach the date of the tour, we propose to issue this monthly bulletin to keep you informed about the details of the tour and also to provide background information on the sites we will be visiting, the New England immigrants who lived there, and a variety of related historical topics. We hope you find these messages helpful and that they will whet your appetite for this second Great Migration tour. If there are topics you would like to have