Archive for the 'Art and nature' Category

Lavacourt - first impressions

It is unfrequent to be so pleasantly surprised. On a weekend drive out of Paris I stumbled almost by accident on the hamlet of Lavacourt on the River Seine and its small Restaurant-Bar-Tabac “Chez Charlot”. Immediately opposite lay the village of Vetheuil - a village made timeless by Monet who lived there in the 1880s.

No better invitation could there have been to settle down to a simple lunch of “poulet frites” and a “pichet” of red wine. What else could one ask for?

The village of Vetheuil as seen from the hamlet of Lavacourt (captured by mobile phone).

Vertheuil seen from Lavacourt - taken using a mobile phone

And the same scene rendered timeless by Claude Monet some 120 years earlier (painted in oils!).

Vetheuil in Summer

Here is another of Vetheuil in the Winter. Je pense q’une autre visite s’impose!

Vetheuil in Winter

Find out more about Claude Monet.

Ernst Haeckel’s Chameleon

Chameleon

Ernst Haeckel was a reknown 19th century biologist, naturalist, philosopher, and last but not least, artist. His extraordinary work “Kunstformen der Natur” (Art Forms in Nature) includes a hundred beautiful illustrations of animals and plants. This exceptional work had a important influence on the Art Nouveau movement of his time.

Ernst Haeckel print from 1900 - the chameleon is top left

Chameleon

Aleppo Pines (Pinus halepensis) at Les Figuières

Les Figuières

Enikoe’s impression of house at Les Figuières

Les Figuières by Enikoe

Gosse’s prawn

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Philip Henry Gosse was a talented 19th century English naturalist who carried-out detailed marine biology studies and wonderfully described his observations of the natural world. He was also a talented artist and many of his books contain his own drawings. The photograph above was taken in a rock pool in Cornwall 120 years after Philip Gosse had painted from life the very same subject!

The prawns are almost transparent and dart in and out of the recesses of the rock pools and are almost impossible to photograph. I plunged my hand into a rock pool and as by magic not one prawn, but many prawns, swam towards my hand. Were they attracted by the paleness of my skin or the warmth on my hand?

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Notice how the limbs of the common prawn (Palaemon serratus) are elegantly ringed in blue and orange! Just below the common prawn in Gosse’s drawing is the sand shrimp (Crangon crangon).

Watch a short film about the common prawn “Histoires de crevettes” by ‘avant-garde’ independent film-maker Jean Painlevé (1963) :