Thursday, 30 December 2010

For the first time the Morse Museum’s new 12,000-square-foot wing will provide long-term public access to its collection of art and architectural objects from Louis Comfort Tiffany’s celebrated Long Island home, Laurelton Hall.

The exhibition features the recently restored Daffodil Terrace and approximately 250 objects from or related to the estate. These include prize-winning leaded-glass windows, iconic Tiffany lamps, custom furnishings, as well as art glass and pottery in Tiffany’s personal collection.

The new Laurelton Hall galleries provide 6,000 square feet of additional public exhibition space and deepen the Morse’s interpretations of Tiffany’s life and legacy. Laurelton Hall, built between 1902 and 1905 and destroyed by fire in 1957, is arguably Tiffany’s greatest work of art. The artist directed every facet of the estate’s construction, from the room interiors and architectural details to an extensive scheme of gardens and fountains. In addition to the terrace, the 11 new galleries at the Morse showcase surviving components of Laurelton Hall’s dining room, living room, and reception hall—also known as the Fountain Court—as well as other rooms, creating a unique experience.

The Daffodil Terrace

The Daffodil Terrace, installed in a new glass-enclosed gallery, is situated with a view of an expanded garden courtyard at the Museum and presented in a manner related to its original location at Laurelton Hall. The 18-by-32-foot outdoor terrace exemplifies Tiffany’s unique and dramatic style. Supported by eight 11-foot marble columns that are topped with bouquets of glass daffodils, the terrace’s coffered ceiling is composed of hundreds of stenciled wood elements and molded tiles in three bays. The central bay features a skylight covered by six large panels of iridescent-glass tiles in a pear-tree motif. The terrace, pieced together from more than 600 distinct parts and fragments, is the Museum’s most significant conservation project since reassembling Tiffany’s chapel interior from the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago.

Gallery Highlights

Highlights from the dining-room installation include: a 13.5-foot-high, mosaic-decorated marble mantelpiece that is one of Tiffany’s most forward-looking designs; a 25-foot-long Oriental rug; a domed leaded-glass chandelier 6.5 feet in diameter; and a suite of six leaded-glass Wisteria transoms. The living room installation showcases four leaded-glass panels depicting the four seasons—each from a single window displayed in the Tiffany exhibit at the Exposition Universelle in Paris in 1900, for which the artist won a gold medal. Five turtleback-glass hanging lamps suspended from an iron oxbow fixture made to the specifications of Tiffany’s original serve as the focal point for the gallery. The exhibit of objects from the Fountain Court includes the four-foot-high fountain vase that was its centerpiece as well as a millefiori blown-glass hanging shade. From the art gallery Tiffany built on the estate, the Morse is showing the pair of intricately carved Indian doors and half-moon-shaped peacock-feather window and glass mosaic that graced the entryway.
Hugh F. and Jeannette G. McKean rescued works from Laurelton Hall after the mansion was destroyed by fire in 1957. Over the next three decades the couple went on to assemble extensive holdings of Tiffany objects for the Morse—what is today the world’s most comprehensive collection of the artist/designer’s work.

Opening Events

Members Preview

Monday, February 14

5:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m.

Special members-only preview of the new galleries.

Public Open House

Saturday, February 19 through Sunday, March 20

Free admission for Museum visitors during public hours.

Family Night

Friday, February 25

5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.

Free family tours and craft project for elementary-school-age children.

Curator Tours

Tuesdays and Thursdays, beginning April 5

10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m.

Available on a first-come, first-served basis to visitors in the Museum. No advance reservations.

Tuesday, 28 December 2010

New Dalí Museum Opens - Jan 12 2011

The New Dalí Museum Open to the Public
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
The Dalí Museum is open to the public 10:00 a.m-5:30 p.m. 
Mon, Tues, Wed, Fri, Sat,
10:00 am.-8:00 p.m. Thursday, and 12:00-5:30 Sunday. 
Tickets available for purchase at the door starting January 12, 2011. 
Or purchase them online today by clicking here
https://thedali.obsres.com/Login.aspx

Dalí Museum Grand Opening Procession

1.11.11 Grand Opening Procession, Ribbon Cutting & Festival
Tuesday, January 11, 9:30 a.m. -3:00 p.m. 

The public is invited to view a surreal procession departing from the current museum (located at 1000 Third Street South in St. Petersburg) at 9:30am and concluding at the new museum (located eight blocks north at One Dali Blvd.).  

Entertainment, a dedication program with S.A.R. la Infanta Cristina of Spain, Duchess of Palma de Mallorca, and a ribbon cutting ceremony with Spanish Royalty presiding — starting at 11:00 a.m. — will mark the beginning of a new era for the Dalí at its new location. The festivities will continue until 3 p.m. 

The procession, ribbon cutting and outdoor festivities are free and open to the public. Timed tickets to visit the museum after the opening ceremony will be available for sale online on a limited basis. Click here to purchase tickets.

Dalí Museum, St Petersburg - January 5 2011

The Florida Orchestra and The Studio@620: A Night of Dalí & Music  
Wednesday, January 5, 7:00 p.m. at The Studio@620, 620 First Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701 

Explore the link between art and music of the 20th century in saluting Salvador Dalí. The program will include several surreal surprises including special performances of "Party Pieces: Sonorous and Exquisite Corpses" by composers John Cage, Henry Cowell, Lou Harrison, and Virgil Thompson; readings from "Little mi-ma Monsterlet" and "Frankenstein", plus a performance from "Nine Surrealist Studies (After Salvador Dali)" #3 Persistence of Memory. The program is a prelude discussion to “Hello Dalí”, the Florida Orchestra – Dalí Museum Grand Opening Celebration as well as part of the second season of "An Intimate Collaboration II: The World We Live In", at The Studio@620.

Suggested donation of $10 payable at the door. 
Reservations recommended by calling 727-895-6620 as seating is limited.

Pooh's Playhouse is located at Rolling Hills which is part of the prestigious Formosa Gardens Estates.  Rolling Hills is in an ideal location just 1 mile from Highway 192 and a genuine 2½ mile to Walt Disney World Orlando. 

The Formosa Gardens Shopping Plaza is nearby with a range of restaurants including Outback, Carrabas, Red Lobster, Buffalo Wild Wings and Giordanos.  There is also a Winn-Dixie supermarket, UPS store, liquor store and walk-in medical center.  http://www.formosagardensvillage.com/index.html

Sunday, 26 December 2010

Passe-A-Grille Beach, FL - December 2010

One of our favourite places to visit in Florida, we take a drive over and spend the day there where they have being laid back down to an art.  Be sure to wait for the spectacular sunset, so make sure you have your camera with you.

We always stop for an ice-cream at Paradise Sweets where they serve Working Cow ice cream in enormous waffle cones.  The ice cream is delicious and their portions are generous, so make sure you haven't eaten much!  We went in September and enjoyed the sunset eating our ice creams sitting on their floridian beach chairs and enjoying a cup of tea.  As you would surmise from the name, they also sell sweets with a huge selection to choose from - a child's paradise!  We took our daughter back at Christmas and again we sat and enjoyed the start of the sun going down ... and just forced ourselves to have one of those scrumptious ice creams!  As well as making a great cup of coffee they also serve tea, but not just tea, but also Earl Grey tea for those with discerning taste (like me - aka dead picky!).  They also have free wi-fi for those of us on the move or you can't bear to be away from the net for too long.  So if you find yourself this way do check out Paradise Sweets http://www.paradisesweets.biz/


Sitting in the fabulous floridian chairs

Paradise Sweets, Passe-a-Grille, FL

We also had lunch at the restaurant above, Brass Monkey.  Their catchphrase is 'We overlook nothing but the beach'.  We had a great snack lunch, grouper and fries and crabcake and fries, all with a caesar salad.  Warm and friendly service and great food with a view to die for.  Could you ask for more?  http://www.thebrassmonkey.net/

As the sun started to go down further we headed for the rooftop bar at The Hurricane and enjoyed the views where you really feel you are looking out to the end of the world as the view just goes on and on.





And then there are the sunsets.  Stunning .. spectacular .. stupendous .. what more can I say.  The pictures say far more than I can.
Passe-a-Grille Beach sunset starting

Sunset at Passe-a-Grille Beach, FL

sunset starting with the sea oats and palm trees outlined

glorious sunset

going ...

almost gone


If you are looking for a slower pace of life then it's a great place to visit  http://www.pass-a-grillebeach.com/

Rock'n'Roller Coaster Ride Hollywood Studios

Entrance to Rock'n'Roller Coaster Ride

The ride looks like music scales

A large guitar moves seamlessly into the music clefs that make up this ride

Entrance to the Aerosmith Rock'nRoller Coaster

The guitar, Florida sunshine and fabulous music ..

Just off Sunset Boulevard there is this wonderful ride where you see Aerosmith just as they are finishing a recording and they realise they are due in concert shortly.  You get into a pseudo-cadillac coaster which whisks you away flipping and rolling with stunning music by Aerosmith.  This is an amazing ride that weaves you through Southern Califnornia landmarks with a soundtrack that blasts you away, one you never get tired of.