Thursday, June 7, 2007

Alice in Wonderland: A Study in Translation

I saw a postcard of this Mad Hatter panel a few years ago and always suspected it was part of a larger program of panels. Indeed it is and the full Alice in Wonderland Window can be seen as part of the website for the church where it's located - All Saints Church in Daresbury, England.

  Madhatterplus.jpg
SG photography by John Eastwood


Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Flickring Stained Glass Portraits

I've done my fair share of portraits in stained glass and I wonder sometimes how others treat the same idea in stained glass. So - call in my friend Flickr.

These are all gathered from one search on one evening on Flickr using the words 'stained glass portrait'. I was a little suprised that there were only 238 results but I guess the search was too specific. I presume more results would come from 'stained glass head' or 'stained glass face'. Most of the images were not so much of stained glass, but portraits of real people in proximity to stained glass. Still, the search, as always on Flickr, yielded some interesting and surprising results regarding actual stained glass.

mostly pictures...

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This is a stained glass panel from a cemetery in Montmartre, Paris. I'm not sure if the technique used was an actual photographic positive put into a stained glass window or a process using decals or some such method to make a more permanent adhesion to the glass. Most of the attempts to include actual photographic plates into stained glass failed because the photographic chemicals could not hold up over time in the constant transmitted light.
montmartreportrait300.jpg

Another cemetery picture - also in Paris (city of beautiful cemeteries), at Pere LaChaise. I've been there. It is an amazing place, and not just because of Jim Morrison.
perelachaise360.jpg

These are a few portrait details from Queen's College at Oxford.
Charles 2
charles2-oxford.jpg

Catherine of Braganza
catherineofbraganza-oxford.jpg

Henry the 4th
henry-4-oxford.jpg

Gresham Palace, Budapest, Hungary
and who was Kossuth Lajos?
greshamplace-victorian.jpg

All Saints, Upper Sheringham, Norfolk
Unusually for Flickr, this page has a great deal of information about the church, location and window. The portrait is of "the daughter of Henry and Caroline Upcher and the grand-daughter of Abbot Upcher. The family were great benefactors to the church."
allsaintsnorfolkengland.jpg

The Flickr page showing these unusual windows, depicting 23 Victorian gentlemen displaying a dazzling diversity of facial hair styles, suggests that it's located in the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh, Scotland; but there is no sign of it on the Portrait Gallery website.
edinburghmultiportrait.jpg

This is at the Ishiya Chocolate Factory in Sapporo, Japan.
The panel "depicts some of the famous people connected with chocolate, such as Napoleon, Columbus and Goethe." Who knew?
chocolatelovers-sapporo.jpg

Not something I ever expected to see in stained glass portraiture -
Fidel Castro - located at the John Hardman Studio, but could find no info...
castroportraitweird.jpg

This also was unexpected -
Portrait Bra by Mimi Lipson
mimiportratibra.jpg

Stained-glass portrait of Martin Luther - Hauptkirche St. Michaelis†
This one was also tagged 'creepy'.
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Samuel Johnson - the caption being "In a piece of stained glass at the good doctor's house in Gough Square, just off Fleet Street, London"
samueljohnson.jpg

A rather mystical portrait of Aaron, the brother of Moses. Not strictly a 'portrait', of course, but a striking image nonetheless -
aaronwithhebrew.jpg

The Moor's Head Inn, or something like that... from a pub, anyway.
I like the simplicity of this one. I do wonder if it's based on a real person.
moorshead.jpg

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The Bottle Wall, revisited

I received so many positive responses to the Bottle Wall piece that I thought I would do a brief follow up. Starting with this amazing photo of the artist Charles Stagg in his home in Vidor, Texas.
charlesstaggingrrenbottle570.jpg
Photo credit to 'Scott Eslinger/The Enterprise July 31, 2005'

more below the fold:

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

The Viking Ship at the SLAM

I went this weekend to see the new exhibit called Waking Dreams: The Art of the Pre-Raphaelites from the Delaware Art Museum at the St. Louis Art Museum. I had been anticipating this exhibit mainly because I was curious to see if there was going to be any stained glass incorporated into the exhibit. There is one stained glass panel, designed by Edward Burne-Jones and fabricated by Morris & Co., and it's a good one.

The Viking Ship, 32" x 31.5", 1883-84
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Saturday, March 3, 2007

The Bottle Wall

Introducing the Bottle Wall, a peculiar form of stained glass. You won't see any mention of bottle walls or bottle houses in the stately and academic tomes of stained glass history. But stained glass it is, and it deserves recognition.

anonymous bottle wall - posted on Flickr

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be prepared for lots of pictures...