Some people are having problems with this site, so I have decided to continue my travel blog on Tumblr.
The URL is walkaboutstuff.tumblr.com
See you there.
Thanks for reading.
Tour of Bob
I have booked passage on a freighter sailing from Seattle and bound for Shanghai. From there I plan to travel to southeast Asia and Australia and possibly beyond. My mission: to boldly go where I have never gone before.
Sunday, October 15, 2017
Saturday, October 14, 2017
Grand Cerf
During the long voyage across the Pacific Ocean I asked the other passenger, Aurelie, to teach me a French song. I have been practicing and I think I have it in a presentable form now. This is a children's song about a deer who saves a rabbit from the hunter. There is an American version of this except with an old lady instead of a deer.
I enjoyed this so much that I asked my hosts in Shanghai to teach me a Chinese children's song. They did but I'm not ready to perform it yet. When I get to Hanoi I will try to learn a Vietnamese children's song.
So. Here is my rendition of Grand Cerf:
I enjoyed this so much that I asked my hosts in Shanghai to teach me a Chinese children's song. They did but I'm not ready to perform it yet. When I get to Hanoi I will try to learn a Vietnamese children's song.
So. Here is my rendition of Grand Cerf:
Inkstones
At the Guangzhou Museum I learned about inkstones. These are used to grind ink (which is solidified into a stick) and mix it with water. There are four main types of inkstone, one of which is duan which is mined in this part of China. A scholar's desk included the "four treasures," brushes, ink, inkstone, and paper.
Friday, October 13, 2017
Guangzhou, Yuexiu Park
Several people have told me they have trouble viewing this site, and it seems no one can leave comments. Sigh. Sorry about that. I should habe explored other blog possibilities before I left Tacoma. I don't think I can do anything else with just my phone. If anyone has any suggestions please let me know.
Yuexiu Park is a large beautiful place with lakes, gardens, sculpture, a bowling green, an amusement park, and lots and lots of noisy birds and insects.
One trail was called The World of Idioms and Fables. It was lined with sculptures illustrating these. As I am not familiar with Chinese culture I did not understand most of them but it was fun anyway.
I called this guy the hitchhiking mage.
Ooh. I know this one. The blind men and the elephant.
Nothing to see but jungle but I recorded a short video to capture the bird and insect noise.
Yuexiu Park is a large beautiful place with lakes, gardens, sculpture, a bowling green, an amusement park, and lots and lots of noisy birds and insects.
One trail was called The World of Idioms and Fables. It was lined with sculptures illustrating these. As I am not familiar with Chinese culture I did not understand most of them but it was fun anyway.
I called this guy the hitchhiking mage.
Ooh. I know this one. The blind men and the elephant.
Nothing to see but jungle but I recorded a short video to capture the bird and insect noise.
Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Guangzhou
I've been in Guangzhou for about 24 hours and 12 of those were sleeping. But now I have been to two museums, the Guandong Museum of Art and the Guangzhou Museum. The first had some really amazing modern carved jade by a great artist but I guess it was just over my head. I can't think of anything to say about it. I've never seen anything like it before. What I can talk about is the sculpture garden outside. It included some heroic worker stuff but also some very thought-provoking pieces.
At the Guangzhou Museum I saw some beautiful carved jade, porcelain and bronze pieces. There was a whole room devoted to ink stone which I had never heard of before.
Fun but exhausting. Time to get some more sleep.
At the Guangzhou Museum I saw some beautiful carved jade, porcelain and bronze pieces. There was a whole room devoted to ink stone which I had never heard of before.
Fun but exhausting. Time to get some more sleep.
Monday, October 9, 2017
Shanghai 4
Sunday I visited the Power Station of Art. The building was originally an industrial power station and was made into an art gallery in 2010. My host, Holly, said it is called the Shanghai MOCA, but the building clearly says Power Station of Art.
This leads me to a point that has been building in my brain all week. It is impossible to fully experience a place if you don't speak the language. For example, I'm sure I would have learned a great deal about Chinese music and culture in general if I could have understood the speaker at Saturday's concert.
So even though I'm here in this beautiful city and seeing the sights and hearing the sounds I'm like an animal or a blind and deaf man who only experiences a tiny part of the whole. I felt the same way at this art exhibit.
The artist is Li Shan, of whom i have never heard, but who is very famous. In 1993 he gave up traditional art and started working with DNA and how it can be manipulated. His work includes images of combined life forms, and also actual manipulation. One of the exhibits was a field of corn growing in a vast array of milk crates. Another was the same with rice. The explanations were only in Chinese so I have no clue what the manipulation was.
The work was beautiful and moving. Sometimes repulsive. Part of the exhibit was pages from Li Shan's notebooks. I really wanted to know what he was saying but I'm illiterate.
So much beauty.
This leads me to a point that has been building in my brain all week. It is impossible to fully experience a place if you don't speak the language. For example, I'm sure I would have learned a great deal about Chinese music and culture in general if I could have understood the speaker at Saturday's concert.
So even though I'm here in this beautiful city and seeing the sights and hearing the sounds I'm like an animal or a blind and deaf man who only experiences a tiny part of the whole. I felt the same way at this art exhibit.
The work was beautiful and moving. Sometimes repulsive. Part of the exhibit was pages from Li Shan's notebooks. I really wanted to know what he was saying but I'm illiterate.
So much beauty.
Saturday, October 7, 2017
Shanghai 3
Today I went to a concert at the Shanghai Concert Hall. It was an ensemble of traditional Chinese instruments. The music they played varied tremendously. The young players performed masterfully. There was some sort of hammered zither, a flute, a drum, a variety of lutes, and an erhu. I couldn't read the program or understand the speaker but I appreciated the expert and emotional playing in a variety of styles. The first and last pieces sounded traditional to me, like what I was expecting to hear. In between were all kinds of other things. Some sounded like pop tunes but they were unfamiliar to me. I did recognize the Clarinet Polka, and Scott Joplin's The Entertainer, both performed by flute and zither.
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