Showing posts with label St. Patrick's Cathedral New York City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Patrick's Cathedral New York City. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2014

5th Avenue Fabulous ~ Saint Patrick's Cathedral and Rockefeller Center




One belongs to New York instantly,
one belongs to it as much in five minutes as in five years.
~Tom Wolfe

please press "play"


Heading to 5th Avenue!



Sign for the Toulouse-Lautrec show at MoMA! (So good!)




Rockefeller Center




This giant flowered sculpture, below, is actually a Jeff Koons art piece, to coincide with his retrospective at the Whitney museum. Some Tourists asked me to take their photo and offered to take one of me ...




Saint Patrick's Cathedral


St. Patrick's is still under major renovation/reconstruction, or whatever you want to call it. You can get photos here and there where you can't tell that there are workers in hardhats around, and that there are areas you can't really see or get to ...

Our Lady of Czestochowa 
One of the oldest Icons of Mary in the world.
It was said to have been painted by St. Luke the Evangelist 


This photo, below, was taken from under scaffold, and between two large wooden posts. You normally can't photograph The Lady Chapel (which is my favorite) but the manager said since it's closed off for prayer now, I could go ahead take pictures. (Woohoo!) 

It is in the way back behind the main altar. So beautiful. Once when I was praying there, I asked for a sign and just then the lights came on. The actual lights. ;)


You can still light candles in front of the chapel ...


This gives you an idea of how much work is being done. It's very extensive.


St. Jude. I lit a candle for a dear friend.


The facade is under scaffold as well as the lower side, but above ... you have a nice little view behind the pretty trees!



Back out on 5th Avenue ...




A little trinket in the window at  BVLGARI ...


The glamour of it all!
New York! America!
~Charlie Chaplin


Window at Bergdorf's. Very hard to photograph with all the glare!


Love the groovy mod-looking coat below. Valentino.


5th Avenue at Central Park 









Not sure what the rose petals were for but I took the opportunity to show off my fading henna, as well as the 4 lovely band aids on my toes. I can never seem to avoid travel blisters!  (It was taken the last day.)



And across from the fountain, on the park, The Plaza Hotel.



As you can see, above, it had cooled off to 79 degrees but it was very VERY humid. I had spent about an hour in the park, when I realized my phone was dying and that it was starting to drizzle. I need battery power for my, mostly for my Google Maps app, so I asked a street vendor where I could charge my phone. He pointed at The Plaza Hotel.

Apparently, I was slightly misdirected. There is some kind of food court attached, or underneath the hotel? But, I buttoned myself up, slicked my hair back, threw on my lipstick and strolled into the lobby. 

There was a sign basically saying if you aren't a guest, don't hang out in our lobby. I walked up to the front desk and asked if there was anywhere they knew of where I could charge my iPhone, because I needed my Google Maps to get me to my niece, in Brooklyn.



Of course, the two gentlemen behind the desk asked if I was staying in the hotel. I answered no and they looked at each other. Then one of the guys asked me what kind of phone I had. "4S" I said.
"Well, we don't usually do this but I will plug it in behind the desk and you can come back when you think it's ready." 
Yay!!!

I walked out of the hotel and into a huge crowd under the awning, out in front of The Plaza. Apparently, I missed the text alert for flash flood warnings. The rain was starting to really  come down and somehow I ended up trying to protect myself, up against the hotel, out under a big brass lamp that was hung on the side of the hotel. 

I saw people running into the huge Apple flagship store, across 5th Avenue, so when the light changed, I bolted, stopping under a huge tree for protection, until the next light changed. Then bolted again, stepping in huge puddles soaking my Mephistos.



Into the glass column and down the stairs I went, into a sea of hundreds of people, holed up in there, trying to get out of the rain. It started coming down in sheets, and there were people that were coming in sopping wet, like they'd been in the shower fully clothed. Everyone stared up at the glass ... waiting. In the shot above, it had died down quite a bit.

What you can't see in the shot was the area below. It was mayhem. I did find out I am due for a new phone upgrade next month though. (Had to do something with the time.) 

Eventually, after about a half hour/45 minutes playing with iPads, I got impatient and went back up. A got a security guard to flag down an umbrella vendor, and I made my way back over to the Plaza (in my soaked leather sandals) to pick up my phone, charging at the front desk. The thunder was so loud! All that echoing on concrete. It was crazy, but I had places to be!

OH! And the guy at the plaza was so nice. He pulled out a map, which he gave me, and wrote directions for the subway, as well. Nice, right? Swanky.


Here is some footage from 1919 of the 27 Division Parade on 5th Avenue.


This next one is new inductees marching in front of Teddy Roosevelt, during WWI. The video makes strange noises so you might want to press mute.


Both videos are from Critcalpast.com 

Oh, and I made it to Brooklyn! 

More to come! Great art installations and NYC adventures, as well as what I have been doing in Southern California during September! I'm so behind on posting! 

When I'm in New York, 
I just want to walk down the street 
and feel this thing, 
like i'm in a movie.
~Ryan Adams

Blessings and light!!!

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Columbus Day! St. Patrick's, The Cloisters and a Big Ol' Parade


Manhattan 
2013


My second full day in New York, my niece Elizabeth and I headed over to 5th Avenue. It was a gorgeous day in the city!  Unfortunately, Rachel (her younger sister) had a pile of homework and a paper to write, so she wasn't able to join us.

Not sure what church this is, below, but I end up photographing it, every time!


It's a tradition that the one thing I always do, in New York, is visit Saint Patrick's Cathedral. It threads all the visits together, and I remember it from my first visit to New York, in 6th grade! At 12, I'd never seen anything like it.

When we got to 5th Avenue, there was quite the controlled chaos! Barriers … police … then we saw a band and some fire engines. I asked the couple next to us, "What's going on?" 

They looked at us, like we must have been dropped from another planet, and said to us in a questioning voice, "The Columbus Day Parade?"

"Oh, yeah!" We'd obviously forgotten it was Columbus Day, and sure enough, we were standing right there at New York's big Columbus Day Parade.


Columbus Day Parade
2013




After watching the parade for awhile, taking pictures, and popping into Uniqlo to get fleese jackets for under twenty bucks, we tried to find our way across 5th Ave. to St. Patricks, which was covered in scaffolding.




It was a strange and different Saint Patrick's inside, as well. Weirdly apocalyptic but fun to photograph!

 



My mission was complete. I'd made it to Saint Patrick's. Back on the street the parade continued. I love the juxtaposition of the Saints and Juicy Couture!










Heading up the street we saw the beautiful windows of Dolce and Gabbana and decided we had to go in to check it out. We'd both seen photographs of the Fall/Winter collection, inspired by Sicily and byzantine icons … we had to see it in person.

The gal who worked in there was so nice, and brought us back to see the one of a kind pieces in the back. Everything was exquisite and the pieces from the collection were really wearable works of art.

This is the video of their runway show, which had music from Fellini's La Stada, one of my favorite films! (And apparently the favorite film of Pope Francis, as it turns out.)



Elizabeth came up with the idea to go up to north Manhattan, to the Cloisters Museum. A branch of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but at a different location. I hadn't been since I was 12, and all I could really remember were the tapestries, so I was excited to go up there. Plus, she told me there were gardens, and it was a beautiful day, so it was a perfect place to go!

The Cloisters Museum
Fort Tryon Park, Washington Heights
NYC





The room of the famous Unicorn Tapestries (or Hunt of the Unicorn,) that I had remembered. They are Flemish, from around 1500. 

The museum was built in the 1930s, with architectural elements from various Medieval abbeys. It's such a beautiful space, perfect for housing centuries of beautiful Medieval art.



This video gives a quick overview of the museum,with a bit of its collection, and gardens.



This, below, is a more in depth video, produced by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.




The Lamentation 
Spanish Altarpiece
1480, carved walnut






The "cloister" garden of The Cloisters, reconstructed from a damaged abbey in, the Piranees in France


Janet Cardiff - 40 Part Motet
In the reconstructed Apse
1200, Spain




One of the reasons Elizabeth wanted to come to the Cloisters, was because of a sound installation, by Janet Cardiff. It was amazing. 

The 500 year old piece of music Spem in Alum was recorded in 40 parts. Each speaker, a different voice. As you walk around … you are standing next to various singers … it was incredible. InCREDible. Like you are part of the choir. At one point I was so moved, I had to old back the tears.

The original piece, is said to have been written for the birthday of Queen Elizabeth I.

Below, is a great little video of when the installation was at the Howard Assembly Room, in 2010. It gives you a much better idea of it than I can, of what it was like! I am happy I was able to experience it, in a reconstructed Spanish apse though!


Here is a different recording of the same piece, that they had for sale, at the museum. Take a listen while you continue your tour! :)






The Medieval medicinal and edible garden


People pretend not to like grapes
when the vines are too high 
for them to reach.
~Margherite de Navarre
1492-1549


View across the Hudson from the gardens






The eye through which I see God
is the same eye 
through which God see me;
my eye and God's eye are one eye,
one seeing, 
one knowing,
one love.
~Meister Eckhard, Sermons of Meister Eckhart
1260-1327


Leaving the museum and walking through Fort Tryon Park ...






Thanks Elizabeth for a great day! 
It couldn't have been any better!



God is in all things, but in so far as God is Divine
and in so far as God is rational,
he exists more properly in the should and in angels,
that is in the innermost 
and highest part of the soul, 
than he does anywhere else.

~Meister Eckhart (1260-1327)
sermon 4,
DW 30, W 18


To visit The Cloisters, click here for the Metropolitan Museum website
For additional information on the Cloisters, and its history, click here

Blessings and light!!!