Posts tonen met het label art. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label art. Alle posts tonen

donderdag 2 november 2023

Blue Period volume 9 - Tsubasa Yamaguchi

 So, picking up where we left, Yatora and his group needed all the help they could get.
 

 
And that help arrived from an unexpected corner...
 
Yakumo brought the whole costume team to help out, as Kimeni had secretly went out to ask around for help.  Thanks to this, they manage to finish on time for the festival parade.  Yatora's friends also come to the festival, and while they might not win the grand prize, much to the sadness of Kimeni, they do win one of the side categories.
 
In the meantime, their class's foodstall is a huge success,  as Yuka passes by and immediatly starts flirting with one of Yatora's friends, Hacchan.  Hashida also comes by the festival, joining Yatora and Takahashi to the art exhibit of the students.   Here, the latter two find themselves in exactly the same situation as a year ago and have a good talk.

During the summer break, Yatora paints nothing, kicking back and relaxing with his friends to go out fishing and the likes, until he goes visit an exhibit about Velasquez with Takahashi and Hashida to get his art fired up again.  He learns about what made Velasquez so great, as he initially isn't impressed by him at all.  Takahashi turns out, contrary to what Yatora expected, to have had quite a reputation in art at middle school, even though he was on the academic track.  Being an artistic prodigy, he takes them both to his place to show a piece he made when aged only 3.
 

 
The next weeks, they will learn about fresco's and mosaics at the campus, which is totally new territory for Yatora and his classmates causing them to struggle with the process of creating that form of art.  Yatora admits to Yakumo he is jealous of Takahashi's natural talent though.  During a night out with his fellow students, they talk about a rumour that every year one student is allowed into TUA based on academic scores and not on their art performance, and clues seem to lead to Takahashi being that special student.  When Yatora tells him about this, it pisses him off intensly.
 
During the meeting of the faculty teachers, it is once more hinted that there is indeed a special student in this group of freshmen students, but his identity is kept under wraps apart from being stubborn and not listening to advice.  But the end of the school year is already approaching, and for their final assignment they will have guest lecturers like the famous artist Konatsu Ono.  Yatora tries to make up with Takahashi, but feels worse afterwards, but Hacchan lets him see that hard work is a talent on itself as well...
 
So the end of the first year approaches, will Yatora pass?  And who is that special student, is it Takahashi, who has been hinted at, Yatora, for being our main protagonist, or will it turn out to be someone totally different?
 
Maybe I will find out more in the next volume!


dinsdag 13 maart 2018

Dinant - the city of the mighty Citadelle, Leffe and Saxophones

The past weekend found Noshi and me in the walloon city of Dinant, for a bit of culture sniffling and a night away from home.


Famous for it`s 19th century citadel fortress on top of the cliff to protect the bridge over the Meuse, and for being the birthplace of Adolphe Sax, there was quit a lot to see. 

We stayed at the IBIS Dinant, a cosy little hotel with a room with view on the Meuse.  It`s a cheap and clean hotel, and while the room wasn`t immense, it was more then comfortable enough for the night we spend in the city...


China Light Dinant

As it happens, and unbeknownst to us, past saturday a light festival started around the bridge, displaying various chinese works that lighted up spectacularly.  While most where located on the riverbank, more of them where scattered around town as well.











In the town hall, alongside the artwork, a picture exposition took place with all kinds of local people, from the mayor to a police officer, wearing chinese paper helmets.








Notre Dame de Dinant 

At the base of the citadel, the impressive church Notre Dame de Dinant is located.  Originally build in the 13th century, it`s pearshaped tower was a later, 16th century, addition.















Alphonse Sax House

Born in Dinant 200 years ago, the creator of the saxophone is one of the things the city is very proud off.  This shows as saxophones are spread all along town, and the birthhouse is repurposed as free, small museum telling the tale of how the saxophone came around.











But first, time for a coffee and some sweets...

Maison Leffe

The famous brewery of the "blonde Leffe" features a virtual tour, where you use a card with a QR code that activates all kinds of panels with movie clips, pictures, and smell devices about the founding and history of the abbey of Leffe, and how the beer became known to the populace worldwide these days.



















The tour also comes with a tasting, a Leffe of choice.  Noshi picked the new member of the family, the Ruby, while I settled for the good old brown one.

So that concluded the visits for the first day, and we went to a local Hong Kong and Thai restaurant for a lovely meal... soup and a 5 flavours with rice dish.


The Citadelle

The mighty fortress, build between 1818 and 1821 by the dutch, dominates the entire view from the city.  We went up there to enjoy the two expositions that took place there.








1914 exposition

Detailing the history of the first world war at Dinant, with the slaughter on the morning of the 23rd of august 1914 (where a young lieutenant, Charles DeGaulle, was amongst the defending garrison) as the germans captured the city for the tactical objective of the bridge.  The exposition makes use of visual and audio items to emerge the visitor in the chaos and panic of that faithful day and the nights leading up to it.

















History of the Citadelle

We took the free guided tour along the citadel to learn more about it's history and how it was build.  The tour takes you along rooms normally closed to the general public, including some stunning views and recreations of places like the kitchen and  armoury.








































It also featured another small part of WW1, but this is a recreation of a trench from the Ypres saillant, these weren`t found in the vicinity of Dinant at all.  The shelter that was all sideways after being hit by a bomb did play havoc with your senses...






And then we decended the 408 steps back to Dinant from the citadel (yeah, we went up using the teleferique, I`m not totally insane you know...)







A nice two days out trip, and at only 2.5 hrs with the train from Antwerp, closer then it might appear... and closed of the weekend with some wine and cheese.