So we've finished the Rijksmuseum and are heading down the street and across a bridge, toward our favorite vlaamse frites and herring joints, when Vicki looks down the canal and sees one of Amsterdam's great but rarely witnessed sights: the dredge that picks the bicycles out of the canals. Nothing evokes Amsterdam more than canals and bicycles. OK, drugs and sex certainly evoke Amsterdam more, but it's awkward to photograph them. Anyhow, a small crowd had already formed, and I was thrilled to join it and record the following...
...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Rijksmuseum 2015, Again, 2
And visit some of our old friends...
Cornells Wierlingens' Explosion of the Spanish Flagship During the Battle of Gibraltar, in lurid detail |
My favorite group portrait, which we somehow missed in May, Bartholomeus van der Helst's Banquet at the Crossbowmen's Guild in Celebration of the Treaty of Munster |
Reflection in one of the silver breast plates |
And in one of the glasses |
Night Watch mob |
Milk Maid mob |
One of my favorite Hals, The Merry Drinker |
And my favorite Hals, Portrait of a Couple... |
Great museum |
Rijksmuseum 2015, Again, 1
We continued driving the familiar ground, out of France, across Belgium, and into Netherlands, 3-4 hours, finally arriving in Amsterdam Saturday night. After a trip to BW Campers to pick up stored items, we camped at Gaspaarplas, and spent a couple days cleaning and preparing the camper for storage, and packing for our return to the US. We reserved one day for a trip into Amsterdam for some last minute shopping and for visiting some Rijksmuseum departments we'd not seen before.
Namely, the household goods, as I call them; here, some incredible hand-painted tea sets, for two, for twelve, etc. |
45 miniature silver items in a doll house kitchen |
More table ware |
How to do big hair in the 18th century |
Hand-painted Meissen cutlery set |
More Meissen...reminding us of the Green Vaults |
Lots of flowery dresses and flowery head-gear |
In the magic lantern collection; some were too lewd even for me (to post) |
Evolution of double-reed instruments |
Traveling harpsichord |
Oh yes, there is a Delft department; here, a perpetual calendar |
Breughelesque Delft |
What really knocked us out was the engraved glassware |
Thus |
And particularly the stippled engraved glassware |
Sort of pointillist in glass, pretty amazing |
France Out-takes, 2015, II
Continuing the amazing and amusing...
Interesting house/porches near Fontaine-Henry |
Meteo on the street in Caen |
Lawn ornaments near Utah Beach |
Message on a German gun emplacement: "Who changes the children, changes the world" |
Gun battery in Cherboug: Sic transit, Gloria |
Normandie humor |
One sees rather few home-built rigs in France...here's one |
Your bones are being evicted from this cemetery |
So you've pulled into a parking lot at a scenic overlook and are admiring the sights when up rides a bicycliste/asshole to exercise his male rights just outside your front windshield... |
Medieval pizza maker in Vitre |
French hot dog |
Ingredients for Kouign Aman...Food of Satan |
What happens when you fall asleep reading |
Sic transit, Gloria |
Clock tower in Amiens |
Belt and suspenders approach |
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