Saturday, December 7, 2013

Qatar, part deux

So many museums, so little time...

The Damien Hirst retrospective, put on by the Qatar Museums Authority:


famous formaldehyde shark:


stained glass butterfly wings:


close-up:


full replication of an English pharmacy:


many, many flies:


more formaldehyde animals (the smell was overpowering):



the breathtaking Museum of Islamic Art, designed by I.M. Pei...







...with equally breathtaking collections:

Qur'an from 13th-century Iraq


pages from a 7th/early 8th century Qur'an


16th century, from Syria or Turkey


this guy


The Ramayana, India, 16th century


wild cat illustration from the 15th/16th century book entitled "The Marvels of Creation and the Oddities of Existence"


the Prophet (with veiled face) encounters a serpent


and then there's this guy:


Last stop, the Museum of Crying Women, an exhibition of Italian artist Francesco Vezzoli's work at the QMA gallery. Very weird, very cool.






 

and an entire room devoted to the Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum (as well there should be):





Sunday, November 10, 2013

Welcome to Qatar, y'all! (part one)



About a week ago, I returned home from a twelve-day trip to Qatar, where I was doing some preliminary work on a new research project. I stayed mostly in Doha, which is the capital and by far the biggest city, though on the last day I got the chance to venture out of town to a camel-feed farm with some amazing nature photographers and birders. Though I have spent a lot of time in other parts of the Middle East, this was my first trip to the Gulf. Here are some impressions...

(above is the stunning Museum of Islamic Art, designed by I.M. Pei, and opened in late 2008. more on this later).

My hotel was about a 15 minute walk away from the Corniche, a pedestrian walkway that stretched all the way along the curved bay of the city. Despite it being October, it was insanely hot, but everything immediately felt about ten degrees cooler on the Corniche. Below, a fishing dhow; a pop-up mosque on the beach; window reflections; and skyline with the spiraled Islamic Cultural Center.






Friday prayer at the mosque outside my hotel window:





The amount of construction going on in Doha was mind-boggling. For the past 10 years or so, Qatar has been building some of the most impressive, modern buildings in the world, and there are many more in the works. Below, the downtown skyline; the Doha Tower by French architect Jean Nouvel; the Cornell University building in Education City (this is really what it's called); an office building near my hotel; and one of the many, many gigantic malls strewn throughout the city.







And, finally, there was this guy:




Tuesday, November 5, 2013

happenings

there is no real excuse for not posting anything for more than three months, but things got a little crazy this summer and fall. here's what's been happening:

saw some beautiful summer colors at Noxubee:




collected water at a nearby natural spring, considered by some to be the cleanest water in Mississippi, and met some fellow spring water enthusiasts at the source:




went pear picking at the wonderful Reese Orchard (and subsequently muscadine and persimmon picking):





got a new phone and discovered Instagram:



oh, and bought a house. more on this later, but here she is, in all her glory: