BEAR and I are too busy shipping out your chateaux to jump in a Venice canal and think about gondolas... But no reason YOU can't dream of gondolas...
'Gondolier Fever' has been going on since Canaletto and before after all...
It does look terribly relaxing...
Gondola dancing anyone...
Who knew?
Are there gondola parking lots?
Can you get a ticket for double parking?
Which would you rather have?
A ride in a gondola...
Or a pistachio gelato? I know my answer...Hmmm
Pistachio wins hands down.
I think I caught gondola fever from looking at this watercolor book by Jean-Louis Morelle. Though the only Venice scene is on the cover - sometimes that's all it takes...
Please vote in the comments if you would like a gondola watercolor SALE on Monday...
Oui or Non...
Chateaux are shipping out TODAY by Priority Mail not gondolas - too slow!
Along with the multitude of artichokes, gelaterias, and bridges in Venice, you can hardly walk two steps without bumping into a Lion... The winged lion is Venice's symbol or mascot, since the remains of San Marco, the Evangelist, were stolen from a tomb in Alexandria, Egypt, and brought there in 828 AD. VitorioCapaccio painted this lion in 1516. The lion is usually depicted with its paw on an book inscribed with the Latin motto goes: Pax tibi Marce, evangelista meus. Aka: Peace be with you Mark, my evangelist. Being Mark the patron Saint of Venice. This lion guards the Accademia bridge... Another lion protecting the courtyard at La Fenice opera house... Each of the arcades of Piazza San Marco have different lions heads. Fortunately not all are roaring at once... Caffe Florianin San Marco sprinkles lion heads over it's china, napkins, and sugars. I know. I saved the sugar packets... If a Venetian house has a door knocker, it's likely to be a lions head...
You can follow suit and bring home a lion knocker or doorbell...
Or a winged paper weight. I did not see any Lion masks. Did you?
For a while Venetians kept live lions in their gardens in the 16th century. For a longer while there were thousands of cats, but they were removed to a shelter on the Lido. This Fu dog (Lion of Buddha) is the most current lion to reside in Venice.
Venetians had a penchant for Rhinos as well, illustrated in this Pietro Longhi painting. You do still see a few. There was one on my street corner, fortunately in bronze. Donna Leon has yet to take up Venice's lion in her mystery books, but I've only read four...
The Venetian lion must be a good cell conductor. "Can you hear me now?" This one is lounging in Piazza Mani.
Venetian masks don't do it for me - too glitzy... But last day in Venice I discovered these marbleized silk masks and flipped. Venice is a key center for paper arts... And marbleized paper/carta marmorizzata is their specialty.
I took a class in marblizingat the Book Center and it is hard. I can't begin to imagine how you do this to fine silk fabric..?
Marbleizing was revived in Venice during the 1970s. The sheets are made by hand and each is unique. Why not don your marbleized mask and write some old fashioned snail mail on these perfect note cards..?
You'll find a 'marbleized' pen in the same shop...
The ink is NOT marbleized but the hand-blown glass ink well comes from Murano...