Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fish. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

My New Friend Flounder

Walking along the beach in the Outer banks, the shell pickings are pretty slim.  The surf is just too rough, and a whole clam shell can seem like a prize.  While running on the beach, a mostly intact conch shell appeared before me, but before I could grab it, a wave took it away.  The next wave set it between my feet, so I considered it a gift from the ocean.  It was the best shell I saw on the beach all week.

On another walk, I came upon this guy:
 A flounder lying in the tide line.  When I leaned over I could see his he was alive, his mouth moved and his side rose and fell.  I slipped my hand under him to pick him up but he flipped away from me.  So I slipped both hands under him to propel him to the incoming wave.  Success!

Nope.  He was back on the sand in front of me.  This time when I picked him up he didn't offer resistance. I flung him into the wave, and back he came again.  Hmmm, maybe he just wants to die.

But, I thought, wouldn't he rather die in the water instead of gasping for breath on land?   "Sorry Buddy, you are just too cute not to take your picture."  I took his photo as he stared at me with his two green eyes, moving his fish lips.  Then I lifted him, waded into the water and flung him past the surf.  He didn't return.

Success! What a good deed, I congratulated myself as I walked back down the beach.  But then, feelings of self doubt came over me. Maybe he was an enchanted human that was turned into a fish and his last wish was to die on dry land. Maybe I had just screwed everything up.  Maybe I had just lost my chance to be granted three wishes.

"Maybe you were supposed to kiss him," my friend Jon said.


Sunday, March 13, 2011

Japanese wood block prints

I have a fondness for Japanese woodblock prints.  I have always been fascinated by how lacking in wood grain they end up being.  They could be linoleum block prints, but that seems so un-Japanese.
Years ago, I took a yoga class in someone's home.  She had this print hanging in her stairwell.  One day it was gone and another print was in it's place.  When I asked what had happened to it, because I loved looking at it, she said she had decided to take it down. And then she gave it to me.  Even though it has lots of foxing and a big fold line down the center, I had it re-framed and have had it in my living room ever since.  I even painted the wall to match the blue.


It turns out that it is a Hiroshige print, though how old,
I have not determined.
  My parents had always had several Japanese wood block prints in their house that I have always coveted.  Now, after all these years, they are in my possession.  They all need serious re-framing but I want to get them looked at by someone that knows something about them first.  This one is definitely a Hiroshige also.



And I'm pretty sure this one is also, but I have no idea what generation these prints are, whether old and original or 19th century re-prints.
As for this print, I still haven't figured out who  the artist is.  But I keep looking.  I thought it might be Hashiguchi but I do not know for sure.






  Here is a photograph I took that reminds me of the first print.
It's from a weekend on the Chesapeake Bay.