To read more about this trip, click
HERE.
On Saturday morning, I got up, checked out of the hotel, and went out to explore the city a bit while I walked down to the
Art Institute of Chicago. Here are a few of the things I saw along the way:
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Yes, another shot of the Chicago River. It's so darn picturesque! |
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Detail on the downtown courthouse. |
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Doors leading into the courthouse. It's hard to
believe any government building could be this pretty. |
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I love how oddly narrow these are. |
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I saw someone else taking a pic of this building so
I stopped and took one too. Not sure what it is. |
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Magnificent Ionic columns. |
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Chicago Board of Trade. |
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Equally magnificent Corinthian columns. |
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I would love to live somewhere where the
advertising boards look like this. |
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Statues and fountain just outside the Board of Trade. |
Right about the time I stumbled across the above courtyard, a storm rolled in and absolutely poured rain. It hasn't rained like that where I live for months, so I loved it. Here's a partially cloudy shot from down by the museum:
Now, I have to tell you that I love the Art Institute of Chicago. I've been to a lot of different art museums. This one is my favorite, hands down. So I was very, very excited to go there and I had a great time. However, I don't like to take a ton of pictures of art because I feel like they just don't translate terribly well. So I'm only posting a few.
A lot of what I really admired was the furniture. I can hardly fathom the kind of dedication it took, hundreds of years ago, to create intricate furniture like this:
I also really enjoyed this full suit of armor:
Here are the pieces of art that I connected with the most:
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Green Dancers by Edgar Degas. |
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This piece is by Charles Ray. I neglected to write down
the name and now I can't find it. |
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One of the famous Chagall windows. |
The friend I went to
Palm Springs with earlier this year turned me on to what's enjoyable about the mid-century modern style, so I particularly enjoyed this funky clock corner:
I spent about two and a half hours at the museum and saw perhaps half of what was on offer. Then my brother arrived to pick me up, so I had to go, but I think that was a good thing because I was beat. Last year, my brother went to a training near DeKalb, Illinois. He expressed an interest in going back out there to explore the area, so we did.
Once we got off the tollway, I enjoyed the scenery, the same meadows and farm fields that I remember from my youth (spent in nearby Michigan). On my GPS, I noticed a place called
Shabbona Lake State Park and asked my brother if he'd be interested in checking it out. He was and we did:
It was lovely, so I'm glad we went. Afterward, we drove up to DeKalb, where we spent the night. We didn't do much of note, just had dinner, drove around a bit, and went to see the movie "No Escape" (my brother's choice; I liked it well enough). After two days of travel and lots of walking, I was happy to have a relaxing evening.
2 comments:
Damn, but those buildings are so lovely. The pictures from the natural area too.
I associate the Art Institute of Chicago with Ferris Bueller's Day Off, because that scene in the movie is my favorite.
Someday I will go there so I can have my own associations.
It's pretty funny that I went out and saw Ferris Bueller the weekend before I went to Chicago, since it's essentially a love ode to the city. It was unintentional. Anyway, as good as that movie is at portraying the city, it definitely needs to be experienced for its own sake!
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