Monday, May 8, 2017

Second Hand Shopping in Skåne


We needed to drop some gear off down in Malmö, so we took an opportunity to do some second hand shopping in Skåne, closest to Malmö, so not as far in as we traveled last time when we needed to get furniture for our apartment.  We stayed at a work friends summer place for two nights, we stayed there just to sleep over last time, and I was (am) in love with the place, so I was really happy to stay a bit longer this time.
The second hand shopping is amazing, it is a loosely organized mix of actual shops where people are curating and refurbishing antiques, interspersed with barns that have just seemed to have accumulated generations of stuff, some barns that seem to have different sellers throughout, and a sprinkling of garage sales.  Both trips we both found basically what we were looking for.  This time we bought a dining table- Scandinavian in its magic ability to go from a four person round table, to a six person oval, to finally an 8-10 person formal oval.
We also found odds and ends, I got a version of a hand tooled leather bag/purse I have been searching for - maybe 3 years now? We completed our plate settings, and also found five new matching spice jars we were missing.

I realized that, at this moment in time- Stockholm really is going through a transition- growing so quickly- working out how to fit in people who have been displaced from their own countries and cultures.  There is building everywhere, rock being blasted, trees being cleared, roads being extended- all over the city but also directly next to our building.  My mood completely changed while being in the countryside.  For about ten years now I have been sidling away from cities.  When I have a choice I avoid large cities when traveling.  When I thought we might settle here I pushed for a smaller city.  But then, Hobart grew- the as the media calls it...'the MONA effect' has perhaps permanently changed Hobart, if not concretely, at least by outside perception.  For my first five or six years I could barely get people I knew to remember we lived in Tasmania and not Tanzania, or New Zealand- whereas now Tasmania seems to be on every persons 'must visit' list. In 1992, when I moved from L.A., to Seattle I never expected Seattle to boom the way that it did, yet still, I was surprised all over again when Hobart changed.  

I came back to this post to add, because as I sat in a small patch of sunshine, looking out at the clouds and small snowflakes (in May!) I realized I hadn't wrote what I wanted too.  My intention had been about how much Zok loves to second-hand shop now.  How when I first took him when we were in Bellingham, the concept was so foreign to him.  He never went thrifting or as the Aussies say 'op-shopping' when he was young.  He never had to go from necessity nor did he have the fever or looking for treasure but he does now.  The bargain hunting part of his dna sadly still loves a large bargain store like costco but all in all, I feel I have created a positive change.  Plus this is a couples activity that we both enjoy.  Also now, when we pull off the road, to some random barn, and I start to speed up as I go through items saying semi-crazy things like "Our höganas plates are here somewhere, I can feel it!" and then I find them...well he is almost a believer in my powers...
 


Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Bredäng Konst Tbana, Lena Kriström Larsson



I have to admit that the lack of spring-like weather since arriving from actual summertime weather really has been like a dark cloud smothering my moods.  The day I did this station, there was a bitter wind, and I also had a friend in tow, a local, which usually amounts to about 2-3 minutes worth of attention.  I think I will go back to this station to give it a bit more attention.

I couldn't fully understand the art signage, but I believe that the artist worked with the local school kids, and that there was theme that was about honoring the original nature of where this neighborhood is now.  Only, I am unfamiliar with the area, so I don't know how much nature is left, another reason I want to go have a look around.

I keep telling myself, that April isn't over, and that come May suddenly the trees will bloom and this snow mixed rain will abate, and Spring will arrive, all at once.  But in my heart I can feel a hardening, for years now I have felt myself recede from any passions I had for cities.  This happened once in 1992, when I moved from Los Angeles to Seattle- but from about 2000 I have had a steady pull to the quiet of the life I have in Australia.  Of course, we have had really bad luck this last year- and maybe I will have a change of heart- but if I had to decide today, I would go home to Australia, and stay.






Monday, April 17, 2017

Mälarhöjden Station Tbana Konst, Margareta Carlstedt

The entire piece is called 'Ebb and Flow' and is an enamel piece a 145 meters long by Margareta Carlstedt.
The plaque said she won a contest in 1961.


 The judges agreed that the painting gave the feeling of light, air and music


 

Monday, April 3, 2017

Vårby gård Station, Art by Rolf Bergström (#53)






I came to this station on a rather, ugly weather day which is unfortunate as the time before, I had come on a bright, sunny good light day, but my phone (camera) died when I got to this station.

I searched but I could not find the artist plaque for this station, I asked and perhaps my Swedish was bad, or perhaps his was, or perhaps he had no interest in art because asking got me only an agitated display of body language.

Fortunately the artist has this station on his website and written there is:

Artistic design of Vårby Farm Underground Station.

"The station area consists of a fairly extensive system of stairs, walkways and a hall. "Flora" includes an artistic part with five large images, color scheme, two minor alterations, replacement of some of the fittings, and planting of plants (Virginia creeper) along a major wall facing the center of the square.

I've wanted to make a beautiful station, the visibility of the architectural qualities, giving the station a personal identity and a varied structure.
I have chosen to do a plethora of exotic plants from different corners. Five great photos of the plants have been burned onto vitglaserad tiles. Flowers organic beauty contrasts with crystalline architectural nooks and crannies."


If you like to see more look via this link
\http://www.rolfbergstrom.se/ 

 

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Skärholmen Tbana, Konst Ulf Wahlberg

 
There are actually 23 panels to show the change of light and the impact 
(or really I want to use both effect/affect together, because I think there is both a change on what one can see, and what one might feel in relation to what one thinks is being seen) 
on what the viewer might be able to see from sunrise to sunset at the light changes so perhaps what shapes one is able to make out.
The panels run of the back wall of the South bound tracks.
This is one of the stations I thought I wouldn't be able to translate well. So I had taken photos years ago, but never bothered to post them (and this was before the now ye olde instagram).

The panels are displayed in such as way that an empty station and a full ten minutes to pace along and choose different vantage points to look at them are important for a real impact.  That said, they look interesting from a passenger window when the train is moving along the other track, being that far back and seeing them a bit in a way that works like a flip book is interesting.
The photos are from New Mexico- and the photos feel like the photographer was new to the desert and the way the light plays there, and wanted to try and impart that here, in a place where the landscape and the light are so very different.

 
The change back to Hökarängen has been a shock.
 There is a still a week of March left, and although I know the equinox has passed, I can see no signs of spring here.  But, my neighborhood is still a construction zone, the extension of our street, the building (and blasting of rocks to achieve this) of four new apartment complexes, and the kindergarten are still in what looks like early stages- there are container offices, huge construction vehicles.  Felled trees, open trenches with what I assume is infrastructure or upgrading/additional water mains or sewer lines.  The small woodland areas that were a large reason I liked our building so much have been diminished and I am not sure when I will get over that.  Plus I feel selfish, as there is an obvious need for housing, and I am only thinking of myself.  

 

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Into the wilds go the house cat and the alley cat.

As we were displaced for about nine days, and also had a concurring opportunity to volunteer up around Soldiers Beach, on Maria Island- we decided to give tent camping a try.  We lucked into beautiful spots up where my dear neighbour took me (six!) years ago.
We had good weather, hot for Tasmania but when you are camp on the edge of various beautiful beaches, the heat can be nice.  Our state is a bit of a geological wonder- so we get white sand beaches, pink sand beaches, beaches ringed with bright orange rocks, and we even went out and saw a beach with dark red rocks.


Campsite #1, pink rocks and clear, clear water.
To be fair...Tasmanias' tourism boom can definitely be felt, there are more and more tour operators, and one morning we had a drone flying over our tent.


 Campsite # 2


 Campsite # 3, I love the imprint between the wallaby feet from its tail.


Last Campsite hours from Darlington, Maria Island.

We did have one night inside as 'someone' caught a cold as soon as we left (I have decided he might be a 'house' cat), I managed to stay well until I got home, but today, day 3 home and I am miserable.  We need to unpack, but our first 2 days home were so busy and I think mentally I knew at least we were moved back in, so I can't seem to do much today, or for very long.
I love camping, but I do also love electricity.
I think we might be destined for a camper-trailer.

The weather is still hot, and I love time in the ocean, but we leave for snow in less than 2 weeks.  I suppose a nice snowfall will set off my tan...
 
 

Monday, February 13, 2017

"Look how absurd I was when I was young" forestalls cruel criticism but it falsifies history."

Certainly, with the way I am feeling "Hazardous Edge Ahead" could have been the title for this post, however, I took a moment to go back a few years within my blog at the last five years of what I posted in February. This is usually a comfort, because my personal, internal sense of time is always off, I am too emotional a creature to have clarity-so thank you internet technology.  

Soon we have to pack up the contents of our house, which will be stored, box by box, book shelf by book shelf, into a shipping container set in our driveway.
We will leave to go camping, or couch surfing, ahead of our next 'land care' volunteer trip to Maria Island.  Thus vacating for the 5-10 days needed for the repairs on the house.  February seems to be a normal time for both house repairs and changes, as well as going to Maria Island to volunteer.

I was just on Maria having finally gotten to take a 'main-lander'- to the island.
Maria, the same as the rest of Tasmania is still enduring a huge surge in visitors.
The government of tourism stated: 1.19 million visitors (so twice the population) and a 3% increase from the mainland, raising that number above 1 million visitors. I have heard rumours that a new ferry (90 seats!) will be taking passengers from Triabunna to the island, this will make 3 public ferries, and the 1 private (a luxury all inclusive tour company). I am writing about this as a reminder to my future self, as truly the changes in our town, and our state feel (have I written this already?) like it is changing at the same exponential rate that Seattle did when I lived there in the 1990s.

We are trying to recover from our recent loss- taking stock of our options- and how to find a sense of security that we can move forward with into the next half of our lives.  I think the idea of that the Queen (U.K.) sends out letters to her citizens that reach 100 years of age- has cemented me to the idea that 50 years of age is a half way mark.
 I can not clearly express the tangle in my brain that I am trying to unravel to find out what I believe about aging.  I know I should feel lucky, and most days I do.  I know I rather deal with a bit of stress if that stress means I am facing decisions that need to be made.  But mostly I want to sit somewhere pretty and read a book.
 Which I did get to do while on Maria.
Here:

I will get some more reading done during our camping adventure.
Our very first actual camping adventure, together.
We are having storms, and violent bursts of rain instead of the usual sunny, hot February, but of course we are closer now to March - which can be very rainy.
Luckily, tents are good places to be when it rains.
Also, we can always go in the ocean, and then we might not even notice that it is raining.

Also, from the "my husband is a feeder" headlines:
 

 The apricot pastry was so good, that it was worth every bit of snarly feelings I had at the gym the morning after.