This week, several friends from the Holladay Ward and I drove up to the Utah Museum of Fine Arts at the UofU to view their exhibition of British Landscapes. The paintings were on loan from a museum in Wales, and they were certainly a beautiful site to see. There were works by Constable, Gainsborough, Turner, and a host of others, with even a couple of Monet's thrown in for good measure. We chose this last Wednesday evening because the Museum is free on the first Wednesday of every month. Unfortunately, we arrived kind of late in the day, so we didn't have an awful lot of time to browse, and the gallery was packed with other visitors in our same boat. But it was a thrill to see works of some of the great British painters, and a fabulous evening with friends.
One of my favorite's was this painting by Henry Clarence Whaite, called "The Penitent's Vision: The Shepherd's Dream". At the bottom, you see a shepherd, in a mountain glen, kneeling in prayer. At the top right, there's a vision of Angels and others, watching over him. It's a very tender painting, and even lovelier in person.
One of my favorite's was this painting by Henry Clarence Whaite, called "The Penitent's Vision: The Shepherd's Dream". At the bottom, you see a shepherd, in a mountain glen, kneeling in prayer. At the top right, there's a vision of Angels and others, watching over him. It's a very tender painting, and even lovelier in person.
Comments