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Potential Black Sea Cruising

I’m trying to plan out next year’s travel and have become obsessed with the Black Sea.  I blame this on indecisiveness.  I was thinking about visiting Istanbul, curling along the western Turkish coast and then up through Cappadocia.  Then I got thinking about Russia and a grand tour from regal St. Petersburg through the countryside to Moscow.  I’ve also been enjoying Curious Cat on the Run‘s travels through Romania, so Eastern Europe seemed like a beautiful and decidedly untouristy destination.  So there you have it.  A dramatic mix of numerous cultures that can only be achieved, in any practical way, by visiting the Black Sea.

I realized pretty quickly that an organized cruise may be the only way to see it all in a reasonable amount of time.  On my own, I would have to cobble together a trip through numerous ferry lines without very efficient routing, like Odessa to Yalta to Odessa to Batumi.  (For help, see this Lonely Planet thread).  With limited vacation time, I am always looking for the best way to maximize my travel days and back-tracking, not knowing ferry schedules ahead of time, and negotiating travel in three languages over 12 days doesn’t make much sense.

Sadly though, I am not a “cruise” person.  Don’t get me wrong, I love the ocean, as long as I am on a passenger ferry.  The idea of ginormous buffets, cheesy entertainment, being stuck with 2000 other people on a ship, 4 hour visits to ports and lame pre-packaged shore excursions do not appeal to me.

So now I am looking for “acceptable” companies, meaning smaller ships whose mission and style cater to the discerning nerd traveler, schedules with long port visits and it would be nice if they didn’t cost an arm and a leg. I’m weighing a few that I’ve found so far (and am always looking for experienced advice….).  So either I pick one and go to the Black Sea next year, or I scrap it all together and go to Peru!

Cognition as Sculpture: Jaume Plensa at MIT

Jaume Plensa’s “The Alchemist” at MIT (Photo: DaydreamTourist)

Many modern artists find themselves returning to familiar themes for continued exploration.  Catalan artist Jaume Plensa has created a catalog of large curved metal sculptures shaped into contemplative figures. I find something other-worldly about these figures, especially those made of letters, as if this were some futuristic totem waiting for us to decode them.

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Photo of the Week: The Louvre Pyramid Gets New Lights

Newly installed LED lights illuminate the Louvre pyramid (Photo: Christophe Ena/AP Photo)

New external lighting are inaugurated at the Louvre, the worlds most popular art museum, at the Pyramid, the three pyramidions and the Colbert pavilion of the Louvre, with the warm glow of new LED lighting , Tuesday Dec. 6, 2011 in Paris. AP Photo/Christophe Ena.  (Text and Image from artdaily.org)

This isn’t the first lighting change the Pyramid went through.  Switching to halide lamps in 2005 from 100W halogen lamps changed the glow from orange to white.  It looks like this latest lighting change has unified the illumination through the pyramid so that is evenly bright.  I think it enhances I. M. Pei’s work and punctuates the Louvre courtyard.

Cartoon Cities

Decorating with travel photography always looks sharp and certainly inspires trip day-dreaming on a daily basis.  While you can get some amazing global images from amateur and professional photographers, I find myself coming back to stylized city illustrations.  It’s fun to see a location distilled to its essential elements and I have always loved stylized graphic design.  In honor of the Holiday shopping season, here are a few of my favorites from etsy.com with links to their stores below.  (If they don’t have your favorite city, it doesn’t hurt to ask if they could do it.)

Portland, Oregon city cartoon - loosepetals
Portland, Oregon by loosepetals (Etsy.com)
Washington DC

Washington DC by albie design (Etsy.com)

San Francisco city cartoon

San Francisco by Matte Stevens (Etsy.com)

Images Credits:

Portland, OR by Loose Petals

Washington DC by albie design

San Francisco by Matte Stevens

Vintage Travel Posters

Classic travel posters of the 1920-1940s have got to be some of the most gorgeous but overlooked pieces of art ever.  Combining both travel nostalgia and crisp graphic design, the images are evocative and interesting.  I want to hang one on my wall then pack up a hard case travel trunk and decorate it with stickers from each of my destinations!   Here are some of my favorite travel posters from an exhibit held last year.

vintage Marsailes to Egypt rail poster

vintage Syria and Libya travel poster

vintage Vienna travel poster

vintage cruise Alaska and Taku Glacier travel poster

All images are from the 2010 Boston Public Library exhibit, “Away We Go!”  You can view the entire exhibit on Flickr.