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Posts tagged ‘blogging’

Travel Plans, Cultural Tourism, and a Date with Giotto

In just a few weeks I’ll be headed to Italy!  I was very honored to be invited on this trip and could not pass up the opportunity to connect with professionals in the travel industry, catch up with fellow bloggers, and take an art pilgrimage to see one of the greatest pieces of Western Art.

Tiberius Bridge, Rimini

Tiberius Bridge, Rimini (Photo: zioWoody, Flickr)

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Big Thank Yous!

I want to send a big Thank You to all my readers!  I write to satisfy my own fascination and passion for art and travel and it makes me happy that others find these things as interesting as I do.  Within the WordPress blogging community there are several awards that are passed around through peer nomination.  I have been honored to get four of these over the last year but haven’t had a chance to write about them!  And so I need to catch up on some long overdue thanks to these wonderful bloggers who nominated me: MidLife Traveler, will wander…, Florence and the Historian, and Sharp and Keen!

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Happy 1st Birthday Daydream Tourist!

wayne thiebaud cakes

Happy blog-iversary Daydream Tourist!  One year ago, I was itching to use my passport, enjoyed planning hypothetical trips and thought I could share that with a wider audience (hence the blog title Daydream Tourist).  Luckily I wasn’t too strict and let the posts and scope of the blog evolve. Part hobby, part creative outlet, I’ve enjoyed writing, researching and sharing and am proud of what I’ve done this past year.

The greatest revelation of this experience has been how much I love art and history.  Like I said, I originally meant to write a travel planning blog but when my fourth post was about my favorite Hapsburg rulers, it was pretty clear my interests were broad!  This sounds laughably nerdy, but I’ve really enjoyed the primary research and detective work of The Friedrich Wahle Project and hope to make more progress this coming year.  It was also fun to find my niche among travel bloggers.  I’m not really one for adventures and crazy, breath-taking experiences.  I’m someone who likes to linger and absorb the details of a place whether that’s through people-watching or spending 4hours at a small archaeological site.  I’d like to think I share interesting observation and pictures from my travel with a mix of history and context to these places.

I’ve also learned that writing is hard. Don’t get me wrong, I write quite a bit professionally, but its a technical style that doesn’t lend itself easily to art history and travel subject matter, nor to the tone of a blog.  The Daydream Tourist has been good practice for me and I hope that with time my writing will improve and I can get a little faster at making these posts.  I would also be helpful if I stopped perpetually editing my draft posts and published them.  Right now, I have 10 semi-completed stories, so if in the next week there is a wave of slightly awkward posts to go up, you know I just got fed up and let them loose.

Statues of DC height comparison

I particularly liked the image I made for my MLK Memorial post which showed the relative size of some DC memorial statues relative to a 6′ tall person.

My Favorite Posts: It should come as no surprise, that I’ve enjoyed writing pieces that require some investigation and analysis.  I really liked my post on the Iconography of John the Baptist.  It was an interesting story to tell and was genuinely inspired by something small I noticed and didn’t understand.  I also liked putting together and doing some critical analysis of the outdoor context of several Arnaldo Pomodoro sculptures and showing the connection between art history and the 2011 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.  I definitely like the gratuitous use of John Singer Sargent paintings and the amusing hypothetical question posed in the My Perfect Portrait post.  It’s really hard to choose a favorite travel experience but I must say I loved the ancient Marathon re-enactors, the mosaics at Ravenna and my photos of the Istanbul Spice Market.

Alaska vintage travel poster

People love this Alaska vintage travel poster! (Flickr, Boston Public Library)

Most Popular Posts: My most popular post describes how historical, artistic and scientific analysis was used to determine what George Washington looked like.  I discussed a beautiful piece of research from Mount Vernon in collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh and Arizona State University.  I half suspect these page views were all from middle school students trying to write a report on George Washington.  Hopefully they learned a little bit about America’s first President and something about forensic anthropology!  My second most popular post was on the virtual reconstruction of Duccio’s Maesta altarpiece. The huge painting is a 14th century masterpiece and raises some interesting questions about restoration.  I’m happy with how that article turned out; it was actually pretty fun tracking down the panels outside of Siena and making the Maesta images!  It’s also interesting to see what posts get views based on internet searches.  A post about vintage travel posters and my very first post which included a UNESCO World Heritage map still get very consistent traffic.

Special Thanks!  I want to thank my readers and 61 followers.  It’s very encouraging to see that others actually like what I post!  Thanks also to top commenter and art news conduit Elliott in Gotham!

Next Steps: I’m still so satisfied from my Turkey trip, I’m not really sure where I am traveling next.  Maybe Peru to soak up some Inca history?  Maybe Vietnam to soak up a new culture? Maybe an art pilgrimage to Ghent? Maybe a real pilgrimage on the Camino de Santiago?  I’ll guess we’ll just have to see. 🙂