Takamatsu Exhibitions
2014年02月18日
February is the coldest month in Japan and we’ve experienced two heavy falls of snow this month. As I’m always interested in what’s going on in the local galleries, I visited the Mure Stone museum in Mure cho, close by to Takamatsu.
By chance, and exciting exhibition of sculptures was on display by a local resident & Italian artist Luca Roma.
The work was of a very high standard as anything made by this very creative man and as I prefer natural light, I used the occasion to take some pictures of his work for the blog.
This exhibition will run through February and I will be writing about the Stone museum in more detail later this month.
Other bloggers in Takamatsu of interest:
http://cathy.ashita-sanuki.jp
http://ogijima.com
http://ww8.tiki.ne.jp/~tmath/home/
Where we are:
http://wikitravel.org/en/Takamatsu
http://www.city.takamatsu.kagawa.jp/english/
http://www.i-pal.or.jp/profile/topics/kagawas-welcome-card.html
By chance, and exciting exhibition of sculptures was on display by a local resident & Italian artist Luca Roma.
The work was of a very high standard as anything made by this very creative man and as I prefer natural light, I used the occasion to take some pictures of his work for the blog.
This exhibition will run through February and I will be writing about the Stone museum in more detail later this month.
Other bloggers in Takamatsu of interest:
http://cathy.ashita-sanuki.jp
http://ogijima.com
http://ww8.tiki.ne.jp/~tmath/home/
Where we are:
http://wikitravel.org/en/Takamatsu
http://www.city.takamatsu.kagawa.jp/english/
http://www.i-pal.or.jp/profile/topics/kagawas-welcome-card.html
"Pat has lived in Takamatsu continuously since arriving here on a one year study and leave 1981. Originally from Tasmania, Australia, he was involved in education at a variety of levels including as a specialist teacher for children with learning difficulties, and at senior high schools throughout the state. Pat is employed full-time by the i-pal Kagawa International Exchange as a co-oridintaor for international relations amongst other duties including traveling to schools and giving talks in Japanese to kids about Australia. He has been involved with youth education exchanges between Japan and Australia for many years.
Pat has been many things in his colorful life including a seaman, helmsman, welder, carpenter, traffic warden, scholarship/studentship winner at the university of Tasmania, staff at the Australian Embassy in London to name but a few. Pat has far too many hobbies which include tennis, playing jazz flutes and saxes, riding bicycles with the Takamatsu Cycling Club all of which his long-suffering family tolerate. Recently he's become interested in painting again. His wife wishes he would put more time in to helping around the house and the garden which he artfully avoids ..."
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Posted by pat at 21:24