Lavinia Iulia Falcan Illustrates Children’s Book

The Little Pink Cloud (Illustration: Lavinia Iulia Falcan)

“Imagination has brought mankind through the Dark Ages to its present state of civilization. (…) The imaginative child will become the imaginative man or woman most apt to create, to invent, and therefore to foster civilization. A prominent educator tells me that fairy tales are of untold value in developing imagination in the young. I believe it.”
—L. Frank Baum, The Lost Prinzess of Oz, 1917, Introduction

My friend and wonderful artist Lavinia Iulia Falcan has illustrated a children’s book and I just love the Little Pink Cloud! So far the book is available in Romania and in Romanian only, but maybe it will we translated into English so that children (and their parents!) here can also enjoy Lavinia’s wonderful pictures.

I met Lavinia earlier this year at “Emerging Visions / Plurality of Expressions” in New York where we both exhibited our art. She loves colors and indulges in them in her paintings, illustrations, and murals. Check out her art on her webpage and follow her on Instagram and Facebook!

“Skies/Himmel” a Winner at the 2017 International Photography Awards

"Skies/Himmel" a Winner at IPA 2017

I just found out that “Skies/Himmel” has made a 3rd place at this year’s International Photography Awards (IPA)! The prestigious IPA is a sister-effort of the Lucie Foundation. The Foundation’s mission is “to honor master photographers, to discover new and emerging talent, and to promote the appreciation of photography.” Incepted in 2003, the IPA has this year received nearly 15,000 submissions from over 165 countries across the globe. I feel deeply humbled and grateful that the jury panel has selected “Skies/Himmel” as a winner in the Book – Monograph category.

Guessing Clouds

Nemo, 2015.

Hamlet: Do you see yonder cloud that’s almost in shape of a camel?
Lord Polonius: By th’ mass, and ‘tis, like a camel, indeed.
Hamlet: Methinks it is like a weasel.
Lord Polonius: It is back’d like a weasel.
Hamlet: Or like a whale.
Lord Polonius: Very like a whale.”
William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act III, Scene ii

Even though Hamlet might have been testing his chief counselor there and things did not end well, I just love guessing clouds! Do you remember spending afternoons lying in the grass with friends as a child, looking at the sky, trying to outdo one another in what you could see there? Telling stories about heroes, monsters, and adventures? What happy, carefree days those were!

And what do you see in the picture above? I see little clownfish Nemo playing in the ocean. Looks like he is having fun!

Types of Clouds

White Blue Grey (5), 2015.

“I pointed out the different types of clouds and what they told of the weather to come. She showed me the shapes they held: a rose, a harp, a waterfall.”
Patrick Rothfuss, The Name of the Wind, 2007, Chapter 33

Nephology, the science of clouds, categorizes different types of clouds depending on their distance from the Earth and on their shapes. For high-level clouds the prefix cirro- is used, with alto- used for mid-level clouds. Low-level and mixed-level clouds usually have no prefix. Sheets of clouds are called stratus clouds, stratus being Latin for “stretched and spread out”. Puffy clouds are called cumulus clouds, cumulus being Latin for “heap or pile”. By combining altitude and shape, this system provides categories and names for all the wonderful cloud phenomena in the sky. Based on this system, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) publishes its International Cloud Atlas. And something named “stratocumulus stratiformis” just has to be beautiful, right?

The by GG – Fine Art Photography Shop Is Online

The by GG – Fine Art Photography Shop

“… shops on either side, can human industry or ingenuity go farther? Ah, human felicity! to have at once so many wants suggested and supplied! Wretched Grecian daughters! miserable Roman matrons! to whom shopping was an unknown pleasure, what did, what could employ them? Harm, no doubt; for ‘Satan finds mischief still for idle hands to do.’ But, without that grand resource, how they got through the four-and-twenty hours, like the man with the iron mask, remains a mystery.”
Letitia Elizabeth Landon, Romance and Reality, 1831, Volume 1, Chapter X

Proudly announcing that phase one of the by GG – Fine Art Photography Shop is now online: At Artsies by GG you find your favorite Skies by Gabriele Golissa™ photograph as an accessory or a keepsake. So far you can choose between greeting cards, Galaxy and iPhone cases, and tote bags with some of my most cherished Skies. For open edition photographs you will also find various print options in different sizes; for limited edition photographs I offer small prints (8 x 6 in) on different surfaces. Should you prefer your prints framed, you can also choose between different framing alternatives. So take a look right here!

I am planning on selling limited edition prints from my website again some time soon. Check back later for that, before any mischief happens 🙂