Turner’s Colours in Co. Waterford ~ Gatherings from Ireland # 48

I had made arrangements with myself to soak  in the last weekend of this year’s  Turner Exhibition at the National Gallery of Ireland  in Dublin on Saturday and Sunday. However, life got in the way and I never made it.

http://www.nationalgallery.ie/

In the midst of everything, I just  couldn’t get Turner and his seascapes, with those magnificent colours of his, out of my mind. So I decided that the next best thing to being at the exhibition was to work with the lovely coast that I have all around me here in Co. Waterford.

It has been a stormy few days all I could do while the greyness lingered was to collect Turner-coloured stones from the beach.  Then, I managed to capture a sunset and this morning was sheer ecstasy as Tramore saw the most beautiful sunrise at high tide in stormy seas.

So, I hope you enjoy this little selection:

Stones at Newtown Cove, Tramore, Co. Waterford
Stones at Newtown Cove, Tramore, Co. Waterford
Sunset at Stradbally Cove, Co. Waterford
Sunset at Stradbally Cove, Co. Waterford

A Hint of Sunrise over Tramore Bay, Co. Waterford
A Hint of Sunrise over Tramore Bay, Co. Waterford
Sunrise over Tramore Bay, Co. Waterford.
Sunrise over Tramore Bay, Co. Waterford.

Waves at Sunrise in Newtown Cove, Co. Waterford.
Waves at Sunrise in Newtown Cove, Co. Waterford.

National Gallery of Ireland ~ Turner Exhibition

Yesterday, I was struck by discovering that November 3o was a highly significant date in the lives of two of the world’s most quoted people: Mark Twain, who was born on November 30 in 1835 and Oscar Wilde, who died on November 30 in 1900.

You might well wonder what all this has to do with the National Gallery of Ireland and the Turner Exhibition which takes place there every January.

Well, for me, the link between all three is my late father. He absolutely loved quick wit and  always had a few books of ‘quotable quotes’ close at hand.  The tougher the situation, the more he leaned into these books to garner a chuckle or nugget of inspiration.

I remember well sitting by his hospital bed in Coronary Care waiting for him to wake up.  I was flicking through one of his ‘old companions’ and found myself  totally captivated by the quotes that he had marked. He woke to find me with a big smile on my face and wanted to know what was so funny. I began reading some of the quotes to him and soon we were both laughing with sufficient gusto to entice a nurse over to us. Her words: ‘ You two know how to enjoy yourselves ~ would you like a cup of tea?’  Always one with a sweet tooth, Father seized his moment and said: ‘ Oh, tea would be lovely especially with a few chocolate biscuits!’  The tea and biscuits arrived in jig time!

So, yesterday on learning it was Mark Twain’s birthday, I went to one of  Father’s trusty books of quotable quotes and had a look to see what quotes he had earmarked.  This was the one that jumped out at me:

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things  you didn’t do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the  bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover.”  

 ( Mark Twain)

This quote immediately brought the paintings of J.M.W. Turner into my mind and how Father had introduced me to the January Exhibition of Turner’s work at the National Gallery of Ireland.  What an antidote to post-Christmas blues! I’m already planning January’s trip ~ and yes, I will Explore, Dream and Discover!  Discover the National Gallery of Ireland and its Collections

A Windy Day(J.M.W. Turner)
A Windy Day
(J.M.W. Turner)