Monthly Archives: October 2017

The Clark Art Institute

World class.

Sterling Clark made money in the smartest way possible. He chose his (grand)parents well. Grandpa was the co-founder of the Singer Sewing Machine Company which created one of the great American industrial revolution fortunes. His grandson fell in love with art, especially the French impressionists, and had much of the collection paid for by the time of the Great Depression.

Surviving the latter, as smart money did, he became paranoid about the cold war destroying his collection in New York and moved it in the 1950s to Williamstown, Massachusetts, right by Williams College. The collection specializes in Renoir with a smattering of Monet, Sisley and Pissarro, along with some truly awful academic art by William Bouguereau. Those can be excused in light of the strength of the Impressionist pieces. There are also several fine John Singer Sargent portraits.

My son and I visited the Clark on a revisit to WIlliams College and had a fun time of it.


The entrance space is large, light and airy.


The pool uses recycled water. Of course. (Isn’t all water ‘recycled’?)


Winston enter the main gallery through the modern addition in back.


Severe but well done, the architecture of the addition integrates well.


Maybe the finest Renoir collection this side of the Louvre.

If Renoir is your thing, a visit to the Clark is recommended.

Panny GX7 snaps, 12-35mm f/2.8 Vario lens, a universal purpose lens of stellar quality and low bulk.

Vermont scenes

Beauty, subtly written.


The marker denotes Williamsville.

Vermont on a fall day is special, as a round trip from Brattleboro via Wilmington, Dover and WIlliamsville proves.


Between Wilmington and Dover.


Fall colors are coming.


Single lane covered bridge between Williamsville and Brattleboro.


Wiliiamsville Volunteer Fire Department.


Williamsville general store.


Standard Oil Company of New York, one of the original Rockefeller oil companies resulting from the 1911 anti-trust break-up of Standard Oil, became Mobil in 1920 and merged with Exxon in 1999. Capitalism prefers monoopolies to competition, and is busy recreating the Standard Oil Trust. Rockefeller would be proud, even if the sign has been used for target practice.


Feed and Grain.


Baptist church near Dover.

All snaps on the Panny GX7 with the 12-35mm Vario, which does a lovely job of rendering color and detail.

At the off

School race day.

Every fall weekend sees my son run against other local area schools in New England in a fiercely competitive environment which breeds the leaders of the next generation.


Winston at right, arrowed.

Yesterday’s venue was at Loomis Chaffee school, set on their magnificent Connecticut campus an hour south of my boy’s school, Northfield Mount Hermon in Massachusetts. The jewel-like Loomis campus comprises 300 acres of which 290 are wetland, flooding annually. The school buildings are set on the elevated section you see behind the cross country runners, known as ‘The Island’, the beautiful cloisters and quad modeled after those at the University of Virginia.

On this occasion my boy’s school was running against three Connecticut powerhouses, Loomis, Hotchkiss and Taft, the latter created by the brother of US president William Howard Taft, who has the unique distinction of being the only US president to go on to serve as a US Supreme Court justice.


Cloisters on the Loomis Chaffee quad.

A picture perfect fall day.

Panny GX7, 12-35mm f/2.8 Vario.