Showing posts with label waterloo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waterloo. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2022

April 26 2022 - The Red Roofs

 

Search engine "BING" has a picture of Gaspe today with the buildings below.  Their red roofs make me think of old traditions.  Are red roofs an old tradition?

Yes.  They were made of clay tiles. They are still on traditional houses in Europe.  Pictures of Prague are spectacular.  

The pictures that come up are Red Roof Inns and what else?  Pizza Hut!  Here's the story from Pizza Hut.  The article has left out the names of the founders.  I can only assume this is purposeful.  They are Dan and Frank Carney and opened the first Pizza Hut in 1958. 

 

"The red roof design didn’t come along until 1969, when the restaurant brand started to grow internationally. The two brothers began to worry about competition, and started to think about new, creative ways to distinguish their Pizza Hut restaurants. The brothers called up a college friend and fraternity brother who happened to be an architect and artist in Wichita: Richard D. Burke. As the story goes, Burke had originally charged the brothers a hefty upfront fee that the fledgling pizza start-up wasn’t able to scrape together. Instead, they offered Burke $100 per store built using his design, never guessing that Pizza Hut would become the global company that it is today.

One of the architects who worked with Burke reports that the red roof design was a fusion of common sense, the architectural taste of the 1950s, and a need for the design to be both remarkable and appealing in a variety of locations. The same year the design was being drafted, Pizza Hut expanded to their first locations in Canada, Mexico, Germany, and Australia."

The Wikipedia entry says that the iconic Pizza Hut building style was designed in 1963 by Chicago architect George Lindstrom. So it likely is the roof that was designed by Richard D. Burke.

This is the logo used from 1974 to 1999.  It has that famous red roof.  It looks perfect on top of the Seagram Distillers Building in Waterloo.

 

Read more daily posts here:
marilyncornwellblog.com

Purchase works here:
Fine Art America- marilyncornwellart.com
Redbubble - marilyncornwellart.ca

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Nov 5 202 - How Much Does a Grecian Urn

 

Earlier in the week, I was researching decorative outdoor urns for the month of November.  This would be something in the conifer blue tones such as Juniper.

This picture popped up so I checked it out. It is carved from a single block of carrara marble. This particular photograph was taken by Sir Cecil Beaton.  It is Queen Elizabeth posed in front of the Waterloo Urn at Buckingham Palace in 1938.  The urn is still there today.


This garden urn is 15 feet tall and weights 40 tons. Napoleon lay claim to the block of stone when he was travelling through Tuscany on his way to make war in Russia in 1812. It is expected he intended to have victorious scenes carved on it to commemorate his victories.  However, he was defeated, and the 'vase' was presented unfinished to the Prince Regent in 1815, who became George IV, and had the sculptor Richard Westmacott commemorate the Battle of Waterloo and other various scenes. 

The urn proved too heavy for the Waterloo Chamber in Windsor Castle for which it was intended, and was presented to the National Gallery. In 1906 it was restored to the monarchy and placed in the gardens of Buckingham Palace, where it  no longer dwarfs its surroundings.

Extraordinarily large vases or kraters (a mixing vessel) originated in Athens and Rome. Famous is the Borghese Vase, a monumental bell-shaped krater sculpted in Athens from Pentelic marble in the 1st century BC.  It is now in the Louvre.  Another monumental marble bell-shaped krater was the Medici Vase - sculpted in Athens in the 1st century AD.  It is now in Florence. These have always been outdoor "garden" elements - even from their beginnings.

My own version of the big urn comes from the Niagara Falls Botanical Garden.  This picture comes from a winter visit to the Butterfly Conservatory. 

As for frosty leaves, I would be very pleased if we got some frost like this.  This is a few years ago - and coincided perfectly with the fallen Japanese Maple leaves.



 

 
R