Friday, March 6, 2015

The Norman Lindsay Gallery and Museum, Faulconbridge. 6th March 2015




WARNING:   The following contains NUDITY.


I think the gardens here may have been more substantial in earlier times, but at present all the effort (the property is run by volunteers) is put into restoring the buildings.


Photos marked NMP have been, or contain material downloaded from the web, as photos are not allowed to be taken inside the buildings. 


Click on photos to enlarge.


Pelargonium and nude.

"Springwood",  Norman Lindsay's home, was built in the mid 1890's
for the Sydney department store owner Francis Foy. 
 (Francis Foy first named the estate "Maryville" )

Norman Lindsay's home.


Norman Lindsay in front of one of his painting, 1936.
NMP

Sea Horse Fountain

Sea Horse Fountain

I wondered if this was once a garden bed.

Inside gallery and his studio (bottom right).
 NMP

Samples of his works.
 NMP

.......... and now for something completely different, children's books.
NMP


Gazania and gravel path.

Nice lines.

Norman Lindsay Sculpture

Good use for an old bath.

The Satyr and Nymph plus Sea Horse Fountain.


Sculpture Garden and Studio.

Tanked

Water Columns

Norman Lindsay Sculpture

Exaggerated use of cement joinery from earlier days.

Fungi making use of one of the old gaden beds.

Norman Lindsay's sculpture,  Balinese Dancer, C1927.

Peeking over the roof line.

Rosemary.

Norman Lindsay Sculpture on pathway to pool.

That's Lynn on the ......er.....ummm......left.



The swimming pool.

The swimming pool.

The local eucalypts were in flower.


Sphinx sculpture

Sphinx sculpture

Satyr sculpture


Another pelargonium.


Norman Lindsay Sculpture

Woman Holding Breasts

Smell the roses, or in this case, the oleanders.

         Rose Lindsay (Norman's wife) 1924.
                              NMP

Gumnuts and Gravel

Tropics in the mountains.
Bir's Nest Ferns.

I think it needs a cushion.

A forked Maritime Pine.

The Satyr and Nymph.
(let me give you a hand)

Pine Knot

New poster for the movie 'Sirens' which revolves
(very loosely) around Norman Lindsay and his models.





Cameras:  Canon PowerShot SX10 IS and Sony DSC-W690.