This blog is for sharing my picture postcards received from time to time with folks who may be similarly interested. Please also see my stamps and first day covers blog www.letstalkstamps.blogspot.com
Welcome
Добро пожаловать к этому международному месту открытки изображения.
Benvenuto a questo luogo internazionale della cartolina di immagine.
Καλωσορίστε σε αυτήν την διεθνή περιοχή καρτών εικόνων.
Willkommen zu diesem internationalen Abbildungspostkarteaufstellungsort.
Bienvenue à cet emplacement international de carte postale.
Onthaal aan deze Internationale plaats van de beeldprentbriefkaar.
Welcome to this International picture postcard site.
(Please Click on the Picture for an Enlarged View)
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Christmas stamps 2014
This maxicard shows his
year’s Finnish Christmas stamps, the artwork of Kristina Segercrantz,
famous for several award-winning book illustrations. With these stamps executed
with watercolor technique, Segercrantz wants to create a true Christmas
fairy-tale atmosphere. In the blue-hued Christmas Eve Christmas-tariff
stamp, an elf girl enjoys the enchanting
atmosphere with a Christmas reindeer in candlelight. In the other Christmas
stamp, the orange-hued Christmas Morning 1st-class stamp, an elf rings a large Christmas bell, feet
off the ground.
The graphic design of
the Christmas stamps comes from Olavi Hankimo.
Thank you Ella.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Kouvola Railway Station, 1902.
Kouvola is
a town and municipality in
south-eastern Finland.
It is located 134 kilometres (83 mi) northeast of the capital, Helsinki.
The
city has a population of 86,943 (31 January 2014) and
covers an area of 2,883.30 square kilometres (1,113.25 sq mi) of
which 325.06 km2(125.51 sq mi) is water. The population
density is
33.99 inhabitants per square kilometre (88.0 /sq mi).
Kouvola's
central location within Finland's borders and as a border post between the European
Union and Russian
Federation makes
it a quite lively town.] The town originally grew up around
the junction of the north-south and east-west rail tracks. It was also a major
road transport junction.
The card sent to me by Reino shows the Kouvola Railway Station
as it was in 1902.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
World Post Day in Helsinki
The picture on the card is that of The Market Square in
Helsinki at the South Harbour. The market is internationally famous. The booths
here sell traditional market foods and treats, as well as handicrafts and
souvenirs. There is also a heated café tent where you can comfortably sip
steaming hot coffee even on the coldest days in winter.
South Harbour is a bay and harbour area immediately
next to the centre of the city of Helsinki, Finland. It is the largest
passenger harbour in Finland, and 5.4 million passengers travel through it
every year. Most of the harbour's traffic is to Stockholm, Sweden and Tallinn,
Estonia, and for cruises.
Ella sent me this card essentially as it was World Postal or Stamp Day on 9.10.2014. The
stamp is a personalised one by the Post Office in Helsinki. The stamp shows an
illuminated water front in Helsinki. The postmark is peculiar to Helsinki only
on this day.
I had featured a maxi card about Philately Day in Helsinki in 2013
(see my post dated 3.11.2013).
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
The Salzkammergut, Austria
The Salzkammergut is a resort area located in Austria. It stretches from the City of Salzburg eastwards along the Austrian Alpine Foreland and theNorthern Limestone Alps to the peaks of the Dachstein Mountains, spanning the federal states of Upper Austria, Salzburg, and Styria. The main river of the region is the Traun, a right tributary of the Danube. The name Salzkammergut literally means "Estate
of the Salt Chamber" and derives from the Imperial Salt Chamber, the authority charged with running the precious salt mines of the Habsburg Monarchy. It is a UNESCO World
Heritage Site.
With its numerous lakes and
mountains, the Salzkammergut offers many opportunities to take part in water sports, bathing, hiking, cycli ng, caving, golf and relaxing around lakes such as the Grundlsee orToplitzsee. The Katrinalm, an alpine pasture, is
found near Bad Ischl. Typical Salzkammergut culinary specialities
include dishes such as Kaiserschmarrn (cut-up and sugared pancake with raisins), Krapfen (similar
to doughnuts) or Lebkuchen (gingerbread).
I think this card is one of the
most beautiful cards I have ever received. Thank you Claudia for sending it to me. I think you are very lucky to be living in this wonderful region.
Friday, October 10, 2014
Socorro, New Mexico
In 1598 Juan de Onate’s Spanish colonization expedition
arrived here at the Piro Pueblo at Pialbo. They renamed it Socorro owing to the food and shelter provided by Pialbo’s
inhabitants. The pueblo and its Spanish mission were destroyed during the Pueblo Revolt, and the area was
not resettled until 1815. A west bank road connected Socorro to the Camino Real
on the east side of the Rio Grande.
Thank you Sam-Quito
for this nice card from New Mexico.
Saturday, October 04, 2014
Tom of Finland
Touko Laaksonen (8
May 1920 – 7 November 1991), best known by his pseudonym Tom
of Finland, was a Finnish artist
notable for his stylized homoerotic fetish art and
his influence on late twentieth century gay culture. He has been called the
"most influential creator of gay pornographic images" by cultural
historian Joseph W. Slade.
Over
the course of four decades he produced some 3500 illustrations, mostly
featuring men with exaggerated primary and secondary sex traits with tight or
partially removed clothing.
During his lifetime and beyond,
Laaksonen's work has drawn both admiration and disdain from different quarters
of the artistic community. Laaksonen developed a friendship with gay
photographer Robert
Mapplethorpe, whose work depicting sado-masochism and f etish iconography was
also subject to controversy.
A
controversial theme in his drawings was the erotic treatment of men in Nazi
uniforms. They form a small part of his overall work, but the typically
flattering visual treatment of these characters has led some viewers to infer
sympathy or affinity for Nazism, and they have been omitted from most recent
anthologies of his work. Later in his career Laaksonen disavowed this work and
was at pains to dissociate himself and his work from fascist or racist
ideologies. He also depicted a significant number of black men in his drawings,
with no overt racial or political message in the context in which they appear;
although they bear some commonality with racist caricatures of
the "hypersexual" black male, these traits are shared by Laaksonen's
white characters as well.
Art
critics have mixed views about Laaksonen's work. His detailed drawing technique
has led to him being described as a 'master with a pencil', while in contrast a
reviewer for Dutch newspaper Het Parool described
his work as 'illustrative but without expressivity'.
There
is considerable argument over whether his depiction of 'supermen' (male
characters with huge sexual organs and muscles) is facile and distasteful, or
whether there is a deeper complexity in the work which plays with and subverts
those stereotypes. For example, some critics have noted instances of apparent
tenderness between traditionally tough, masculine characters, or playful smiles
in sado-masochistic scenes.
In
either case, there remains a large constituency who admire the work on a purely
utilitarian basis, as described by Rob Meijer, owner of a leather shop
and art gallery in Amsterdam, "These works are not conversation pieces,
they're masturbation pieces."
Writing
for Artforum,
Kevin Killian said that seeing Tom of Finland originals “produces a strong
respect for his nimble, witty creation”. Kate Wolf writes that “Tom of Finland
helped pave the way to gay liberation”.
Thank you Dear Ella for these interesting cards.
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