Photographic Tour of The Artisans Cup

Thanks Micheal and Oscar for these amazing shots

crataegus's avatarMichael Hagedorn

This is beyond words. This isn’t a photo essay, as I tend to do, but simply photos. I think that if you were not able to come to The Artisans Cup, seeing many photos of it will give you a sense of the magnitude and emotional impact of the design, lighting, and quality of the trees.

I thank my friend Oscar Jonker for use of these photos. He was there in the first couple hours when the Cup was finished setting up, and then he zipped right to the hotel and blogged about it. I was too tired here in Portland to even think of writing, so I begged the use his lightning fast post from Bonsai Empire. Thanks Oscar for all these great photos! (Only two are mine…the first and the last).

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The Artisans Cup– An Exhibition of American Bonsai

Great coverage from Bill of a ground breaking event

William N. Valavanis's avatarValavanis Bonsai Blog

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The inaugural Artisans Cup Exhibition was held at the Portland Art Museum on September 25-27, 2015. The well attended and dramatic show of 72 exhibits featured nearly 100 individual trees, if all the shohin and three point bonsai are counted. The black unique metal and wood individual tables were professionally designed and installed by a fabricator. The exhibition gallery was darkened and was only lighted by two small lights adjusted by a professional photographer to highlight the focal point of each bonsai display.

The successful Artisan Cup exhibition was organized and tightly controlled by Chelsea Neil. Congratulations to Ryan and Chelsea Neil, sponsors of the Artisans Cup Exhibition.

Like my other blog entries, this is my informal personal report with my amateur photographs. These photos do NOT fairly represent the Artisans Cup Exhibition, which featured numerous large native juniper bonsai, but rather bonsai, which interested and impressed me during the…

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The Haunted Ancient Yew in Chipping

IMG_4418Today Carolyn and I visited an ancient Yew in the grounds of St Bartholomew’s Church, Chipping in The County Palatine Of Lancaster. The church was established at some time before 1230 and rebuilt in 1506. As well as the fine specimen which grows at the SE corner of the church, there are a further 6 yews in the churchyard. The largest of these girths 2m 30cm at 20cm. This amazing tree has had a major branch supported for hundreds of years by two iron struts. The tree is in remarkable condition and commands an impressive location in the centre of the village.

Across the road from the church is The Sun Inn, a 17th Century local’s pub steeped in history and haunted by the ghost of Lizzie Dean.
Lizzie was a scullery maid who liked to dress in colourful clothing. In 1835 the poor girl had the misfortune of meeting a local lad who told her he loved her deeply. He played a cruel trick by proposing to her, in the hope that he could have his wicked way.

After he had conducted his plan successfully, he informed poor Lizzie that he no longer wished to marry her. Lizzie’s heart was broken in two, and to add to her heartache her ex-lover proposed to her best friend, and she, against Lizzie’s wishes, agreed to marry him.

On the day of the wedding at St Bartholomew’s Church, Lizzie made her way up to the pub attic that overlooked the church yard. She wrote a suicide note, placed a rope around her neck, and hanged herself in the Sun Inn’s attic.

In her suicide note she wrote “I want to be buried at the entrance to the church so my lover and my best friend will always have to walk past my grave every time they go to church.”

Her grave is under the huge Yew tree in the graveyard of St Bartholomew’s Church, and she is said to walk in and through the ancient yew on the way to her resting place.

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