Monday, January 15, 2007

"Support our Terps."

Yesterday afternoon I finished the National Gallery of Art and then came home exhausted and famished. But I did see some cool stuff, including (over the course of my 2 days there) works by Renoir, Picasso, Monet, Degas, Van Gogh, Da Vinci, Rothko, O'Keefe, Pollock, and the large Campbell's Soup painting by that guy who's name I forget. An excellent gallery: you should go if you're ever in DC.

Today---Martin Luther King, Jr. Day here in the U.S.A.---I took the subway out to Prince George's Plaza for some grocery shopping, and then took a long walk around the University of Maryland. Wow. Such a huge campus, and with such amazingly enormous red brick buildings. The university just celebrated it's 150th anniversary (1856-2006), and the school teams are known as the Terrapins . . . or Terps for short. And, because EC wanted pictures, here are some that I took to document my travels.

First up, some examples of the architecture. Please note that I am not a photographer, so don't expect artistic composition!

And here's a last one that I took of a window on the Ritchie Coliseum:
Did you notice how the buildings are all very similar? And also that there's no snow here? That's right. We've hardly had any proper winter at all yet, despite the fact that it's now the middle of January. Today it was supposed to be 21 celcius. I even had to take my jacket off when I was strolling through campus.

Speaking of campus (again), there's really something about space and place that makes a big difference on these sprawling grounds. It's very impressive. For example, here's a (admittedly sad-looking right now) Greek memorial of some sort right in the middle part of the huge mall that leads up to the main library. The memorial features a MLK, Jr. quotation on the bottom right of the picture.

And this is a walkway alongside said mall. Imagine walking up this every day?
There were very few other people around since the students are still on break. I also walked past more than a dozen Greek houses, and they are enormous and mostly impressive looking too.

Oh, but the oddest things were seeing a building named "Armoury" with two cannons out front, and this bird. What is it?!

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

soup = Warhol

Don't neglect the national portrait gallery. I used to work there.

Anonymous said...

Hey Jen your bird is a hawk.
-Risa

Anonymous said...

i want one!

Anonymous said...

Red tailed hawk. Buteo jamaicensis

historyjen said...

Hawk! Yeah, I thought so... but in my mind, hawks are super scary and not to be seen by regular people just out on a stroll through a suburban campus. Crazy.
Thanks anonymous (x2).

E :) said...

Gorgeous bird. Apparently there is a statue of Jim Henson just outside the Student Union at UMD. Did you see it?

historyjen said...

Jim Henson: Yes! He's talking to Kermit the Frog. It's great. Thanks for pointing that out to me, E.

Anonymous said...

Don't be knocking the armouries! Where do you think Americans trained for their entry in WWI? A bunch of campuses, esp. in the midwest, still have those buildings, though often times their use has been changed. in other cases, though, ROTC is still based there. Madison still has its armoury, and, I'm pretty sure, Minnesota, home of your beloved Gophers.