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The home page shows the most recent blog entry. To explore the blog and for information on the MA Landscape Architecture course please click on the menus below. 'So you want to be a landscape architect?' recounts the highs and lows of my conversion year at Leeds Metropolitan. The Masters section is dedicated to my MA year on exchange in Sweden and back in Leeds.
Some of the contents pages above open up into new sites, such as my pintrest page.
If you are looking for my official work and portfolio as a Landscape Architecture student then please visit my website www. soniajackett. com

All below images are strictly copyright of © Sonia Jackett 2013.

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Admin Post

Hi all, 

As I mentioned in my last post, I am going to be working on a more professional website alongside this blog. As I result I have changed the website address from soniajackett.blogspot.com to peripateticisland.blogspot.com - so please take note! More information and links to be provided soon regarding the website.

Meanwhile....have you checked out my other new features and side projects? 

Currently working on Counterfeit Food - still a tumblr site but hoping to get a more official look soon!

And if you're into visuals (or a curious set of friends and family), I've added a photoblogroll of My Peripatetic Life.

All the best,

Sonia

Friday, 12 July 2013

Venice

35mm Pentax Super ME

Gloss finish (don't know why I did that, will definitely be going back to matt)

If you have had a gander through my previous photos you will have notice that I am intrigued by vanishing points; down streets and alley ways, enfilades, below two trains in a railway station frame a vanishing point as it disappears into the countryside. Why so? I honestly am still trying to pick it apart, I think somewhere it is along the lines of a mobius strip - that there is always more to see, to experience and it could be right...down.....there....and it comes back to me as the starting point. I have the power to walk down towards that "point." At the same time I think I see that vanishing point as something running away from me, something I am trying to chase - that insatiable hunger to always want to do/see/feel/live more. 

When I took these pictures however, I was in Venice. And if you read my last blog post you would see how it is the people who swarm to venice - the locals, the countrymen, the tourists, who you rub intrinsic shoulders with, and share La Serenissima with - then you would know it was also this that makes the experience of Venice. Venice is beautiful but the smells, noise, chatter, and character of Venice is either now made by people, or has been made people - lest we forget that. So in these photos, I have tried to incorporate these thoughts - the layers of Venice, physical and material but also ... the human dimension.










Venetian Character



Campo S.Giacomo Da L'Orio








Four Venetians




Venice Santa Lucia 


Vicenza



Villa Rotunda, Vicenza


Vicenza



Venice






Mass in Salute


Maurizio Nannuci at the Guggenheim






From the Belfry of San Giorgio Maggiore



Campinale



Da mangiare, Da Damminare, Da Vivere

Sunday, 7 July 2013

La Serenissima


Earlier this month I returned to one of my favourite cities - Venice. A few photos of the trip can be found on MyPeripateticLife  photoblogroll.  

We stayed on the top floor of an apartment building, just east of St Mark's Square. The terracotta roofs filled with make-shift balcony gardens spanned as far as the my eye could see, only intercepted by the occasional bird and worn bell tower. 


Terracotta Rooftops from the apartment window 


Smells; cooking oils, herbs, noises, calls, church bells and sunlight created an aroma of serenity. I was in La Serenissima - the most serene state of Italy, otherwise known as Venice. 



Venice is the ultimate city to walk in. I walked down the Fondamenta Minotto, sketched a boat. I went to the Giardani Pappadoroli, visited San Giacomo dell' Ora, Frari, San Rocco, bartered in the Rialto market. 
Campo Santi Giovanni E Paolo 

The Campo S.Giacomo Da L'Orio was a delight to stumble up - a pocket park in the middle of Venice whilst the Campo S.Giovanni E Paolo was the perfect location to people watch, framed by a bridge and the basilica, its namesake. 

On Wednesday we went to Vicenza. Every time I cross a bridge in Venice, the sun beating down, the canals a murky aquamarine with texture like a Canelleto painting - I think; "to live somewhere that gives you so much please...." I though that about the place. In Vicenza, or just outside, we visited La Rotunda, and I thought it there too, but actually about the villa itself. Palladio's masterpiece was recently bought and restored by a wealthy American. I am not envious though, I am just glad someone appreciates it every single day. 


Piazza dei Signori, Vicenza 

They say Venice is two maps layered upon one another. That is what it is like - history saturated in twists and turns. When I walk around Venice, I always appreciate it for its present. But. I never think of it without, in the back of my mind, in some small way, it's history. 

The streets are always full of myself, the walker, the dreamer and the Venetian in Prada or Gucci, the Venetian in full swing with their shopping back from the Rialto and the teams of souls from every corner of the globe. Those that have had the pure pleasure to immerse themselves in La Serenissima since its foundation. 

Couples in St Mark's Square