I took my World Literature Students to the British Museum on Thursday, July 25. They were there for several hours, but I spent the entire day in this great museum.
For the first half of the day, I re-familiarized myself with their collections, particularly the ones I asked my students to concentrate on: the ancient world (Greek, Roman, Assyrian, and Egyptian) and the Enlightenment display. The latter was new to me; it took up a long room on the right side of the museum where the British Library used to be. Typically, the museum was crowded, but I enjoyed wandering through the halls I saw many years ago.
After lunch, the students went elsewhere, so I retrieved my camera and a bite to eat before getting back to it. I retraced my morning steps, this time armed with the 5D. I mentally planned which rooms needed which lens during my morning walk, so I was pretty much ready for an afternoon shoot.
When I was there in 2000, I had my first digital camera. It was one of those Sonys that stored the captured images on floppy disk! The quality was terrible; it would be like coming to England armed with only my iPhone for photos. Not a good solution. So many of the photos I took in 2000 needed updating, and this time I had the right equipment. I especially wanted to revisit the bust of Homer. (For comparison, here’s the one I took in 2000. See the difference? I made the size smaller so the resolution and noise weren’t so terrible.)
I also liked the statue of Venus being startled in her bath. This is a popular one, so getting a clear shot was a challenge. The Assyrian collections are also vast; I’ll pretend this one is Gilgamesh. I also included the most awkward pose ever.
Take a stroll of your own through my collection. It’s in no particular order, so I’m going to try to label them soon.









I finally got caught up and took a gander and your blog and photos. Fabulous, to say the least. I’m so excited that you get to be there with all your new gear. The one of Canterbury Cathedral was awesome . . . you might want to call some stock photo folks when you get back and see if they want it.
Enjoy, Professor!!
M
Thanks, Monica. I don’t want to come back. No one would miss me, right?