No, I did not spell gesundheit wrong, nor am I working on a new Volkswagen Farfegnugen ad.
I am referring to the following four images taken on our Christmas Market tour in Germany and France, back in early December.
They all deal with different periods of Kunstgeschichte or more simply put in english – Art History.
Lesson number one.

This is St Paulin’s Church in Trier, Germany. St Paulin’s is a beautiful example of the baroque-rococo style and was completed in 1751. The imagery on the ceiling was done by Christoph Thomas Scheffler in 1743 and features two scenes from the life of Paulinus, a Trier bishop who was exiled in 353.
Lesson number two.

From St Martin’s Cathedral in Mainz, Germany. While the romanesque styled St Martin’s is much older than St Paulin’s, these windows and the painted backdrop for the crucifix are much more recent and what caught my eye ( even more so than St Stephen’s famous blue windows by Marc Chagall ).
Lesson number three.

Shot from our tour bus near the Porta Nigra or Black Gate in Trier, Germany, this fine example of modern street art or “tagging” brightened up an otherwise dreary cement bridge abutment.
Lesson number four.

Depending on where in this timeline you decide to put post modern, this shot could actually come before lesson three.
Anyone care to guess what it is? OK, I’ll tell you.
This is actually the lower portion of the reception desk at the Hotel Krone in Tubingen, Germany. By day – it is frosted white plexiglass, but at night when the room lights are dimmed, it glows from within – as if on fire.
So what was supposed to be a tour of the region’s Christmas markets, became more of a lesson in art history and appreciation. We definitely enjoyed the markets, but there was so much more to see and even more that we missed.
I guess there’s always next time…..Enjoy!
Chuck