by Leiermann | Mar 20, 2022 | Fine Arts, Fine Arts, History
Rouen – Cidre, Joie et Cathédrale by Anja Weinberger Or: What do Claude Monet and the young man with a green mohawk have in common? “You’ve heard one, you’ve heard them all.” Hasn’t each of us heard or perhaps even uttered this...
by Leiermann | Mar 19, 2022 | Fine Arts, Fine Arts, History
On the road to Amiens by Anja Weinberger I love to look – more precisely, I love to sit in a church and let the space affect me. And even more precisely: my favorite thing to do before “looking at the church” is to read everything that anyone has...
by Leiermann | Feb 9, 2022 | Fine Arts, Fine Arts, Fine Arts, History, Uncategorized
Enchanted Brittany by Anja Weinberger Enchanted Brittany – churchyards and culinary delights at the end of the world In Brittany, that is, in the extreme northwest of France, there are these wonderful, legendary and usually...
by Leiermann | Jul 18, 2021 | Fine Arts, Fine Arts, History
The long journey to Mont Saint Michel by Anja Weinberger Probably everyone knows this. There are things or situations or simply thoughts that run through our minds more often than others. It doesn’t necessarily have to be superficial. In my case, it’s...
by Leiermann | Sep 3, 2020 | Biographies, Biographies Literature, Literature
Michael Ende von Stefan Havlik The freedom of fantasy – on the 25th anniversary of Michael Ende’s death On September 1, 1995, the “Reigen seliger Geister” (“Circle of Blessed Spirits”) resounds in Munich’s Waldfriedhof:...