Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Corcomroe Abbey, Ireland for Black and white community

 


On a quiet weekend away from the clinical cadence of a conference in Dublin, I drifted westward into the limestone hush of the Burren, where time feels less like a sequence and more like a residue. There, half-held by earth and sky, stood Corcomroe Abbey—a structure that does not announce itself, but rather emerges, as though it had always been waiting for the light to find it again.

The abbey carries the gravity of the 13th century, founded around 1194 and later rebuilt under the patronage of the O’Brien kings of Thomond. It belongs to the Cistercian Order, whose architectural restraint is evident in every line: no ornament for ornament’s sake, only the quiet geometry of devotion. Even in ruin, it feels deliberate. The stone—ashen, weathered, patient—absorbs light unevenly, lending itself to the kind of high-contrast rendering my old Canon 6D paired with 14mm f/2.8 would honour so well.

Through that wide glass, the nave stretches with solemn clarity. The lancet windows, stripped of their glass centuries ago, now frame only sky—sometimes pale, sometimes brooding—each opening a quiet negotiation between absence and presence. The abbey’s most striking detail rests near the chancel: the finely carved tomb of King Conor na Siudane O’Brien, its effigy worn but still unmistakably regal. Time has softened the features, but not erased the intent.

There is something inherently monastic about the way your image resolves—high contrast, almost austere, as though the sensor itself understood the discipline of the place. The Burren’s karst landscape, with its cracked pavements of limestone, mirrors the abbey’s own fractures. Both seem less broken than distilled.

No crowds pressed in, no voices lingered. Just the wind threading through empty arches, and the faint echo of a life once structured by prayer, silence, and stone. In that frame—wide, deliberate, and slightly aged in tone—you didn’t just capture a ruin. You caught a place still negotiating with time, still holding its form against the slow erosion of centuries.


Canon 6D

FE 14mm f2.8 



Linking Black and White community

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Main Hall Chamber of Bonratty Castle


Sunday, May 10, 2015

West Coast of Ireland


A rare weather in west Ireland. This blue view lasted a few secs...

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Bonratty Castle, Ireland


This castle was built in 1400s. No modern modifications on the castle itself at all. 

Lower lake of Ring of Kerry, Ireland


This place is similar to Hamilton Island view except this is a fresh water lake in west of Ireland.

It is just simply lovely to feel the nature here.