Carved directly into the sheer face of a massive granite monolith, the ancient Sasseruwa (Reswehera) Buddha statue of Sri Lanka stands as a timeless monument to spiritual endurance. Sculpted over fifteen centuries ago, the colossal figure captures the Abhaya Mudra – the gesture of fearlessness. Its deeply textured, weathered stone beautifully merges ancient human artistry with the raw, unyielding earth.
Alaka
“Gloria Victis” National Gallery of Art – Washington D.C.
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography

Antonin Mercié’s masterful Gloria Victis (“Glory to the Vanquished”) stands as a powerful tribute to resilience in defeat. Created after the Franco-Prussian War, it subverts traditional heroic imagery by depicting a winged allegory of Fame lifting a dying soldier, who holds his broken sword high in defiance. The dynamic, upward-sweeping composition captures a brilliant interplay of vulnerability and strength, immortalizing the courage of the fallen and proving that true glory is never lost.
Out, Damnet Spot
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C..
She walks with her eyes closed, her hand reaching for something no one else can see. This is Lady Macbeth in her final unraveling – the sleepwalking scene from Act V, captured in white marble by German-American sculptor Elisabet Ney in 1905, just two years before her own death.
Ney gave her not madness but something quieter and more terrible: a woman entirely alone inside her own mind, still trying to clean what cannot be cleaned.
Behind Glass – National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
There is something fitting about encountering this face through two layers of separation – the veil the sculptor carved, and the museum case that now holds her. This is Fantasy Bust of a Veiled Woman (c.1865–1870), a glazed terracotta by Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse, believed by some to be a portrait of Marguerite Bellanger – actress, courtesan, and one of the most talked-about women in Second Empire Paris. She looks downward, away from us, as if the gaze of the viewer is precisely what she is not interested in returning.
The Vigil
Photography
Some silences are too profound for words. Augustus Saint-Gaudens understood this when he created the Adams Memorial — modeled between 1886 and 1891, deliberately left untitled by its creator, resisting any single interpretation. This bronze cast resides at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC. The full memorial stands in Rock Creek Cemetery, where it has kept its wordless vigil for over a century.
Heilan Coo
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
South Mountain Creamery, Maryland
Plundering The Streets, One Spoke At A Time
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
Frederick, Maryland
White Fire
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
Dogwoods in Spring, Washington DC
Lady Coco – Elsewhere
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
A candid portrait
Cobblestones And Dormers
Alakajay, Black And White Photography, Photography
Maymont – Mansion and Gardens, Richmond VA

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