LAGUNA GLORIA ENGAGEMENT SESSION | INDIAN ENGAGEMENT SESSION | AUSTIN INDIAN WEDDING | INDIAN WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER |

INDIAN WEDDING | LAGUNA GLORIA ENGAGEMENT | FLORIDA ENGAGEMENT SESSION

Kavitha and Achyutha lovely couples approached me to do their Indian Engagement session and Indian wedding in Austin. They later changed their wedding venue to Houston. The couples chose Austin’s one of the glorious wedding/engagement venues Laguna Gloria for their engagement session (Laguna Gloria engagement session). I can’t express how much I adore Austin’s weather in winter, its like Austin has this split personality of a rugged look in summer and serene beautiful greeneries in Winter. It was one such day, when it rained the previous day and we had the shoot scheduled the next day, everything looked beautiful and bright under the cloudy weather. We covered the whole of Laguna Gloria extensively all around and the session went for about 2hrs.   

About Laguna Gloria from their website:

The Contemporary Austin – Laguna Gloria, formerly known as the AMOA-Arthouse at Laguna Gloria, is the former home of Clara Driscoll and site of a 1916 Italianate-style villa on the shores of Lake Austin in Austin, Texas. It was the original home of the Austin Museum of Art and still houses some of its collections. The building is now one of two sites of The Contemporary Austin.

Before the influx of white settlers, Native Americans visited the site for its nearby spring (today underwater). The land that includes the property was originally owned by Stephen F. Austin, who in 1832 (seven years before Austin was founded) wrote that he wished to build a home there. This never came to pass.

In 1914 the property was purchased by Hal Sevier, editor of the Austin American, with his new wife Clara Driscoll. They completed their villa two years later, inspired by a honeymoon visit to Lake Como in Italy. Clara, an avid gardener, spent many years planting native and foreign plants around the site and designing the terraced gardens that remain to this day. In 1943 Driscoll donated the homesite to be used as a city museum.

In 1961, the site was converted to the Laguna Gloria Art Museum and became an important part of the Austin arts scene. Soon after, the museum began offering art classes, and in 1983, a 5,300-square-foot (490 m2) facility was built specifically for the growing art school.

In 1992, the institution changed its name to the Austin Museum of Art, and four years later, moved its primary exhibition space to 823 Congress Avenue, in the heart of downtown Austin. Laguna Gloria remained the site of The Art School, and in 2003, the Driscoll Villa was renovated and again became an exhibition space, focusing on local and regional artists.

The site is immediately adjacent to Mayfield Park, also on the National Register of Historic Places.

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