Looking in corners and out of the way places

In an interesting juxtaposition, I explored unexpected corners and spaces today.

Starting on the Hartford Belle, a boat sailing 2013-10-05 11.22.14the Connecticut River near Hartford, surprises were there in this pretty unsurprising city.  Who would expect this Russian onion dome on the Colt’s Firearm Factory?

I love origin stories and learned that the name Connecticut is a Dutch-ified version of an Indian word that means “long tidal river.”  Those Dutch!  They came as early as 1614 to explore the 410 mile long river, which runs all the way up to the Canadian border.  The river has a two-foot tidal variation each day, even as far up river as Hartford, 40 miles from Long Island Sound.

2013-10-05 11.38.39

 

The river is the first of the “Blue Way” program for cleaning up polluted, historic rivers.  Now little commercial traffic travels up the river.   Still, Hartford is prettier from the river than on site.

 

 

The afternoon saw me off the boat and on foot, back in New Haven.  This tour explored the corners of buildings on the Yale campus.  We were snooping out carved spouts and grotesques on “gargoyle-infested buildings.”  In contrast to the guide of the Woolworth Building, this author-architect Mathew Duman defines a gargoyle as a figure-caricature that also works as a channel for rain water.  Grotesques can be inside or on the exterior of a building, but are purely decorative.  No funnels there.  We can watch the architectural historians battle it out, or start our exploration.

2013-10-05 16.49.43What’s fun about the gargoyles around Yale is that they play off of student life, as well as showing dignitaries from its past.  The sense of fun, irony, and satire are consistently present, on all types of buildings.

Here’s a carving from the law school  Can you make out the charismatic teacher and his sleeping students?

 

And Calhoun Hall is named for a man who is shown as a student sleeping over his studies, not as a great benefactor.2013-10-05 15.41.06  Love the monkey grotesque, who seems to single-handedly hold up the building.

2013-10-05 15.40.26

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-10-05 16.00.59

Hilariously, this grotesque with the wooden stone on Bingham refers to a prize awarded to the Yale student who eats the most.

And as a critique on gluttony, two grotesques on Davenport show the roasted fowl and Faust (get the sound similarity?).  They satirize the gluttony of food (fowl) and gluttony of power (Faust).

2013-10-05 16.28.13

 

The bulldog Handsome Dan is the campus mascot, and bulldogs are all over the place on building facades.  I particularly like the bulldog nerd.

Also a “yale” is a fantastical figure that can resemble a goat, a unicorn, or a hybrid with a human.  It can be embellished with an elephant tail, polka dots, or horns that go in separate directions.  Lots of latitude in portraying a yale around campus.  We saw a baby yale, but don’t get too close!  They’re supposed to be vicious.  Here’s a pair of yales in the bright light of the old art building.

2013-10-05 16.13.24

Don’t look so scary, eh?

Check out more of my favorites in the slide show below.  Don’t miss the screenwriter and the painter (although he is missing his brush)…

What was so great about the tour, too, was being able to go into the locked courtyard of a resident hall.  We got a bell concert, commemorating the new president induction at Yale today, while standing in the Brother’s Immunity (a literary society) courtyard of Branford College.

2013-10-05 16.21.05

 

I definitely felt like I was in a rarefied place, but really, this is a dorm.  Yes, really.

You can hear some of the bell tower concert in this video of the main courtyard at Branford.

 

 

Here’s some more images for you:

[Not a valid template]

 

 

 

 

 

 

Meant for Tourists

When the Woolworth Tower opened one hundred years ago, Frank Woolworth wanted to attract tourists.  You could pay a small fee to ride to the observation deck of the Tower and there find the ubiquitous gift shop.  Ladies could enjoy the tea shop, gentlemen the Ratskellar.  What they wouldn’t have found was a Woolworth’s which Frank considered too tacky for his “cathedral of commerce”–a catchphrase attributed to him, but actually spoken by a priest.

How fitting for this quasi Gothic Revival tower, with its Byzantine-Romanesque Revival interior.  The idea was to build a cathedral for American business, using similar construction concepts as a medieval cathedral.  Small problem.  This building is 790 feet high, the tallest skyscraper in the world when it was built, and the limestone walls would have had to be 20 or so feet thick to support the colossal weight.  Instead, the building embodies modernity and New York in its glory–steel construction with a terracotta facade.2013-10-03 18.01.13

Terracotta is basically clay, an inexpensive material, and skilled immigrant labor was cheap for the hire.  Frank paid the rock bottom price of $13.5 million, in cash, for his building.  The result was a spectacular palace with ornate carvings inside and out, and a lobby meant to wow!  The headquarters for Woolworth took up less than two of the 55 stories, and the rest was leased on spec.  So that lobby was the sales pitch.  Barrel vaults, arched 2013-10-03 18.28.09throughways, and a dome open up the fairly narrow space in a spectacular way.  You can see from these pictures how luxurious the mosaic ceiling, wall murals to Labor and Commerce, elevators by Tiffany, and marble from Greece make the space.

2013-10-03 18.32.30

 

 

 

 

2013-10-03 18.32.49

 

 

2013-10-03 18.37.39

 

 

 

 

 

 

Architect Cass Gilbert turned the stone masons loose and let them carve according to their own artistic drive.  The resulting grotesques are witty and wonderful.  My favorites, of course, are of Frank Woolworth counting his fives and dimes and of Gilbert holding a model of the building.  Grotesques were used inside cathedrals to scare away demons, and while Gilbert is certainly a benign figure, Woolworth’s portrait grotesque may just do the job.

2013-10-03 18.32.04

Frank Woolworth

 

Cass Gilbert

Cass Gilbert

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are plenty of dirty little secrets, or not so secret problems.  From the beginning, the terracotta has torpedoed off the facade.  The attempts to fix the problem with concrete exacerbated it with the increased weight.  The building facade is basically continually under inspection.  The beautiful skylight was so drafty that it grew icicles that crashed 2013-10-03 18.40.16down below, before being permanently closed off.  The basement pool, always intended for gentlemen, had an unexpected use.  When it became part of a Jack Lalane exercise studio, it attracted the underground gay male bathhouse type.  The building management, in disgust, eventually didn’t renew the lease of the exercise studio.

But who cares about that now?  For some short period of time, you can still get in the building for a tour–no peeks otherwise.  Then when the tower finishes converting its luxury condos, priced at several tens of millions each, the building will clamp back down.  Not what Frank Woolworth wanted at all.  No insularity for him.  Instead, he built this out-of-this world celebration for the spirit of business, to be rejoiced in by all.

2013-10-03 18.49.442013-10-03 18.49.49

Some things that never change and those that do

On the Edward Hopper tour in Greenwich Village, I got to see some of the places where he and Jo created their lives.  He lived in the same apartment on The Row across from Washington Square for over forty years, and Jo moved in with him after they married.

Built in the 1830s, the creme de la creme of New York society lived there.  It was the site of the Henry James novel.  A hundred years later, Hopper moves in to the fourth floor walk up with a shared toilet.  In the 1950s, the landlord tried to kick him out.  They went to court, and Hopper won.  New York real estate is tough.  No indication that they ever got a private loo.

2013-09-15 11.25.30My architectural favorite on today’s tour wasn’t connected to the Hopper’s at all.  Robert Deforest, President of the Met Museum, moved from The Row to 10th Street.  You can see how he was inspired be East Indian motifs in this elaborately carved wooden window corbels.  Built in the 1880s and named one of the ten most beautiful homes in America,  NYU has now gutted the interior, so little remains of the Indian craftsmanship.  Sigh.2013-09-15 11.25.38
Worse was the famous Tenth Street Studio building, torn down and replaced by a ’50’s modernist apartment building.  It was this tear down, as well as Penn Station, that led to forming the Landmark’s Commission.

Across the street is what is left of Gertrude Whitney’s Studio Club, in which even the reclusive Hopper partic2013-09-15 12.00.34ipated.  She assembled eight townhouses and the rear stables into exhibition space celebrating living American artists and their current work.  All that’s left is the patriotic, streamlined eagle above the doorway, the staircase, and the fireplace, which is a piece of art in itself.

 

The stables next door?  The sign was painted for a movie.

So in this city that’s always changing, today we celebrated an artist who doggedly stayed the same–despite the discomforts of his home and marriage and in the face of art trends that turned in a very different direction.
2013-09-15 15.00.50
I saw another example of this juxtaposition at NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts.  Lynda Benglis has four works there.  Look at the contrast between her famous latex pours from the late 1960s and the 1904 classically-inspired mansion that houses the art history doctoral program.  What a place to take a class, as you can see in this slide show.

Invalid Displayed Gallery

 

My day wrapped with a new opera of Jane Austen’s Persuasion, my favorite of her novels. Some things never change, like the poignant charm of this Austen story, which worked fairly nicely as an opera.

Herb & Dorothy 50×50

When I led tours at the Delaware Art Museum as a docent, we received a gift of 50 conceptual and minimalist works collected by Herb and Dorothy Vogel.  A beautiful documentary about Herb and Dorothy told the story of how a postal worker and Brooklyn public librarian were able to amass a world famous art collection.  If you haven’t seen it, I recommend you rush to it.  So inspiring!

Poster 50X50

 

 

 

Now a follow up documentary is being released.  It looks at the gift the Vogels made to each of the 50 states.  50 Works for 50 states.  One museum in each state got the gift.  In this trailer for the new film, you’ll hear my voice about 22 seconds in and then see a glimpse of my public tour they filmed.  Apparently, more is in the film.

I hope you’ll catch a screening–opening at New York’s IFC Center on September 13 and Real Art Ways in Hartford on October 4!  I can hardly wait.

Clang, clang, Go to the Art Colony

“Clang, clang, clang went the trolley…”

Actually only two clangs are needed to say “let’s go” on the trolley.  I learned that today at 2013-08-23 13.57.13the Shoreline Trolley Museum.  From 1900 on, the trolley ran from the New Haven Green to Shore Beach, for just a nickel.  Over time, the trolleys all over the state, including to the “electric park” for the rides.

The electric trolley grew out of the horse-drawn car, but was a whole lot cleaner.  (By the way, the term “teamster” comes from driving a team of horses.)  Through the years, the trolley car developed, not looking so much like a stage coach any more.  The sides were straightened out and sides were closed off to help endure the winter.  In the summer, the car had removable side panels for the breezes.  And the conductor finally got a windshield!

2013-08-23 13.56.33

Imagine my surprise when our trolley car was called “Desire.”  Yes, that Streetcar named Desire.  Same line.  Our car was retired about 1959 and brought from New Orleans for this museum.  An enormous key is needed to start the trolley and then some muscle power to 2013-08-23 13.46.23shift the gears, as I learned in the museum.  We rode the trolley three miles through the marshes not too far from the shore, speeding up to 25 mph, although friction allowed us to coast a lot, too.  You can imagine why some cities are considering reviving their trolleys–efficient and fun.

2013-08-23 14.07.22

 

When we reached the end of the line, me humming along with Judy Garland in my mind, we all got up and pulled our seats back to face the other way, and we were ready to return.

At the car barn, we saw all kinds of trolley cars, many damaged in Hurricane Sandy, so needing restoration.  The corporate car, which was used to check the lines around the state, but also for boondoggles, was pretty impressive.  Note the stained glass windows.  It even is outfitted with a kitchen and bath–bigger than some New York apartments.

2013-08-23 14.44.54

 

Pretty fancy for a trolley car!

 

 

 

 

 

I went on, not by trolley, but by car on I95 (ugh), to the Florence Griswold Museum to see the “Animal/Vegetable/Mineral” exhibit, which was good.  But I swept away by the Griswold house and it story.  Daughter of a ship captain, “Miss Florence” grew up in the 1817 Old Lyme mansion, but couldn’t swing it financially.

So she turned it into a boarding house, soon attracting New York artist Henry Ward Ranger.  Ranger started bringing his artist friends in the summer, and soon the Old Lyme Art Colony was born.  Most famous were Childe Hassam and Willard Metcalf, but about 200 Tonalist and Impressionist artists worked there over the first decades of the 20th century.

Art is all over the house, where artists also painted panels in the dark wooden doors.  2013-08-23 16.16.08

 

 

Here Ranger painted the moonlight on the right and challenged Henry Rankin Poore to finish the scene, painted on the left.  So sweet!

 

 

 

2013-08-23 16.24.47

 

 

Most remarkable of all is the dining room where over 25 artists worked on panels.  I love the beautiful still life the curators created with the panels and red, red apples.

And then there’s the panoramic painting by Poore, a bit of a satire of the Old Lyme Artist Colony, and a real charmer.  Here’s a portion of it.  Two bottles there.  The bottle of paint or turpentine almost full.  The bottle of liquor, well, almost empty.

2013-08-23 16.29.21

 

 

And I think you can see most of very long, thin painting in the video below.

 

 

By the way, I started my day at the Boat House restaurant on the Quinnipiac River about 5 minutes from my apartment.  What a view!  What a day!

2013-08-23 12.41.582013-08-23 12.42.21

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lifestyles of the Rich…

On this postcard day, the sky was so blue, it hurt my eyes.  The wind was calm.  The temperature in the 70’s.  A perfect day to get out on the water.

2013-08-11 11.06.01

View of the Thimble Islands from Stony Creek on the mainland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Maybe the tiniest beach in Connecticut

Maybe the tiniest beach in Connecticut

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Only 15 minutes from my apartment is the Thimble Island Cruise in Long Island Sound.  A string of 25 tiny, glacier-formed islands named for a berry like a black raspberry, these picturesque islands have been settled since the 1600s.  Now, 100 families summer here.  A handful get power and water from the shore.  The rest make do.  You know, holding tanks for rain water and such.

2013-08-11 12.00.182013-08-11 11.20.38
But you gotta be rich.  You could get this little rock and hut for $1.9 mil.  Imagine what the 27 bedroom summer home with the formal gardens and swimming pool goes for.

All these rocks you see are granite, and originally, some of the islands were quarries.  No longer.  The land, what there is of it, is just too valuable.  You could feel bad for the owners of the 1885 Wheeler House. They have to dig up their native palm trees every fall and take them to another island to winter over.

The most populated island has 35 homes, and at one time also had a church and post office, like a real town.  It is called, wait for it, Money Island.  I’m not kidding.

 

 

Maybe this is because the most famous person from the area was Captain Kidd.  The pirate.  Here is the hidden harbor of his island, where supposedly treasure like gold and

Captain Kidd's hidden harbor.  It really is hidden.

Captain Kidd’s hidden harbor. It really is hidden.

silver stolen from ships in the Sound was buried.  Apparently most of his loot was found about 30 miles away, when he was captured in 1699.  The Scottish sailor was taken back to England, where he was tried and executed in 1701.

 

 

 

My favorite house is this one, built to withstand the weather, including 100 mph winds.  The wind goes above, around, below, and has left it the house alone for the past 30 years.  Not bad.

2013-08-11 11.37.31

 

 

 

 

 

 

But really, this little houseboat is the ticket.  Forget living on top of a rock, like the seals that 2013-08-11 11.59.08apparently swarm in March.  Forget hovering like a cormorant or white heron, whom we watched dry off on granite baked in the sun and carved by the sea.  Just live in a little houseboat, heaven on day like this, and pack it in for the winter.

 

 

 

A study in blue, dotted by kayakers and one sailboat

A study in blue, dotted by kayakers and one sailboat

Following Holden Caulfield

2013-07-13 10.36.08

Following in the footsteps of Holden Caulfield in Central Park today brought out the kid in us all.  Fun fact about Catcher in the Rye–the New Yorker wouldn’t publish a short story version of it for five years because they didn’t want to be seen as encouraging runaways.
2013-07-13 10.21.07

 

 

 

First, we admired the Delacourt clock but missed the animals circling when the clock struck.  Boo.  Our circling would have to come later.

I didn’t know that the Central Park Zoo was formed when people dropped off their animals like goats, and the resulting menagerie grew into what we see today.

 

2013-07-13 10.35.26
Like Phoebe and Holden, we paused at the duck pond.  My friend Helen and I wondered what the turtle was doing with these geese, and we came up with some pretty good stories.  I bet you can, too.

 

2013-07-13 10.38.30

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-07-13 10.44.52

 

 

 

We gawked at the Victorian Gardens carnival, no doubt just as those two kids did.

 

 

 

 

 

 
Then it was time for the circle.  How long has it been since you rode a carousel?  Right in Central Park, a real old fashioned carousel.  Pretty great!
2013-07-13 11.01.04
Apparently, the animals were originally used as a Coney Island draw.  When they were no longer needed for that purpose, the animals were put in storage.  In 1952, right around Holden’s time, the original carousel burned, and new life was given to the horses and other figures in storage.
Another fun story is that the carousel was originally mule-powered.  The barker would 2013-07-13 11.03.36stamp twice for the mule to go, round and round in a circle, and stomp once to stop.  Apparently, children would lie on their stomachs to see underneath the carousel, fascinated to watch the mule work–more of an attraction than the ride itself.

I really got a kick out of our ride.  Thanks to Helen for the treat.  Holden told his sister Phoebe to go for the brass ring, a tradition on the carousel.  If you successfully grab the ring while going around, you got a free ride on the carousel, while grabbing the brass ring of life as well.
2013-07-13 11.33.21

 

 

We wandered off the tour at that point, and Helen introduced me to Hans Christian Andersen in the park.  We lucked into a magical storyteller giving us an African origin story, accompanied by a musician playing a kora–a traditional string instrument–that really added to the experience.   Evocative.

 

Our time in the park ended as the day turned tropical and sultry. We ducked into the Whitney for the superb Hopper show and then the Guggenheim for the transformative James Turrell light work.  The nautilus interior of the museum has never been more heavenly.  To my perception, it morphed from 3D depth to impossibly flat.  Weird and almost psychedelic.  If you haven’t seen it yet, make the trip, fight the crowds.  It’s worth it.

Kinky Boots held no surprises, but the vegan Japanese shojin meal at Kajitsu was full of gastronomic delights.  Shojin ryori developed in Zen Buddhist monasteries, based on the avoidance of taking life for their food and on simplicity.  Their tea ceremony grew into shojin ryori, the devotional practice  of the meal I had.

I sat at the chef’s table, and my meal was prepared right before me, the silence in the room only punctuated by the sound of the Chef’s wooden clogs.  Every so often, a server would bring him a tiny cup of something to drink that he would toss back.  Sake?

The quiet, a true rarity in New York restaurants, and the only decoration on the beige-gray wall a sprig of green leaves with small white, feathery buds, diminutive on the long wall reinforced the spare, Japanese aesthetic.

The food was oddly textured to my American palette, tending toward soft, but very flavorful.  Each course had some kind of exotic sauce to mix in myself– one sticky, another thick.  The server explained each dish.  “Chef recommends,” she would say, instructing me on how to mix the sauce and dish.

For the soup course, I mixed kelp broth with many ingredients–seaweed, tofu skins, morel mushrooms (food of the gods!), miso…  I think.  I could hardly understand the server, who was very sweet to explain it all nonetheless.  Etiquette?  Pick up the bowl and slurp.

 

The third course

The third course

I had four courses, considered the tasting menu, served very slowly, and wrapped up with matcha and candies.  The matcha is dark green from the green tea and thickly bitter like espresso.  You start with the candy, then sip.  Chef  whisked the tea for me, delivered it, bowed silently , then moved on.

Matcha and candy

Matcha and candy

Others nearby were having ten courses or chef’s choice.  I was plenty content with four–the end of a feast of a day!

 

 

 

 

Tales from the Crypt

The International Arts & Ideas Festival starts today, and before volunteering at the Made-in-Connecticut panel, I went on a tour of the crypts of Central Church.

2013-06-15 11.04.17

 

The church got its name because it’s the center church of three on the New Haven Green, and one of two United Churches of Christ there.  But it was the first and only for about 100 years of New Haven’s history.  Established in 1638, the first pastor John Davenport made his first sermon on “Temptation in the Wilderness.”  I can’t really imagine what those temptations would have been.  I think most would have been focused on staying warm through the winter.

The current church is new, only 190 years old, and is the fourth meeting house for Central Church, serving not only as a church, but also a location for lectures, concerts, forums, and other public meetings.  Daniel Webster was one of the first to hold a political meeting at the church, which has had its share of notables among the congregants like Eli Whitney, Samuel F.B. Morse, and Noah Webster.

2013-06-15 11.15.03

 

 

The chandelier and Tiffany stained glass were site specific to this new building.

 

 

 

 

But what makes this place creepy fun is that it was built over the original cemetery of more than 5000, all buried in The Green. With a big rain this spring, one old tree’s roots were washed up along with the bones of several bodies!

2013-06-15 11.23.01

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-06-15 11.01.26The earliest date that I see for someone buried below the church is 1687.

2013-06-15 11.31.35

 

 

 

 

2013-06-15 11.26.49

 

 

Some of those who died before were relocated to the large cemetery a few blocks away.  In 1812, Sarah the wife of the minister was last to be buried on The Green, now part of the crypt.

 

 

 

 

 

2013-06-15 11.28.25

 

 

Benedict Arnold’s first wife was buried here in 1775, before she had any reason to be embarrassed about her merchant husband turned soldier then traitor.

 

 

 

2013-06-15 11.29.25

 

The crypt offers a lesson in tombstone art.  The earliest tombstones were decorated with vicious looking sculls with wings, for returning the soul to God.

 

 

2013-06-15 11.30.02

 

 

Then the scull became less scary and was shown with a crown, as a king in heaven.

The inscriptions were often elaborate, as for the “painful mother of 8” with an angel on the tombstone.  I should say so!

Some had ‘vanitas’ sayings, such as the Latin for “as you now stand, so once did I”–worth remembering that people roved among these tombstones on The Green, so that reminder was to live well.

One of the founders of Yale in New Haven (where there was free land; Yale was moved after its formation in Old Saybrook, CT) lost several children as infants, as well as two wives before marrying the woman who would outlive him.  The infants are buried together 2013-06-15 11.37.00with headstones and footstones.  Tombstone size was not connected to age of the deceased, but rather to the purse.  Some children had the largest stones and even tabletop markers–the most expensive.

 

 

 

 

 

With the festival today, The Green is full of life–a one-man circus, a series of concerts, food vendors, buskers, sunshine, and lots and lots of living people.  They may not know who’s just below their feet…

Taste of New Haven

Today, I joined Eric with Taste of New Haven as he guided our congenial group around the Theater District and part of the Yale Campus.  Eric, a fellow Washington University alum, is an architect working on community sustainability, as well as leading gastronomic tours.  He provided a terrifically colorful history of the Yale Green.  I probably won’t look out at it (from my apartment window) ever the same again.

On this hot afternoon, we started at a wine store with a refreshing Portuguese white.  Did you know that the best time to drink wine is early in the morning, before you brush your teeth, because you palette is at its cleanest?  As Eric said, this practice makes you not a lush, but a ‘wine connoisseur’.

2013-06-01 17.21.02

Eric tells us about the first hamburger

Although we didn’t sample the food at this place, Louis Lunch is famous as the first place to serve a hamburger, to a man in a hurry.  Some things never change.  This building was moved from its original spot to make way for development and then was expanded.  In this picture you see the entire length of the one room restaurant.  In other words, it’s still tiny.

 

I’ve been wondering what makes New Haven’s apizza so famo2013-06-01 17.11.31us.  Eric explained it better than anyone else so far, attributing its accolades to a different quality of the dough.  Apparently, it’s high protein, although I wouldn’t argue any health benefits. The dough is also stretched, not tossed, accounting for its irregularities.

The famous pizza places in New Haven cook the pizza in ovens that reach 800 degrees!  They use not fresh but canned tomatoes grown in the ash of Mount Vesuvius.  The classic cheese pizza at Bar did have the tastiest tomato sauce.  I might go so far to call it volcanic.

New Haven has had a large Italian population and pizzas made popular lunches for factory workers.  Apparently, an entrepreneur also stacked pizzas on his head “really high” before walking from the train station to the workers in Wooster Square on their lunch break to sell his delicious pies.  Today, Wooster Square is home to two of the contenders for best apizza in New Haven, but I liked what we had at Bar better.  Except perhaps for their famous mashed potato pizza.  It tastes about as good as you’d expect, but it’s the best seller here.  Diversity of taste is what makes the world go round.

2013-06-01 17.16.55

In the Women’s restroom at Bar.

Bar also has a great look.

The party space at Bar

The party space at Bar

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We made a quick stop at a boutique chocolatier, a crowd favorite…

2013-06-01 17.36.54

 

 

 

 

 

 

…wandered through the Yale campus, looking especially pretty with its alumni gatherings this weekend…

2013-06-01 17.54.14

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…and I learned why New Haven is called Elm City.  One of its rich, nineteenth-century inhabitants wanted to beautify his neighborhood and planted the trees.  In the 1880s, Charles Dickens on his famous trip across the United States thought New Haven was the prettiest place, based on seeing this elm-laden area.

2013-06-01 17.58.40

 

 

Here Aaron rubs the foot of a statue.  Lots of good luck in store for him!

 

2013-06-01 18.27.22

 

 

And just like in New York, public art can surprise you.  Eric showed us just where to stand to see the ‘Four Circles in a Square.’  The work is actually painted on several different buildings, including the circular parking ramp you see in the center rear.  As we walked down the narrow cut through, the coherence of the piece broke down, and the remains looked like large, random orange blotches on disparate buildings.  How wonderful to have someone help me see!

 

We ended at Kelly’s Irish Restaurant, where most of the group had corned beef spring rolls.  Yes, really.  But they were a hit.  I was glad to be a vegetarian.  By the time the Hawaiian mochi arrived, the sun relented, and sitting outside under the Greek-like arbor (note the crazy quilt of international influences here) with good company was just what this over-stuffed tourist needed.

 

 

A Perfect Day in Central Park

Lucky people on a blissfully perfect Memorial Day.  Central Park was overrun, so that it looked like Coney Island mid-summer.  Here’s Weegee’s take on Coney Island from 1940.

I took a walking tour with Tony Robins from the Municipal Art Society, but couldn’t bring myself to take notes or write you any details.  Tony did cover the history and development of the park, which grew out of the Romantic English garden tradition.  Each tree, shrub, and rock has been carefully planned and placed, all with the intention of looking completely natural.  I caught a few snapshots of the manmade touch, including the artificial lake, seen in the slide show below.

Hope your holiday was a blast!

 

Blustery

On this very blustery, cool New York day, I started with a walking tour of the Jewish Upper West Side with Marty Shore and the Lower East Side Jewish Conservancy.

My favorite fun fact was more generic than Jewish.  Did you know that tenements are five stories and “French Flats” are six stories?  Well, that explains a lot.  Tenements were built to make the most money off of immigrants.  Cramming four apartments per floor, the residents shared two toilets per floor, and each apartment only had 2 windows.  One of those windows might be from the bedroom overlooking the kitchen.  What a view!  No wonder TB was known as the “Jewish disease.”  By 1901, a new law was passed requiring each room to have a window.  French Flats benefit from the extra light, sanitation, and ventilation.  Of course, tenement apartments on the Lower East Side sell for a fortune now, as I’m sure they do on the Upper West Side.  Times do change.

My favorite architecture came from the Belnord apartments, which could mean ‘beautiful north’, with a little creative spelling of the French equivalent.  Built by John Jacob Astor, the apartments are huge, through-floors, meaning they stretch from the street to the courtyard.  Here’s a view into the courtyard.

2013-05-26 11.35.57

The building stretches an entire city block from W 86th to W 85th and from Broadway to Amsterdam, but only has 221 apartments.  Doesn’t that give you an idea of the scale of the apartments?

Isaac Bashevis Singer, Zero Mostel, and Lee Strasberg all lived there.  I bet the halls rocked!

2013-05-26 11.35.122013-05-26 11.38.58

 

Maybe you can make out the fresco like painted cement of the archways.

 

 

 

 

A very classy place.  We were chased off by the white-gloved doorman.

 

 

 

 

On the flip side was Seneca Village, formed by free blacks, poor Irish immigrants, and even some middle class types, based on the bone china found in a recent archeological dig.  They built their own houses in the 1850s on land that would become Central Park and were summarily kicked out of their homes, with 24 hours notice and without recompense, to make way for the park.  Perhaps you can imagine the wooden houses they built when you stand at Central Park West and 83rd Street.

Then I jumped off the tour and took the crosstown bus over to the Met, where members were getting a sneak peak at The Civil War and American Art.  As a museum colleague, I talked my way in.  I had seen the exhibit at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, so wanted to see how the exhibit was laid out, as well as to take a close look at two paintings.  I heard the podcasts of Eleanor Harvey, Curator at the American Art Museum, talk about five works from the show, so was anxious to see some details for myself on these very famous paintings.

First, Winslow Homer’s A Visit from the Old Mistress, a powerful warhorse from 1876, one of several incredibly poignant and provocative works he made during Reconstruction.  Click on this image to enlarge it, to see the particular detail Harvey talked about.

https://i0.wp.com/americanart.si.edu/images/1909/1909.7.28_1a.jpg?resize=574%2C431

The former owner of these slaves has visited their cabin to ask for a favor, for them to work for her perhaps.  Originally, Homer painted the white woman’s hand by her heart, holding a red flower.  A peace offering?  The sign of an open heart?  Whatever it might mean, Homer changed his mind and painted it out, removing all sentimentality.  Instead, the white woman confronts and is confronted by the black women in a tense, cold stand off.  Pentimento, the leaching through of layers of color over time, is a major issue with Homer’s less technically accomplished, earlier works, which allows us a glimpse into his thought process and provides a truly fascinating, new perspective on the work.

Same with Harvey’s reading of Eastman Johnson’s The Girl I Left Behind from c1872.  I don’t know if clicking to enlarge this image will even help with this enchanting detail.

https://i0.wp.com/americanart.si.edu/images/1986/1986.79_1a.jpg?resize=572%2C678

This girl, who’s loose hair is whipped back by winds like we had today, holds books and seems to be a school girl, gazing dreamily into her future in this Reconstruction era.  But Harvey points out that she wears a wedding band.  All of a sudden, the title takes on two levels of meaning.  Her husband (now more likely than a father or brother) has left her to go fight.  And the girl left behind could represent America herself.  The America before the war.  The figure stands in the middle of the painting bisecting the landscape, ambiguous and devastated by war, marked only by another detail.

In the lower right corner of the background landscape, which her front foot points toward, is a split rail fence.  That particular kind of fence was an emblem of Abraham Lincoln.  Her stance and position in the painting, plus that ring, makes her the re-unifier of North and South, now that Lincoln was gone.  She becomes the allegorical figure of America, generally represented by a woman, her wind whipped by physical and economic violence and turmoil of war and its aftermath.  The painting is immediately elevated from the sentimental to an image for all time.  Can you tell I’m in love?

Another really insightful show has opened at the Whitney.  Hopper Drawing focuses on the artist process.  Any one gallery of the exhibit features one or two Hopper paintings and many of the sketches and drawings that evolved into the painted work.

My head was going all over the place.  Since Hopper’s work is considered cinematic, I spent a lot of time thinking about the depiction of film in painting.  Hopper painted this familiar scene, the inside of the movie house in 1939 with New York Movie.

Edward Hopper. New York Movie. 1939

The wall text talks about how the usherette is depicted in a militaristic uniform, with its jaunty red stripe.  The movie house rules prohibit her from watching the movie.  Notice that the audience is made of up one-sies, people on their own.  Now compare that image to this exuberant painting by John Sloan, Movies – Five Cents, from 1907 (not in the Whitney show).

Movies in 1907 are still a spectacle.  The theater is thronged, and the film is a shared, captivating experience.  Note the young woman in her be-scarfed hat, turned to look back at us.  Looks like she might have saved a seat.  How the tone of the American Urban Realism painting changed in those 30 years.  Hopper infuses the work with his trademark isolation and loneliness.  Sloan is all about the energy.

So is Reginald Marsh, who made his own movie palace painting.  But I’m not going to give that away.  Come on my tour at the New York Historical Society this summer, and you’ll get to see it and his other awesome New York scenes for yourself.

Back to the Whitney and film, David Hockney has a video there called Jugglers.  It’s delightful.  Made up of 18 screens, slightly akilter, ordinary people are juggling and hoola-hooping, and sometimes making a mess of it.  All color and fragmented and reassembled bodies, it’s just great good fun.

 
David Hockney (b. 1937), still from The Jugglers, June 24th 2012, 2012. Eighteen-screen video installation, color, sound; 9 min. © David Hockney. Image courtesy Hockney Pictures and Pace Gallery
 

My museum hopping ended with the new shows at the National Academy.  On this blustery day, I was especially drawn into the world of Pat Steir, whose coloristic drip paintings evoke very quiet waterfalls.  Here’s her 2005 Blue River, which takes up a whole, long wall.  The details are delicious, so painterly.  I sat and enjoyed this peaceful waterscape, a respite from the windy world of art and architecture.

Populux

Midtown Manhattan, Lincoln Center–the architecture could be called “populux,” combining popular taste with luxury.  Here are some sights from the walking tour today on 52nd and 53rd Streets and its populux.

2013-05-05 14.12.22

Architecture and light!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-05-05 14.21.44

Huge Roy Lichtenstein painting at Equitable Building

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-05-05 14.32.27

Interesting play of light and architectural forms on Sol Lewitt art in Equitable courtyard

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-05-05 15.03.00

Jim Dine, Venus de Milo

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-05-05 15.15.56

A former speakeasy, now the 21 Club with its row of welcoming jockeys…well, welcoming if you’re very rich

 

 

 

 

 

 

2013-05-05 15.51.23

I so rarely look up and the skyline from the street is so interesting

 

Timely, Good Work

I left the United States today, to tour the United Nations.  193 nations share ownership of the land, bordering New York City.  They have their own flag (blue), fire unit, and post office.

The U.N. General Assembly and Security Council were both in session, so I don’t have any action shots.  We did walk through the General Assembly, which seemed empty, but the guide assured me they had a quorum to discuss issues concerning Mal and Somaliai.  A full 60% of 160 issues the U.N. is addressing are focused on Africa.

They communicate in six official languages:  English, Russian, Mandarin, Arabic, Spanish, and French.  They vote by pressing a green button for yes, red for no, and yellow to abstain.  The votes show up on a huge overhead board, although today the board was blank.

The tour was full of facts and details.  Here are a few that touched me most.

Tapestry 1

 

After the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the Belarus people were most affected.  They hand wove this enormous tapestry (you are only seeing one portion of it) in 1991 as an eternal reminder of that danger.

 

 

Red Cup feeds a child

 

 

For 25 cents, a child can be fed a meal.  The children can get the red cup with a meal inside when they go to school.  Two goals from the Milllenium Development Project – eradicate hunger and foster education.

Your UNICEF dollar also goes to distribute 400 million mosquito nets.  I visited on International Malaria Eradication day.  Even though deaths are down by 25% from last year, still 657,000 people will die from malaria this year.

Mosquito Net

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And then there’s environmental sustainability.  For my friend Karen: the amount of garbage that ends up in global landfills annually equates in weight to 250,000,000 African elephants.  I can hear her now, “We’d rather have the elephants!”

Check out the slide show for more images, including the sculpture at the entrance of a mangled handgun, rendering it unusable.  Like everything at the U.N., how timely.

disabled-gun-entrance-un-1

Image 1 of 12

 

 

 

 

Four Freedoms

On a blustery morning, Justin Ferrate led the intrepid over the East River on the tram to Roosevelt’s Island.  In the New York tradition, explained Justin, to change a reputation, merely change the name.  Blackwell’s Island, home of Elizabeth Blackwell, New York’s first woman surgeon, was renamed Roosevelt’s Island.  Why?

Well, maybe the island that served as the pumping ground for New York City, with its prison and dilapidated hospitals for the poor, might have something to do with it.

But now Governor’s Island also has Louis Kahn’s long awaited memorial to Franklin D. Roosevelt and his Four Freedoms speech, made as part of his State of the Union address in January, 1941.  The vision of the worldwide freedoms–or speech, religion, from want, and from fear–were then popularized by Norman Rockwell.  These words and images helped bring Americans out of isolationism and toward participation in World War II.

The paFour Freedoms, FDR monument 4rk of the monument is austere, perhaps in keeping with much of the Brutalist architecture so in favor when Roosevelt’s Island was turned residential.

Stark but still beautiful, I’d say.

 

 

Cherry Blossoms

 

 

The Cherry Blossom Festival was held today, too, and despite the ongoing cold, those blossoms were trying really hard.

 

 

The great irony was that all day, Japanese were celebrating traditional culture as part of the festival, with events located at the FDR memorial.  This picture of a Japanese family walking along the side of the memorial seems elegiac to me.

Four Freedoms, FDR monument 1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Small Pox Hospital ruins 2

The monument is located right next to the really spooky ruins of a small pox hospital. It was made from stone quarried on the island and meant to represent muscularity and stability.  As you can see, it’s very, very Gothic.

The remains are being shored up, so that people can actually visit the site.  Would you?  Yikes!  Maybe only on Halloween…with lots of good friends around!

 

 

UN complex

 

On a brighter note, the monument is located just across from the United Nations complex in Manhattan, which, of course, has its roots back in FDR’s policies.

 

Bridge, trolley station, tram lines 2

 

 

The Queensboro Bridge is viewable from everywhere on the island, making for some incredible sights.  Check out the slide show below.  I really liked the historic trolley station.  It’s made of terracotta–practical because it’s easy to clean with a power wash–and stations were moved to either side of the bridge.  Look at all the interesting architectural juxtapositions here.

 

 

 

And the Roosevelt Island slide show:

 

Ride the tram with your metrocard.  Then walk around the island to the lighthouse on the northern tip and the FDR Memorial on the southern tip.  it’s a great day!

 

History of the Irish

As a more intellectual alternative to the party-hearty St. Patrick’s Day activities, I joined Francis Morrone, tour guide extraordinaire with the Municipal Arts Society, for a tour of the history of the Irish in New York City.

While the Irish were a presence in New York from its beginnings, the famine caused by potato blight from 1845-1851 is when the Irish became even more significant.  By 1855, one out of every three New Yorkers had been born in Ireland.  A million people died in the famine and with 1/3 of its population emigrating, Ireland’s population dropped in half during these years.  As Francis said, “mind bogglling.”

The proprietor of Stewart’s Dry Goods store, a wildly popular precursor to the department store, paid to bring many immigrants over–a charitable act.  He also gave jobs to the new arrivals.

While the more famous and more opulent St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue would havSt Pats sidee been central to this weekend’s parade, we visited the first St. Patrick’s.  From the side, it’s an ordinary looking cathedral, with Gothic pointed windows.

St. Pat's odd exterior

 

 

 

But from the front, the cathedral is an oddity.  Opening in 1815, the church predated Gothic Revival, and Francis surmises that the architect didn’t quite have the style down.

 

St Pat's old brick wall, cemetery

 

Francis really admires this old brick wall that surrounds the church and its cemetery.  The wall was actually defensive, protecting from Protestant vandalism.  Resentment of Irish immigrants partly stemmed from economic concerns.  Immigrants, desperate for work, were willing to undercut labor wages–not a way to build popularity.

Industrial School

Poverty was new to New York, and institutions emerged to help those who suffered.  Among the reformers was the Children’s Aide Society, formed in 1853, which then started Industrial Schools.  These schools were free for indigent children, offering not only education, but also free meals and health care.  Here’s the Dutch-inspired Industrial School right across the street from St. Patrick’s Cathedral.

To show some of the prejudice, consider that poverty was blamed on Catholicism in Protestant New York.

 

With such predominance in the population, the Irish became central to New York’s Catholic Church community, as well as its police, fire department, and schools.  Using organizational and political skills, Irish rose in the ranks of government, to lead the Democratic Party and becomes bosses in its meeting place, Tammany Hall.

Since there was no welfare, by 1863, Tammany Hall became a place where the poor could get coal, clothing, food, and a job, in exchange for political support.  William M. Tweed, a powerful boss of Scottish descent (not Irish), recognized the potential for mobilizing the Irish vote.  Even though the welfare system was efficient, Tweed and his cronies were crooked and eventually brought down.  The Irish, initially in those entry level jobs, rose to power.   Boss Tweed died in jail, but for the next 70 years, Irish-run Tammany Hall would continue to control New York politics with even more powerful bosses.

Police DeptFunds from Tammany were partly how this incredible building for the Police Department was built.  It’s now a coop (sigh, New York real estate), and Cyndi Lauper apparently lives here.  Note that the five female figures on the front of the building represent the five boroughs, with Manhattan front and center, largest of them all.  You can click on the picture for a larger view.

Police Dept, Manhattan

 

 

 

 

 

We stood on the actual intersection of Five Points, where three streets come together.  Five Points is, more importantly, the name for a notorious neighborhood of 19th century gangs, crime, filth, and disease.  That police station, run and manned by the Irish, arrested the many Irish criminals in “paddy wagons.”

The reason for the problem neighborhood is a quintessential New York story.  The 50 acre drinking water reservoir called the Collect Pond, was not only used for fresh water and recreation (as well as experimentation with steam-powered boats), but also as a dumping ground for industrial waste.  By the 19th century, the reservoir was so polluted that the city decided to drain it and the nearby marshy meadows with a canal pumping into the Hudson River (along today’s Canal Street).

Then, the city filled in the former reservoir with rocks and dirt from the nearby  leveled hills, but didn’t do too good of a job.  Hungry developers built many Federal style, middle class houses on this new neighborhood land.  The houses began sinking fairly quickly.  The stench from the old tanneries seeped up from the ground.  Panicky, homeowners abandoned the properties, leaving only the poorest, who had no choice if they wanted a roof, to live there.  You can imagine how nice that was.

But sometimes, good comes out of adversity.  Only the Irish and the freed black population would be so poor and so desperate to live in Five Points.   But it wasn’t all horrible.  Francis researched that many were able to save enough to move to better circumstances.

Dance competitions were very popular in the neighborhood, and arguments erupted over who was better, the Irish dancer Jack Diamond or the African American “Master Juba” Lane.  They had a dance-off, where the latter apparently won.  But the two became great friends, performing together in minstrel shows in the 1840s and 1850s.  Where Irish step dance met Lane’s stylings emerged as tap dance, a Five Points invention.

St. Andrews

 

Here is St. Andrew’s Catholic Church, where 2:30 a.m. mass was held for all the reporters who worked at the many newspapers located around City Hall.  The city that never sleeps…

 

 

 

 

And the city that always has something amusing for the eyes…here on Mulberry Street.

Mulberry Street

 

German Beer Hall

The Tenement Museum has added a tour to their roster of profoundly experiential, oral history based tours.  It’s called Shop Life and adds a German element to their already Irish, Jewish, and Italian focus.

At 97 Orchard, where guides take visitors into the upstairs tenements, each floor interpreted for a different nationality or ethnic group, the basement featured stores.  In 1864, John and Caroline Schneider opened a German Beer Hall there, and the railroad style rooms are interpreted to show the saloon itself, a inner room where reformist meetings were held, and the family’s bedroom in the rear.  The rooms are very narrow, and only the front room was long enough to seat, oh, 20 people.

In 1864, there were 500 German Beer Halls in New York City and 4 on that block of Orchard St alone.  As a “tied saloon,” each one would have been associated with, or tied to, a different brewer, either in Lower Manhattan or Brooklyn.  To gain regular customers, the Schneider saloon offered a free lunch everyday.  Of course, German food is salty.  Hence, more beer!

Darryl, the exuberant guide, talked about contributions Germans made to American culture.: not only beer and a reformist spirit, but also German leisure time that allowed mixed gender outings and experiences.  In other words, women could come hang out in the beer hall alongside the men.  The museum has researched the 35 or so “regulars” who came to the saloon and developed character profiles for each.  My man from history was the Bavarian Augustus Wallace, a Civil War Veteran and musician, who played a tune or two in the saloon.

In the 1880s, after the death of Caroline Schneider, John moved the saloon across the street for a couple more years, because he didn’t like his new landlordShop Life.  Over the next 100 or so years, the basement retail space changed hands many times–Kosher butchers, underwear factory, an auction house, etc.  Here’s a picture of the auction house in action.  Look how narrow the space is and how many people, well men, are crammed in.

As always, the Tenement Museum creates an evocative experience, one where technology plays an integral part.  Technology on this tour helps visitors get to know the businesses that operated there after the German Beer Hall.  Everyone got to take one object over to a presentation table with an embedded screen.  Once the object was laid down, the table’s screen identified the object.

I picked up a brick and placed it on the table.  This represented the brick that was thrown through a kosher shopkeeper’s window during riots over the prices of kosher meat that went up 50-100% overnight.  Then fanning out all around the brick were photos.  Touch a photo, and the screen part of the table told the story of that photo.  You could also pick up an old telephone receiver to listen to the same story being told to you.

So each object mapped to a whole set of related stories.  Pretty cool museum technology.  Leave it to the Tenement Museum, which I think was one of the first to have oral histories playing in the upstairs tenements.  Fascinating, evocative, engaging.  Pretty great.

Afterward, I stopped in a restaurant a friend and I have wanted to try:  Cacio e Pepe on Second Ave between 11th and 12th Streets.  We had both been intrigued by this salad:

Insalata Mistanoci Gruyere E Grue Di Cacao                                                                          mixed green salad, walnuts, gruyere cheese, raw chocolate nibs

I have to say, it was really fun.  But nothing can top the presentation value of

Tonnarelli cacio e Pepe                                                                                                   homemade tonnarelli pasta tossed in pecorino cheese & whole black pepper

Tonnarelli Cacio e Pepe

They bring the pasta in the middle of a huge wheel of pecorino cheese, then slosh the pasta around in the center hole that must gradually get bigger and bigger as the pasta absorbs the cheese.  They scoop a mountain onto your plate, then scrape the remaining soft cheese out of the wagon wheel and dollop it on top.

Thank goodness for half portions of both the salad and the pasta.  All I was lacking was the German lager!

Room of Wondrous Things

The Art Librarians strike again.  No wonder there’s a Librarian Action Figure.

They are always on the go.

Tonight to the Grolier Club to see the Wunderkammer catalogue exhibit.  The Grolier Club was started in 1884 by nine people to promote books and book arts through exhibitions and publications. Interesting in our digital book world, the Grolier Club now has 800 members — collectors, dealers, antiquarians, librarians, fine artists, plus.  And not just in New York.  About 20% of members today are women, after the club gave in and admitted us beginning in 1976.

It’s in its third home, a townhome built by an architect-member in 1917, on 60th between Madison and Park.  The exhibits are open to the public, and if you like rare books, the exhibits at the club are worth a visit.

Wunderkammers are rooms of wondrous things: things of beauty, things of rarity, and things of artistic, scholarly, or financial value.  The exhibit features proud owners’ catalogues of their surprising objects from 1599 to 1899.  Inside a Wunderkammer

You can click on this image to make it larger, to see what a Wunderkammer in 1599 looked like.  As time progressed, Wunderkammers also became cabinets like this one below, for displaying art and natural science wonders.

A Wunderkammer

 

The exhibition includes a 16th century how-to manual for making your own Wunderkammer.  People did it all different kinds of ways.

 

 

 

 

Wunkerkammer, apothecary trade 1

 

A Dutch apothecary traded medicines for curiosities that sailors collected on their voyages for the Dutch East India Company.  Check out some of the oddities that the owner cataloged in this “sea book” and below in the slide show.

Famous people had Wunderkammers, including Peter the Great, who collected curiosities and put them in jars.  We saw these jars in a catalogue, on the whole second floor of the palace.  He also had one of his 7′ tall guards stuffed after his death.  Hmmm.PT Barnum lithograph, museum

Entertainers like P.T. Barnum made museums out of a collection of curios.  In the same tradition as Charles Willson Peale, who started the first U.S. museum in Philadelphia in today’s Independence Hall, Barnum displayed natural history and other wonders, as well as art.

Asian record of fossils, minerals, stones

 

 

Wunderkammers, as a 300 year fad, were not just created in Europe.  Here’s a Japanese cataloged record of fossils, minerals, and stones.  Pretty, eh?

 

So think about cataloging your own wonders.  Who knows, your record could end up in the Grolier Club!

a-wunderkammer

Image 1 of 14

 

 

Letters as Laboratory

The art librarians sure know how to tour.  Today, we got a curator-led, very witty tour of the Beatrix Potter Picture-Letters exhibition at the Morgan Library.  I loved Beatrix Potter when I was a child and (in storage) have the book that I read over and over again, Tales of Benjamin Bunny.  So if you love her as much as I do, then get over to the Morgan before the end of the month.

The picture-letters were the source of her books.  The curator said, “letters as laboratory.”  She wrote illustrated letters to the children in her life (she had no children, nieces or nephews).  Famously, she was writing a letter to the son of her governess.  She told him she couldn’t think what to write, so she made up a story for him in an 8 page letter, which, yes, is in the exhibit. Peter Rabbit was born.

You can read the letter and see her labeled drawings of Flopsy, Mopsy, Cottontail, and Peter.  Much later, she borrowed the letter back, copied it, added some scenes, and Peter, the book version, was launched.

But no publisher would have it, and since Beatrix was wealthy, she self-published 200 copies in black and white (since the letters were in b/w) for friends and relatives–yes, one is in the exhibit.  It really caught on because she knew how to capture the essence of the actual animals and then put them in human situations–a charming combination.

The exhibit also has wonderful photographs, adult letters, a scrapbook, her nature drawings, and original paintings for the books.  Here are some of my favorite things:

– a photograph of Beatrix with a rabbit named Benjamin Bouncer on a thin, string leash

– the 1907 patent application for the toy of Jemima Puddle-Duck, which has ‘mug’ shots, as if for a criminal, labeled front, side, and back–hilarious

– a drawing of the Cinderella story she made for her fiance and publisher Norman Warne, in which the pumpkin carriage is pulled by rabbits; he died before they could marry, but she must have looked at him as her Prince Charming, who would take her away from an overly restrictive Victorian home

– the miniature letters she wrote to children from characters in the books.  For example, one letter was signed Your Friend, Peter Rabbit.  There also are a couple of 2″ high mailboxes.  Apparently, she gave the mailboxes to the children, then when she would visit the parents, she would drop a letter in the mailbox for the child.  Sweet!

The whole exhibit is too sweet for my words.  In a world that can be so sour all too often, give yourself a 30 minute inner child respite with Beatrix.  It’s juuuuust right.

 

Literary Sunday

Francis MorroneOn the 151st birthday of Edith Wharton, I joined Francis Morrone, architectural historian and tour guide extraordinaire, to see her neighborhood through her eyes.

 

 

 

 

 

Unusual for New York, her birthplace is intact…well, except for the facade which was originally brownstone and the Starbucks, which is installed in place of her father’s library.   But Francis said, it could be worse.  StarbucWharton birthlaceks was founded by 2 Melville addicts, naming the chain after the Moby Dick character, and Melville was Wharton’s second cousin.

Anyway, you can imagine home-tutored Edith as a girl, lying on her stomach, reading a book in front of the fireplace.  Think of her as you put cream in your coffee.

She wrote about the cream of society, which she knew well.  Born a Jones, her extended family was the source of the phrase “keeping up with the Jones’s.”

She played in nearby Madison Square, my favorite park, with Teedy (don’t call him Teddy) Roosevelt.  Francis’ fantasizes’ about these lifelong good friends in the park, while neighbor Henry James sat reading on a nearby park bench, as neighbor Herman Melville walked through the park to his work at Gansevoort Pier.  It could have happened, and what a literary geek I am to thrill about it, too.

Across from the park is where Delmonico’s was and where Edith attended the “Patrician Balls” held there during the season, which ran from December to April.  She might have eaten Eggs Benedict, Lobster Newburg, or Chicken Ala King–all dishes invented at Delmonico’s for the eight course meals eaten there by the elite.
Scribners
James gave Wharton the advice to “go New York,” rather than write about exotic locales, and she was off.  Scribners, the handsome building at right, became her publisher, Francis joked, because they were right just around the corner from her birthplace.  What New Yorker wouldn’t want to go to work just around the corner?

House of Mirth sold more copies for Scribner’s than any book previously.  Wharton did not receive any inheritance from her father; it went to her brothers.  She built her mansion The Mount in Lenox, MA and her New York townhome based on her own earnings.  Way to go, girl!

Also love this view of the Flat Iron Building, which has absolutely nothing to do with Edith Wharton.  But after all, iFlatiront was an architectural tour, too.  This was taken on 23rd Street, just across from Wharton’s birthplace.  She lived opposite the swank Fifth Avenue Hotel.  It and her birthplace provide the setting for New Year’s Day, part of the Old New York trilogy, none of which I’ve read.

As we continued toward Gramercy Park, that lovely, locked park no one is ever in and the setting for another book in the New York Trilogy The Old Maid, we passed by one of my favorite trucks, which always is worth a look.  Have you seen it around downtown?  Olde Good Things.  Very good indeed!

Olde Good Things

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We ended in front of the National Arts Clubs, one of the first great places I visited after National Arts Clubmoving to New York.  I hadn’t noticed the five busts of literary greats on the facade at ground level.  Click on this picture to enlarge it.  Maybe you can make out Shakespeare.  In the center is Ben Franklin.

You think you have a lot of books?  The railroad lawyer who lived here originally had so many books that he bought the house next door, just for his library.  He then hired an architect to join the two houses and create a facade to make them appear as one house.  Well done!

Francis wanted us to see this building because Martin Scorcese used its interiors for filming “The Age of Innocence”–particularly the ball scene.  Can’t wait to rewatch it, with that in mind.

Well, I’m off to find the New York Trilogy, so I can continue seeing New York through Edith Wharton’s eyes, much easier to do after an afternoon with Francis.

 

New Haven gems

Today, I ventured to the College Book Arts Association meeting at Yale and had my first introduction to New Haven beyond the art museums.

We got to go on three rare book collection tours at Yale, and I’ll give you a taste of each.  Many more images are available in the image browser below.

I started my day at the Sterling Memorial Library, and oh my goodness, what a library.  It really is a cathedral of books.

Sterling Memorial Library 2

 

This is the long corridor you walk down until you arrive at the circulation desk.

 

 

 

Sterling Memorial Library 4

 

 

 

Yes, this is the circulation desk.

Seriously.

When you get up off your knees, I guess you can check out a book.

 

 

 

Sterling Scrimshaw Maps

 

While there, I got to tour the rare maps collection.  While each map, print, globe, and atlas was a true treasure, my faSterling Map 16th century reproduction of a Roman map of the worldvorite were the walrus tusk scrimshaw maps of the Alaska coast–just the perfect blend of material and function working in total harmony.

And I did love the 16th century reproduction of a Roman map of the world, squashed down to fit on a very long scroll.

The curator Abe also showed us maps he had created for books using Global Information Systems, or GIS software.  So as a curator, he’s a cartographer himself.  Inspiring, his delight in the treasures from history and his passion for creating maps digitally today.

Well, Beineke Library is inspiring, too, in a different way.  Designed in 1963, this is the 50th anniversary of this Gordon Bunshaft building.  He innovated the visible stacks, which extend up six stories, although most of the 250 million books are stored underground.  He also used a local mBeineke, its marble and lightarble that lets light through (as academics do for their students), a lovely metaphor for a library building.

Here’s my demonstration with a small piece of marble in front of a desk lamp.  And here’s what it looks like as the interior walls of the building.

 

The exterior is very much of its day.  Note the column support in the corner.  That actually doesn’t support the building.  It’s simply for aesthetics.  And I can tell you from walking under it, the faux columns do lend a bit of security to the overriding feeling that the building is going to fall on your head.

 

We were treated to some artist books and historic books with art in them, including books by Le Corbusier and Picasso (which also includes his poetry).  But with my passion for American art, you knowBeineke, Indian Ledger Book 2 I was all over the Indian ledger art by Howling Wolf made in the 1870s while he was in prison.  These are famous images and fantastic to see in person.

 

 

 

 

But my two absolute favorites on this tour were the 15th century Latin exercise book complete with doodles of castles, horses, and deer, oh my, and the “Blow Book.”  This is  like the first book of magicBeineke, Latin Exercise Book with doodles, where you can open it 16 different ways to see 16 different series of images.  Like a magic flipbook, the magician ‘blows’ on it, while opening it to reveal something completely different.  Fun, eh?Beineke, Blow Book

 

 

Here’s Elizabeth demonstrating how the Blow Book works.

And by the way, the miniature book on how to make miniature books was pretty postmodern cute, too.  Check it out on the slideshow below.

After Beineke, I got a neighborhood tour of New Haven by a realtor.  The downtown is really fun, lively, and much nicer than I expected–the home of several theaters, Yale’s two art museums, and of course, the bulk of the campus and the Green.  There are condos downtown, and the neighborhoods that I saw are quite lovely.

Returning to the tours, I went to the British Art Museum’s rare book room, where the curator is working on an exhibit for 2014, drawing side by side comparisons of historic “artist books,” mostly the work of girls and women in 19th century England, and contemporary artist books.

I liked the contemporary book of butterflies, where they are made from maps of where they come from.  British Artist Books 4 butterflies contempMuch better than your typical insect specimen book, which I find pretty creepy.

I won’t soon forget being the one who got to turn the pages of a Plant Specimen and Bestiary book from 1500.  Nowhere at Yale did I see anyone touch the rare objects with gloves.  Bare hands.  Bare hands, they insisted.  Things have changed since I was in library science school.  Anyway, touching a treasure like this gave me the shivers–the privilege of direct contact with something that someone labored lovingly over 500 years ago.

British Artist Books, 1500 Plant Specimen and Bestiary Book 4

 

 

 

beineke-blow-book

Image 1 of 39