After work I finally got into the garden and started pulling weeds, trying to enjoy the zesty, fresh spring evening. The past year I have had little time to attend to the garden and I have missed the zen feeling of working the earth. I had no plan in mind. At first I thought forget the veggies, I'm going for flowers this year.
While talking with folks who are also planting, I thought out loud to Reid (my chicken farmer, special ed teacher friend), "Maybe I'll just plant squash this year and nothing else--I could have zucchini out the yazoo this summer, gifting everyone until they hid when they saw me coming, basket in hand." Have you ever eaten fried zucchini blossoms? Still can't decide...maybe sunflowers!
Saturday morning (tomorrow) I wake to hot tea, muffins, the promise of Katie's phenomenal yoga class, and Lightning 100--the retro show. It's great radio and available online. Last weekend was 1969, I think tomorrow morning is 1986. My husband and I try to listen every Saturday, because Buc doesn't play run of the mill, but seeks out more diverse music for the show. It always ends with a Beatles song, or a song by one of the Beatles from the year featured. Read below from the website:
"Join Fred Buc every Saturday morning from 8am til 12 Noon (CST) when he features music from a particular year in progressive radio history! Also hear lifestyle features, news headlines, sports memories, TV theme songs and movie highlights from that year...plus a special local segment from Nashville's music legends! An original one-of-a-kind series, "Retro Lightning" has been a weekly tradition on Lightning 100 for over 15 years!" ref: www.lightning100.com.
Nashville is a pretty great place to live. When we moved here we had no idea how much culture was in this city. We have the BEST concerts, the BEST groups, EVERYONE comes here to play, because hey, it's NASHVILLE! I mean Johnny Cash was from here, we had Patsy Cline, we have Emmylou Harris, Kings of Leon, David Mead, Ben Folds, John Hyatt, Maura O'Connell, Edgar Meyer, Mark O'Conner, Guy Clark and Delbert McClinton. The list goes on and on. With so much musical talent the city has to be cool, or these folks wouldn't stay. I recently read that Bob Dylan said that his favorite two composer/musicians were Guy Clark and John Prine, also from Nashville (or Tennessee, at least.)
Our art scene is pretty hip, too. Recently historic Fisk University wanted to sell a Georgia O'Keeffe painting, and everyone in Nashville was up in arms about the idea. Heck, I didn't even know there were O'Keeffe paintings in this town. About 20 years ago, when O'Keeffe's retrospective went on the road I was going from city to city, checking out museums looking for her work after reading 4 biographies about her. At the time I saw an awesome video filmed in 1977 when she was in her 90s living at her home in Abiquiu. The video was so interesting that I just had to see her work upclose and personal. My timing was not good, because in each city I went to over the next two years, every major work by O'Keeffe was pulled to be part of this special exhibit. I never was near a city that had the retrospective, so I was truly battling disappointment. Even the Monet Haystacks I saw in Chicago at the Art Institute one of those two summers could not lift my spirits. I wanted O'Keeffe!
Fast forward to March of this year, two decades later, when I found out after living in Nashville 18 years, that two O'Keeffe paintings are right here, under my nose. It happened that our 25th wedding anniversary was that month, so I told my husband, Mike, that I wanted to see the Stieglitz Exhibit at the Carl Van Vechten Gallery. This wonderful place has many fantastic pieces--Toulouse-Lautrec, Picasso, O'Keeffe, Stieglitz, Renoir, and many more. Some are really famous artists, others little known but all incredible none the less. Also represented were paintings by the Lake George (NY) crowd that ran with O'Keeffe and Stieglitz, like Marsden Hartley and William Merritt Chase. I should mention that all of these pieces were part of Stieglitz's personal collection.
While there, I found out that Stieglitz was the first to collect African masks as art and not novelty. This was an outstanding afternoon, and a must see for anyone who comes to our progressive little city. Oh, and by the way, write to the Fisk University Adminstration and let them know they would be nuts to sell the major piece in this collection--The Radiator Building by O'Keeffe. It is truly the most important piece of the Stieglitz Exhibit. When I rounded the corner and saw it in person, tears came to my eyes and I caught my breath and held it, not wanting to move.
O'Keeffe hand picked every single piece for this collection, and it should NEVER be broken up. I don't care if the Radiator Building painting is worth $23 million! Let the students sit on the floor, but for God's sake, don't sell the painting! (Seriously, the Tennessean newspaper article I read said the university officials stated that they would buy much needed chairs with the money.)
Well enough about the culture of Nashville. Come see for yourself! Adora
Behind The Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity
by Katherine Boo
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Published By: *Random House*
DOP: Feb7, 2012
Genre: Narrative Non-Fiction
Helloooo Everyone! It's been ages, I hope so much you are all doing well...
14 years ago