Showing posts with label blizzards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blizzards. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Random Things that Make Me Happy in the Middle of the Blizzard...


We are in the throes of a full throttle blizzard here.  The wind is howling like a banshee on the moors, the snow is blowing, the liquor store closed at 4 p.m. (!) and even the corner store where my son works closed at 6.

Hard to tell from the photograph below, but the whitish aspect of the photo is horizontal snow.




I admit to watching the massive pine trees and power lines suspiciously.  The scariest part of a blizzard with 50 km an hour winds is that a power line might go out

a) losing internet
b) losing heat

which is worse?  You decide...

But never mind.  I was stuck inside all afternoon which gave me the opportunity to finish cleaning my office.  I recently finished the final (for me) draft of my novel.  I am in revisions in the 2nd.  I have a nifty idea for a completely different third book, BUT, since I didn't sleep well last night, this seemed like a good day for chores, not brain power!

At three o'clock, I saw the top of my desk...

See all that empty space on the wall?  It is soon going to be home to two dry erase planning surfaces that will help me plot my next novel!




Yes, that is indeed a J Crew box under my desk full of returns.  However, I did receive my dresses and love them both!  More on that later in the week!




Daughter's shoes and my work books.  Yes, apple falls close to this tree.

Then Barry and I moved a bunch of furniture and cleaned.  It was very satisfying, though I am dead tired right now.


But I need some cheering and so I am ending this post with random images that make me happy.  I deserve at least that!

HAPPY:

The cottage we stayed at in Normandy in 2008:




Larry, Moe and Curly reading:


Three of the six Three Stooges read.


Geraniums:



Am I the only one who rubs the oil of geranium leaves  behind my ears?  I was afraid so..


Caftans:

Fitted Caftan.  Pink Love Poppy



I don't own a caftan, but as my body becomes ever more Mrs. Roper-like, I do think there is something quite divine about them..

Eiderdowns:

Oh I like my duvet.  But what I really want is a silk eiderdown!



Just like Mr. and Mrs. Miniver had folded neatly on the end of their beds...That would make me happy!  I could use a fireplace in my room, too...

Oh Walter Pidgeon, you good New Brunswick boy, look at that lovely eiderdown...


How about the future house of the chickens Barry is certain we will never have?  That makes me happy?

xx tracy porter..poetic wanderlust.- follies, guest house- shed- greenhouse
My favourite picture of the Princess of Wales makes me happy:




A picture of a Lhasa apso who could be Indy's twin:



The Tattinger caves in Reims.  All that champagne around me made me giddy before I'd even drunk a drop.  Even thinking of all those bottles of bubbly makes me happy!




Just knowing that someday soon, there will be fields of sunflowers in bloom in France...


And the last thing making me happy tonight?




Yup, I am feeling like a room without a roof!


I have cheered myself up considerably!  Anything making you happy?

Happy Thursday and hope your weather is a little more hospitable than mine..  Stay safe out there!

 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Let Me Brooch a Topic: Cameos as Sculpture

Are there any coincidences in the world?

Well one would tend to think no, especiallu not if

a) you watch any TV shows starring Kiefer Sutherland
b) you watch any doomsday movies
c) you watch any romantic comedies
d) you stay still now and then and pay attention...

Since I have partaken in a+b+c with some regularity in my life and am now, at 50, suddenly partaking in d, I am, too put it mildly, gobsmacked by all of the coincidences/connections that I keep running across now that I am paying attention to things!  I am like the newly pregnant woman who believes that suddenly EVERYONE got pregnant in July of 1991!

What is even worse, you all are here and I cannot help myself from sharing all of these newly discovered interesting "coincidences"!  

Today's post ties my sitting room curtains with some old cameo brooches I have with the book I am reading about Americans in Paris with New York City and New Hampshire!  If you knew me in real life - this post is pretty typical of every conversation I ever have with friends at a dinner table.  My mind is a bit of a mexican jumping bean.

What started this?  Well actually, it was me beginning my 2012 spring cleaning in early January of 2013.  Oh you read that right!  My house has been "cleaned" weekly during that last year, but the deep cleaning (where you take everything out and clean and organize) did not not occur last year.  My husband and I were simply too busy in our jobs.  Now that he is semi-retired and I am home on my self-imposed leave, I have been doing two years worth of spring cleaning.  It is very therapeutic to do manual labour and if this was summer, I would be out in my garden up to my armpits in good dirt as well!

So there I was in the old secretary in my hallway, cleaning out all of the cubbies - old cards, old cheque books, etc, when I came across the two ties for the curtains which are in my sitting room.  Surely every one has one of these kind of cupboards?  Mine is a beutiful old secretary desk that I inherited from  my great-great aunt, but the beauty of its outside belies the chaos of its insides...

The curtains I refer to currently hang straight - we have never used the ties to tie them back when they are open - but I thought to myself "Wendy old girl, either toss 'em or use 'em - they are no good here."  So I brought them out.  I didn't have any of those fancy little hardware thing-ys to put on the wall to hang them off, so I thought I might simply pin them all in some way. 

Then it hit me - I had recently come across two old cameo brooches in my jewellery box, inherited from my Mother, when I was digging out other jewellery to take to get fixed.  Wouldn't they look delightful pinning the ties to my curtains?  They weren't being used in my drawer and cameo brooches are not particularly worn with great regularity, at least around here.  Did it matter that the brooches didn't match?  Not to me!







Don't they look nice? Like they should have always been there.

I am sorry to say that I pinned them up and didn't look all that closely at them.  But some things WANT to be noticed.  And they will ensure that they are.  And this is where these coincidences come in.

Fast forward two weeks.  I am continuing to work my way through The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris by David McCullough.  I know I have harped on this book before, but I cannot help myself - I am learning so much and right now, a lot of what I am learning about are the soon-to-famous artists who went to Paris to study in the late 1800s.  I think all history books should immediately be thrown out and David McCullough should write and teach the rest.  I know this will be a big job for him since he is in his late 70s, but he is an american treasure and he brings history alive as I have never experienced history bought alive by a book.  Every night at dinner I tell a new story about the chapter I have read the night before, so family is also reading the book vicariously through me!

I know: I digressed.  Anyhow, this week I am reading about Augustus Saint-Gaudens, a penniless youth from New York who went on to be arguably one of the, if not the, greatest American sculptor of his generation.   You can see his work in many major monuments:

His very first commission of Admiral Farragut of Civil War Fame, located in Madison Square, which I have determined I must visit while in NYC, given how much I have read about the artistic and physical creation of this statue:

File:Farragut Mad Sq jeh.JPG

File:Lincoln The Man.JPG

Standing Lincoln in Lincoln Park in Chicago


Okay Wendy, sort of interesting you think (or maybe not!), but what struck me most was that Saint-Gaudens began his artistic career as an apprentice to a cameo-cutter in New York City, his talent soon surpassing his master's.  And this experience as a cameo cutter, the details and the intricacies, is said to have informed and bettered his subsequent work as a sculptor.

Now I freely admit that I have never ever thought about who made those vintage cameos I have had in my possession (I in fact even have a few more tucked away unworn as well).  For some reason, I never considered them as art.  But of course, once you start looking, how could you not?  The work to carve these little cameos is no different than the work of any sculptor and I have long admired similar visages on vases in museums around the world.  To think of a young man of 13 sitting for hours at a bench carving out these little delights humbled me.    And made me go back and look at the cameos I had in a completely different way.

Saint-Gaudens went on to have a celebrated career and McCullough's description of the work involved in creating the artist's first statue, the Farragut, was inspiring - I shall never look at a bronze statue in a park the same way again.  I am sure that Kathy could speak to all of this much better than I, since she does sculpt as well as paint, and I thought of you a lot while I was reading this chapter, Kathy!

So I am determined to visit Admiral Farragut when I go to NYC.  But in further research, it turns out that Saint-Gaudens, when he moved back to the US, moved to a bucolic farm in New Hampshire and it is now an historic site near the Village of Cornish.  Which is only about 8 hours from where I live and which has over 100 of his smaller works on display.  You know what that means: another road trip this summer!

But now I must turn my attention back to the cameo brooch for a moment:

Some can be very intricate and beautiful:


Source: here

Source
 They typically portray greek-like images and can be arved of shell, gemstone, or lavs like the cameo above.

I tried to find a new cameo pin to purchase for you all from a reputable store so we could ensure we were getting the best quality money can buy.  I couldn't find a cameo brooch at Tiffanys online, but that good old Canadian stalwart, Birks, has come through and how:

Large scale cameo pin
The site says: Large scale cameo pin, trademarked Birks, handmade bezel setting in 18 karat yellow gold featuring a shell cameo measuring 59 x 45 mm (low relief, modern theme, average detailing). Late 20th Century.

$1,500.00 CAD

I think she is quite lovely and when I look at her I am ever-mindful of the hours that went into her creation.  At that price I can sadly not purchase one for each of you, but if you would like one you can order it here.

How about you?  Do you own any cameos?  Do you wear them?  Have you been to any of Augustus Saint-Gauden's statues or his home in New Hampshire?  Or like me, is Mr. Saint-Gaudens a new discovery?

Today we have the blizzard.  Barry somehow did not believe that the storm was coming.  He will regret that later, since he left the car in the driveway, not the garage.  After 28 years of marraige, you learn to drink your coffee and be quiet about such things, especially if you were the one who happened to suggest it be moved the evening before...
This will be a good Saturday to continue to go through my closet and do some more reorganzing and purging.  And who knows what will come of that? What other coincidences I will come across?  The greatest gift of this leave has been re-discovering that there is a whole world out there.  We miss too much of it when all we do is work.  At least I missed too much of it.

I will also be looking out the window a lot, looking past my little cameos, at the lovely artistic show Mother Nature is putting on for me. 

Have a great Saturday and Stay Safe out there!  Mind those shovels!