Saturday, December 31, 2011

What Gets Dropped on NYE

I never got to see the ball drop when I was little, so I built it up to be a grand event in my head: it must be a giant ball that dropped and shattered. When I saw the real thing on tv in my late teens, it was a real let down. Here is a list of other, way more interesting, things that get dropped. This list does Pennsylvania proud--we drop lots of food items--a broasted chicken, various forms of candy, a bag of chips, and my favorite (because it's where Parker lives), a pregnant Mrs. Pickle in Dillsburg, PA (usually they drop a Mr. Pickle, but Mr. and Mrs. Pickle got married in June). There's also a big wrench drop in Mechanicsburg.


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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Grigg's


Grigg's is a little coffee store, in a town near Williamsport, that's been there for a hundred years.


It has gorgeous ceilings and is crowded with decorations, coffee-related and not (I love these marching elephants).



When I was there, the cafe and shop were filled with loads of Christmas shoppers, almost exclusively my grandparents' age.


The line was long, and I didn't have a book, so I entertained myself by taking pictures.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas Eve

(They're blurry, since I kept the flash off.)


Reading the Christmas story...


... and acting it out.


Candlelit carols.


(She mostly blew the candles out.)



Homemade ice cream.


Cousins!


Merry Christmas, y'all!

Friday, December 23, 2011

Wishful Thinking

Hopkins, over at Ten Thousand Places, posts a number of wonderful gift guides each advent. In that spirit, I give you my own wish list (emphasis on "wish"):

1. Elizabeth Bishop's Merida from the Roof:

I think that this was my favorite picture from the exhibit. Somehow I weirdly forgot to take a picture of this one. It doesn't look anything like this picture above. In the real thing the houses pop with color, especially the neon yellow one in the upper right corner, which almost sparkles. The loads of windmills are dreamlike (and clearly the perfect picture to own to declare your own environmentalism!).

I have a suspicion that all of the pictures from the exhibit are for sale (the horror!). I mean, this would be great news if I had the means to purchase one of them, but it is terrible news, given that I anticipate never having those means. I'm not sure how much they cost, as I gather it's gouache to write the price down somewhere.

2. Jadeite dishes:


I'm in love: it's the color, and the fact that it's vintage. And I'd like loads and loads of it. (I also love green hobnail milk glass.)

3. All of Laurie Colwin's books, signed:


In case it hasn't been already evident on this blog, Laurie Colwin is my favorite writer ever. In fact, I'm not quite sure how I would've made it through this last year without her. Even better: a Laurie Colwin letter!

4. A green Oscar de la Renta gown. Any green Oscar de la Renta gown. This one is still my favorite (but I've never seen him do green wrong):


5. A little two-person convertible so I can drive up and down Route 1 in California with a scarf in my hair and some sparkly sunglasses and probably a green gown:



(picture, picture,
picture, picture)

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Christmas in New York


After the Elizabeth Bishop exhibit and a burger at Kennedy's, we ran off to see The Messiah at Fisher Hall, which I understand is known for having problems with its acoustics. The Messiah is such a lovely advent meditation. It's my goal to go every single year; I'm pretty sure that this is only my second year to make it.

Fisher Hall is surprisingly plain. We had seats in the boxes on the sides and our hosts lent us fancy opera glasses so we could see the soloists (or check out the other audience members...). The only problem with the concert was the two of the soloists had colds and one left in the middle (there was no replacement!). Either way, it took my back to childhood Christmases where we listened to a tape of The Messiah while dancing around the play room.




On Sunday we did a good bit of walking across Central Park on the way to and from the Frick, a wonderful 5th Avenue art gallery. (The picture above reminds me of a Brueghel, if Brueghel painted in a big city.)


The Frick was wonderful. Because of Hopkins' rave reviews, I've been wanting to go for a while. Unfortunately we didn't go together, but I'll go back with you, Hopkins!


It was quite possible the most beautifully arranged and presented art I've ever seen. The mansion is beautiful; the rooms are exquisitely decorated; and the artworks compliment each other. It's the closest thing to a European palace that I've ever seen in America.


This painting of Sir Thomas Moore is one of the Frick's most famous. He's displayed across the room from Oliver Cromwell and they sort of glower at one another. The description on that phone thing that they give you is so funny: the man in the phone says that the fur and the velvet make you weak in the knees.


When walking through Central Park, our host carries a speaker so that he can enjoy the music. This meant that we were led through Central Park by a man wearing an orange hunting cap holding a speaker that was playing opera. It was definitely a moment that made you feel like you're in a movie.


I was really taken by all of the Christmas tree stands that lined the blocks and were, according to our host, manned by Canadians who sleep in little shelters near their trees.


We also hit the typical tourist spots--5th Avenue and Rockefeller Center, all the buildings decked out in their Christmas splendor (Oh my goodness--I was thrilled to go into the gorgeous Art Deco 30 Rock building!). And small town girl that I am, I was thoroughly shocked and appalled by the half-dressed models in the store windows (not pictured).


This is my favorite picture of all.


Last, but not least: here's the view from the window of our hosts' apartment. Moments like these make me feel like the richest person alive.


(picture, picture, picture, picture)
Alternate career possibilities (you can tell how down I'm feeling about the job market at the moment, which is perhaps worse, if that's possible, while at home, where not having a job is a more unusual thing):

1. editor (ideally for a university press)
2. guidance counselor (oh yeah Mrs. Coach!)
3. professor in Poland
4. philosophical therapist
5. Northside Social barista

and to continue the list less practically, but more excitingly:

6. National Geographic photographer
7. professional blogger
8. New York City socialite
9. poet

I welcome additional suggestions, especially for things that require minimal additional schooling and don't require you to move every few years, but rather allow you to pick where you're going to live, all of which I've discovered are very valuable to me.

Elizabeth Bishop, Artist and Curator

Just after we arrived in New York City last weekend (well, just after lunch at Blossom, a spicy vegan hipster restaurant [is that redundant?]), we headed over to an exhibit on Elizabeth Bishop that I've been dying to see. "We" included Francisco and our two lovely, exuberant and colorful hosts.

The Bishop exhibit was in one small room of the Tibor de Nagy Gallery (I think the gallery itself was only two rooms). It was a tiny exhibit, with excellent explanations of most of the pieces on the wall. It contained paintings by Bishop herself, as well as paintings that were in her family, and other artworks that she picked up during her many travels.

It's hard to explain this, but Bishop's paintings, quite possibly more than any other paintings I've seen, reward viewing in person. They just really don't look like the photographs of her paintings. The photographs of her paintings look flat and size-less. In real life, her paintings are extraordinarily delicate--they are painted on very thin, almost translucent paper. The paper is mounted on other, stronger paper. The paper curls slightly and gathers in curves, like thin paper is wont to do. The paintings are mostly quite small, the kind of paintings that I love most, where you have to get close to the picture to examine it. Bishop's brush stroke outlines are bold and blotchy on the thin paper, but also shaky. The colors in her paintings look like watercolors--they fill in the approximate space that they're supposed to, sometimes bleeding outside of the lines.



This one says, "Happy Birthday," in the top left.



Here is the desk that she used in Brazil in front of some paintings (I was surprised at how large and rustic this desk is).




This reminds me of the picture of flowers associated with Emily Dickinson (I think that her brother's mistress painted them for her).




This picture, painted for a lover, places Baedeker's Northern Italy beside some pansies, bringing up themes of travel and home, like the poem, "Questions of Travel." Also note the tablecloth's unfinished bottom (pretty typical of her paintings).


I like the irony: the powerlines look like a light from heaven shining on the church.


Bishop not only painted, but also put together these boxes, inspired by Joseph Cornell. This one deals with infant mortality in Brazil.


This is her reflection on several lines from an Octavio Paz poem she translated (and which was dedicated to Joseph Cornell):

A comb is a harp strummed by the glance
of a little girl
born dumb.



These next pictures showcase some of the art she collected.


This birdcage, of course, brings to mind the birdcage in "Questions of Travel."


(The Economist reviews the exhibit here.)


(picture, picture)

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

A Random Assortment


I give you today's random assortment with a generous portion of nostalgia: The fellowship program that I've been assisting with this semester is over, the fellows have gone, and I'm back home. I hate leaving people. "Superdepressfest," as one of the fellows put it.

So here's the links:

~ Some of Woody Allen's hilarious letters to Diane Keaton. I love nicknames in letters, and "Worm" is a great one. (via Hopkins)

~ Education and Roma children. Many Roma who emigrate to the UK are driven to do so by the possibilities for education there, which are not present in, for example, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, due to existing prejudice.

~ City ties! Potentially super localist! Although how much I like these ties varies according to how regular the street plan is. But, for those who like maps...

~ Paper dolls of Leslie Knope, Ron Swanson, and Tom Haverford. I love these. Especially Ron with braids. I obviously get to be Leslie (right?).

~ Robert Frost's Christmas Cards! (one pictured above)

~ This combines two things of interest to me: QR codes and tattoos. I still don't have the vaguest clue how QR codes and this randomly working one confuses me even further.

~ P.D. James' latest novel is a mystery sequel to Pride and Prejudice, Death Comes to Pemberley. The Economist reviews it here.

~ I love that Garance, too, is afraid to dance, but that she does it anyway. The video is so cute!


(picture)

Monday, December 19, 2011

Christmas Crafts


Being a graduate student, I don't have loads of space in my life for creative expression. In fact, besides taking a couple of pictures and posting them on my blog, I don't have many creative outlets. Which is one of the reasons that I like Christmas: all that gift-giving opens up space for creativity. (Technically, this doesn't have to do with Christmas, but for a birthday that is very close to Christmas we'll count it.)

I needed something to wrap Francisco's birthday presents up with and didn't have any wrapping paper. I felt the need to be creative with it since he used old, carefully chosen New Yorker covers for my birthday gifts. I saw online some pictures of handmade wrapping paper using stamps, which looked amazing, and I figured I could use clip art and do something a bit simpler. I picked lots of simple pictures that make me think of Francisco and repeated them in a pattern and voila!--wrapping paper-ish sort of thing (okay, so I only had a black and white printer--this would have been way cooler in color).



Here's the final product:

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Don't worry, FLG: I was pretty sure that the article ranking Georgetown as the 10th most hipster university was wrong, so I checked with Edge, who is still around Georgetown a lot (I haven't spend much time there this semester). Not only is Edge around Georgetown a lot, but she's also from Brooklyn, so she knows a hipster when she sees one. She writes:

"For my part, I think this is crazy--Georgetown is not hipster at all. It remains preppy to the core, as far as I am concerned. It is hipster only insofar as hipsterdom has now become mainstream (tortoise shell glasses, skinny jeans, floral grandma prints (I read your blog, you hipster you!), etc)."

Black Floral Prints


I'm pretty infatuated by really old black floral prints at the moment. I think that they might be just vintage enough to be okay to wear?




Okay, so not so much the backpack, but just showing you the prints!



(picture, picture, picture)

The View From My Window.3

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