Saturday, August 21, 2021

The New and Improved MOMA

With our art loving friend visiting (and working on a Coney Island hospital project), we bought our timed tickets, donned our masks, and ventured to both the Metropolitan Art Museum and the new and improved Museum of Modern Art.  The MOMA had been working on a two year expansion thanks to the purchase of the adjoining building at their 53rd St. location.  Now, it's 'stretched' and thus expanded.  The permanent collection fills three floors shown in chronological order.  The remaining two floors house the temporary exhibitions. 

The most talked about exhibition in the City is the 278 Cezanne drawings at the MOMA.  They were a fascinating look at an artist's process.  However, there is something to be said for selection and brevity, and this exhibition is really overwhelming.  I felt like I saw everything and nothing.  Many of the drawings were obviously 'practice' in the how to process.  It was pretty interesting to see him refine his fruit.  He also drew himself repeatedly.  (The full front face is his self portrait.)  I wondered if he spent a lot of time looking into mirrors.


He also practiced drawing his art friends' pictures, sculptures, as well as copying classical sculptures he admired.  This is "Olympia", his friend Manet's famous picture which was a reinterpretation of Venus of Urbino by Titian.

 

  
While Cezanne was fascinating, the OTHER exhibition was the one which I really enjoyed.  It was an Alexander Calder exhibition.  Calder has been involved with the MOMA since 1931 - the year of his first exhibit by the MOMA.  "Lobster Trap and Fish Tail" was specially designed for the new MOMA building - in 1939.  
At the dinner commemorating the 10th anniversary of the opening of the new building in 1939, Calder also designed the ten foot long candelabra decorating the table 


The current exhibitions is full of wonderful examples of Calder's art from large floor pieces to small whimsical wire sculptures as well as his signature mobiles.  If you love Calder, this is the exhibition for you.

The third exhibition was a bit of a dud in my opinion.  It's called Automania, and it was designed to show how detrimental the automobile has been on the urban landscape.  Not terribly successful.  My favorite piece was a Judy Chicago painted automobile hood, (outrageous at the time).  The Jaguar was also so beautiful, and the chrome on the Air Stream trailer was a mirror finish.  

 








I also picked and chose some of my 'fave' pieces from a couple of floors of the MOMA collection.  I loved the new expanded MOMA.  Hope you like my pics!    






















 







Monday, August 16, 2021

Long Island Lavender

 One of the delights of a vacation for a curious (nosy) person such as myself is meeting people who have a passion.  Everyone is usually proud of 'their town', but passionate people are usually attached to and passionate about a very particular place or event.  On Sunday we ran into one of those people when we visited the Lavender Farm.  A woman about my age told me everything there was to know about lavender.

I learned their farm is in two parts:  A 17 acre parcel (see above), and a 31 acre parcel.  Even with all the lavender harvested, the scent was pervasive.  There was no doubt what kind of farm you were visiting.  At the farm store they were selling lavender plants (most of which were still blooming) in the size pot in which you would buy a geranium.  And, the bees were busy at work on those blooming plants.  They were also advertising their once a year lavender honey was now available.  In addition to lavender, the farm has its own bee hives.   

There's French Lavender and English Lavender.  Generally, French Lavender has one bloom per stalk while English Lavender usually has two blooms.  "F" (French) is for fragrance, and "E" (English) is for edible.  Thus, you would make a sachet out of French lavender and brew your tea with English lavender.  The lady I chitchatted with confided she drinks a cup of lavender tea every night right before bed as her sleep aid.

In July, harvest begins as the sounds of chainsaws rip through the air.  One man wielding a chainsaw can harvest one acre a day.  Prior to gas driven chainsaws, lavender was harvested using scythes.  It was a much slower harvest, and less noisy.  If you notice, the lavender plants look like domes.  That's the preferred method of harvest.  Apparently, you never harvest lavender close to the ground

19th century scythe

 The woman I talked to demonstrated how to harvest a geranium sized lavender plant you would buy at their Farm Store.  She thrust her hand into the plant about halfway between the tip end of the plant (where the bloom grows) and the soil.  Then she spread her fingers and mimed snipping the plant just above her fingers in an arc, so you would be left with a dome shaped plant.  To successfully grow lavender, you need six hours of direct sunlight and good drainage.

The store was chock full of an array of lavender products.  I was thrilled to find one of my favorite ointments for dry skin.  It is a bees wax/oil pressed with lavender oil, and I seek it out every chance I get.  I use it at night on my hands and feet since lavender is used to calm angry skin as well as promote sleep.  This store had sachets, neck wraps, bath salts, hand lotion, soap, plants, tea, honey, mugs, aprons, t-towels, and my personal favorite:  a purple t-shirt advertising the Lavender Farm.  I also bought harvested lavender in a four ounce pouch.

I plan to add that lavender to my own rose petals I brought to Brooklyn from my rose bushes in Arizona.  I'm going to be making some sachets out of the Korean silk Marilyn, my mother-in-law, gave me.  (She and Norm, Drake's Dad, spent two years on an American Air Force base in South Korea in the 1970's, and Norm's employees had full Korean ceremonial dress costumes made out of silk presented to both of them.)  Forty years later, I was the happy recipient of the silk.  Since the clothes were floor length and 'full', there was a lot of salvageable material. 

Once again, readers, you now know more about a subject than you ever realized you wanted to know.