2.29.2020
black history
In honor of Black History Month—and Flip's last Black History Month at the American Program Bureau, where he has represented Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela and many others for many years (and btw why is Black History Month the shortest month?)—I present the work of my grandchildren on the subject. Isaac drew pictures of a bus pre and post segregation. In the post, he is the kid in the back of the bus. Camilla chose to do a project about Queen Nanny, a leader of the Maroons in Jamaica. I assume she was drawn to the topic having spent some time in Jamaica herself. And she waxed quite irate about the lack of info about the leader. I am just proud to be Mimi's Nini, possibly named for the First Mother.
2.28.2020
getting the party started
Man of the hour author Adam Cohen and Hope arrived after the chairs. |
2.27.2020
dress appropriately
My clothing is going to a place it will feel at home, the land of aloha. Looks like I need to pare down the stack to pack, though.
2.26.2020
i smell a rat
Fortunately, the Rat was not outside my building or any of my usual haunts. Presumably it struck fear into whoever it was ratting out.
Meanwhile, a couple things.
Hannah's fame continues to increase as part of FedEx's promo.
Barrett's childhood home, Weir Farm, gets its own quarter from the US Mint, featuring a painter with palette. You can go to the launch and get your own quarter on April 7.
I am engaging in the usual spate of last-minute entertainments and tasks before leaving for warmer shores on Monday. Please encourage me to work when i get there! I don't have a problem with the playing part.
2.24.2020
two-headed monster
It's interesting being in someone else's mind for any period of time. Editing is like that—you're channeling someone else's sensibility. So for the past week, Donna and have been side-by-side editing captions to pictures that comprise her life's work. Being in her head is challenging. Donna's world is violent, unsafe, oppressive, futuristic, fatalistic, polyamorous, patriarchal and relentlessly political. Except when it isn't—which really keeps you on your toes. Because I don't know if you've noticed, but people aren't consistent or logical. Particularly photographers, who are primarily visual thinkers. Or maybe just Geminis. Anyway, ask me what Donna thinks about anything, and can I tell you: Both what she thinks and the opposite that she thinks a few minutes later. Now I have to remember what I think!
2.21.2020
reigning supreme
Must have been past Adam's niece's bedtime. She clung to him the whole time. |
Yes, there was cake. |
It may be the only time I appear in print.
Barb took a pic of me by the fireplace. yes, she's acknowledged as well! |
2.18.2020
a bit of roundup
They say when you lose weight, you should buy a new outfit. So 20 pounds later, I have. I leave for Hawaii on March 2. What I saved on the outfit (suit $20, sarong $10), I am spending on a rental car. Actually a truck, which will cost about twice the rent I'm paying for the shack. I guess if push comes to shove, I can live in it. The truck, I mean. Well, I plan on living in the suit, also. And the shack.
I have been dealing with people's memoirs. With Chien-Chi's script, which is basically a memoir in slightly fictionalized cinematic form. With Donna's, which is in photographic form (see intro below). She will probably have to join the witness protection plan if this book ever gets published. (As will I and Paula, who copy edited, and Barbara, who researched.) Captions are supposed to be finished this week. Looking forward to my own memoir which is in shitty written form at the mo! Planning to work on it in Kauai.
Here is a story about Todd's work. We met 20 years ago when I was doing a story about him for LIFE magazine, right before it folded. Boy was he suspicious of me! But all these years later, we're still friends. I suppose I should offer a trigger warning with this, except that most of my friends who read this blog already know Todd and his work.
2.14.2020
love is all there is
Happy Valentine's, valentines! If you are reading this, you know already that I love you, but heck, is there any such thing as too much love? I LOVE you. I HEART you. However, I have been unable to obtain these particular hearts for you. That's because the Sweethearts company was going out of business when it was bought by another company who apparently still hasn't got their distriution together. Meanwhile SweetTarts (?) and some other companies have stepped in to provide "conversation hearts" in a little box. But I'm still waiting on the almost real thing. Love you! Mean it!
2.12.2020
backyard life
2.10.2020
2.09.2020
block island now
Well not really now, but on Friday Johnny took these pictures of Block Island in the wind. No boats running, of course. These were in front of my house.
2.07.2020
alice's restaurant church
Some of you may remember Alice, and the restaurant —and the draft. Alice and her husband lived in the bell tower of this church near Great Barrington, Mass., and put their garbage down where the pews usta be, according, memorably, to Arlo Guthrie, who attempted to take the garbage to the dump on Thanksgiving and thereby evaded the draft. And seaking of people who evaded the draft—never mind.
Anyway, Arlo bought the church for real, nad now it's called The Guthrie Center. They hold hootenanies. Sorry, they have folk music concerts and interfaith religious services there, and I guess there's pews there again. I was gobsmacked to see the church when I was visiting Katie and Mike.
Anyway, Arlo bought the church for real, nad now it's called The Guthrie Center. They hold hootenanies. Sorry, they have folk music concerts and interfaith religious services there, and I guess there's pews there again. I was gobsmacked to see the church when I was visiting Katie and Mike.
2.06.2020
rags to rockers
Also, if Hannah pops up on your Facebook feed, don't be alarmed. As a past winner of the FedEx small business grant, they have built ads around her.
2.04.2020
journalists unite
One of the few houses that still seems to subscribe to print magazines. |
Peter relaxes after Mass and prepares to cook breakfast. |
The travelers depart. Photo by Peter Meyer |
Of course most of the action was backstage, in the family's half of the giant house, as Peter and Barb and Ed told war stories. We all met, after all, at LIFE magazine. Much laughing was done. These days Peter Meyer, former author of horrific, true crime books (until he began suffering from PTSD), writes about education and runs journalism classes for grade school kids, which you can read about in the NYT here.
Ed came up with a concept T-shirt: "Boobs for Trump." On the train ride home, Barb said she thought it should look like a cheezy Jersey shore souvenir. We amused ourselves with doing designs and watching the Hudson River slide by. Yes, I did butt in with college reminiscences at the Poughkeepsie stop and high school ones at Scarborough.
What do you think about the T-shirt? Feel free to email me with your ideas and I'll post em up for a vote.
2.03.2020
art weekend
Katie dashes by her Housatonic gallery and studio. |
Katie had a Big Day on Saturday, though with her two galleries, painting workshops and a life in the Berkshires and Block Island, most days are pretty big. At least she doesn't have a dozen horses and a farm any more. We headed over to her Housatonic, NY, Front Street gallery to pick up a telephone to test the land line in her Hudson, NY Warren Street gallery, where she was having an opening that day.
She hustles to Hudson, NY, to preside over an opening of her show of flowers. |
Janet and Peter and their son Dylan in front of their BnB. |