Monday, November 24, 2014

Recent things

So... I've had a chance to pick up some threads from the past. Tonight we'll go to Concert Choir rehearsal - we're working on the Verdi Requiem which we will perform January 10-11. Yesterday we saw a showing of a PBS documentary, Defiant Requiem, which portrays a performance of the Verdi Requiem in 1944 by Jewish inmates at Theresienstadt concentration camp. It was a powerful and very sobering film, and undoubtedly will shape our experience of singing it.



Tomorrow will be a wood stacking day - I hope we can get everything under cover before snow arrives on Wednesday. Thursday we're scheduled to have Thanksgiving with John and Cynthia, unless a storm makes that difficult for them. Tomorrow night is a River Singers rehearsal - that concert is coming up soon - December 6 and 7. And of course Dec, 6th is Guilford Church Christmas Bazaar, for which Ellen bakes hundreds of cookies to make cookie platters to sell. Busy season is on us!

Last weekend we had a Dummerston Choir Rehearsal Retreat at Hallelujah Farm in Chesterfield, NH. It was a lovely day, we had a great time singing together, and then singing at the service yesterday.  The choir will sing December 7 and 14 and also Christmas Eve. I'll try to remember to get a photo.

Happy Thanksgiving to all!





The world of "Christina's World"

We went to Maine the third weekend in September,  to go to the Common Ground Fair, which is an annual pilgrimage for Ellen, and often for me as well. The fair is sponsored by the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association, and it is a wonderful fair with hundreds of exhibits, workshops,  food booths, musical  events, etc. I learned how to make date bars on a campfire (and we got to sample them), a technique new to me for  bringing down a tree with a chain saw (which requires a bit of practice), ten common mistakes woodlot owners make (I'm guilty of several), and other important information.

"Date bars baking by an open fire...."

Serving up those delicious date bars!

During that weekend we stayed with Jim and Mary Tolles in Hope, Maine, and also visited my old friends, Phil and Deborah McKean, who spend their summers in Cushing, ME (they now live the rest of the year at Pilgrim Place, a retirement community in Claremont, CA). That visit included a visit to the Farnsworth Museum in Rockland, ME and that included a visit to the Olson House in Cushing, the location of Andrew Wyeth's painting, Christina's World.

Christina's World, by Andrew Wyeth
When you visit the Olson House, you learn a lot about the background of Christina's World. The young woman in the foreground is Christina Olson, who suffered from an undiagnosed muscular degenerative disease. She had a deep distrust of doctors and eschewed using a wheelchair or even crutches, and thus had very limited mobility and had to crawl around the house or when she (rarely) went outside. She lived with her bachelor brother, Alvero, in Cushing, ME, and Wyeth was introduced to them by his future wife, Betsey James, in 1939, and became a friend. He made this painting in 1948, just a couple of years after his father had been tragically killed when he was struck by a train. Christina Olson was then in her mid-50's. The figure of the woman in the painting is a composite of the head and torso of Wyeth's young wife, and wasted limbs and pink dress of the older Christina Olson.

The Olson House has been restored to an appearance very similar to that of the painting. The interior is mainly bare of furnishings, preserving the bleakness of the lives lived within it. It is impossible, however, the find the perspective on the house given in the painting, because in his composition of the painting, Wyeth altered the position of house and barn, as well as the lay of the land.

Olson House as it appears today
Kitchen in the Olson House, the only room with any furnishings
View from an upstairs window
While we were visiting houses, I wanted Ellen to see Phil McKean's old family summer cottage in Friendship, a place I have stayed in many times in earlier years, and which I consider a classic example of a Maine summer home, with old magazine pictures virtually covering the walls, old books and furniture, and mobiles composed of little hand-carved Friendship sloops, made by Phil's dad, Hugh McKean. The cottage goes back to the 19th century in Phil's family.

The McKean cottage in Friendship, Maine
Interior view of McKean cottage
Even the lavatory has magazine pictures
Surprised at a Maine camp site
The Farnsworth Museum is also a wonderful place to visit. The main exhibit was about Shaker life and design - a fascinating exhibit, but no photos allowed. However, they do allow photos of their permanent collection, and I got these three: a montage by Bernard Langlais, and landscapes by Neil Welliver and Rockwell Kent.

Montage by Bernard Langlais

Neil Welliver landscape

"Lone Rock and Sea" by Rockwell Kent
We love Maine!

Ellen's cooking school for Ben

In late August, Ellen's grandson, Ben Feinland, spent five days with us for a "cooking school" Ellen put on for him. They cooked during the day and watched PBS food programs in the evening. One day they made a meal for the homeless shelter and took it there. Another day they made a Vietnamese dish called pho - a noodle soup with shavings of beef. The finale was a "five small plates" meal - like tapas.  Ben's parents came up for the meal.


Ellen and Ben in the kitchen

Ellen, Ben, Jerry and Julie

The polenta course

More on Ogunquit, ME

I'm sitting in the customer lounge at Brattleboro Subaru while our Impreza gets its 60,000 mile service. 60,000 miles in 18 months. Yikes! But anyway, I've got a long wait. It's raining outside;  it isn't very pleasant for walking. So it's blog catch-up time!

Let's go back a month to my last post. We were in Ogunquit, ME with Katie, Savanna and Brendon. We had beautiful fall weather that was perfect for walking the Marginal Way, climbing on the rocks, walking on the expansive sandy beach. And we also went to the Ogunquit Museum of American Art - Ogunquit being, of course, famous in the early 20th century as an artists' colony, founded by Charles H. Woodbury. The grounds around the museum contain several examples of the whimsical sculptures of Bernard Langlais (1925-1977), a former neighbor of my friends, Phil and Deborah McKean in Cushing, ME. His property in Cushing contains over 100 of his works, and through Colby College will soon become a sculpture park open to the public.

Ellen, Katie and Brendon on the rocks at Ogunquit


The flowers in Ogunquit were still beautiful in October
Brendon had fun checking out the Halloween displays on his scooter


The Ogunquit Museum of American Art
View of the entrance to Perkins Cove from the Museum
Bernard Langlais sculpture
Charles H. Woodbury, founder of the Ogunquit Art Colony
Scene of Perkins Cove by C. H. Woodbury