"If more of us valued food and cheer and song over hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world." - J.R.R. Tolkien
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Family Adventures: Our Ballerina
My parents were in town this past weekend, the main draw being Our Girl's dance recital. She has been devoted to ballet for a couple years now but she's suggested that she might like to try something different this next year: hip hop or tap, maybe. We have some time to think about it. Meanwhile, the recital went very well.
My folks arrived on Friday night and Saturday began inauspiciously. High winds knocked out our electrical power. Losing lights is one problem but the big issue for us is water. We have a well and when the electricity goes, we lose the pump. Facing any stretch of time with a house full of guests and severely compromised toilet capacity was daunting, to say the least. I quickly suggested we go out for breakfast.
The Village Cup served our needs perfectly. Everyone used the opportunity to go to the bathroom, too. Fortunately, the power came on again not long after we got back, still allowing us all plenty of time to get ready for the recital. Phew!
Image via Sonoma Station
One of the big highlights anytime my parents visit is dinner at their favorite Vermont restaurant: Sonoma Station in Richmond. They offer "New American Cuisine" in a simple, yet elegant atmosphere. We've been several times over the years and I've never had a bad order. We have a charming waitress who always remembers us, too, and even manages to remember the details of dance recitals from years past - impressive. All the adults had the rack of lamb special - divine. There was also a very exciting dessert: lemon basil sorbet, apparently a creation of one of their kitchen interns. Oh my goodness! Heavenly! My Wife makes her own ice cream during the summer months and I expect basil possibilities will be explored this year.
Thai for lunch the next day, it was our first time taking my parents to Sukho Thai since the new owners took over. We all agreed that if anything, the food has improved under the new regime. I had the Spicy Tamarind Duck special which was wonderful.
Finally, we spent Sunday afternoon at the Fleming Museum, the University of Vermont's main art museum. We've lived in Vermont for ten years now and, somewhat surprisingly, had never been to the museum before. It's small but the collection is impressive. The academic year is over so it's quiet, too. Given my recent comic explorations, I'm particularly drawn to the pop art. The Fleming has both a Warhol Cow
Image via Joseph K. Levene Fine Art, Ltd.
and a Lichtenstein Sandwich and Soda.
Image via MMoCA
One of my favorites at the museum was Granite Quarry by Francis Colburn:
Image via VPR
We'll definitely be back. There was even talk of becoming members.
On the kickball front, we had our second game last night. I played catcher, which was fun. For my only at-bat (at-kick?), I kicked into a fielder's choice - not too happy about that. We lost again, 4-1 again. It was tied after 5 innings at 1-1 but, as there was plenty of time before the next game, we agreed to play extra innings. What fools we were! I realized only too late that they had their best players coming up. Oh well. Just as with broomball, everyone makes the playoffs so if we can get our act together by then, I think our team has decent potential. There's talk of better organization regarding positions and substitutions for the next game - and maybe even practice!
Labels:
art,
dance,
family adventures,
food,
kickball,
Off My Duff
Friday, April 27, 2012
On the Road: The Family Passions
Photo via District of Columbia
Our Girl and I typically spend our April break in Washington, DC visiting my parents. It's a great time of year to be in the city. The mad rush to see cherry blossoms is over but the dogwoods and other flowering trees are in bloom and the long, muggy summer is still a ways off. It's generally a good time to escape from Vermont, too, though this year's early spring here has been very pleasant. Of course, as I sit here now for my reflections on our trip, it's a dreadfully grey day and there is, in fact, some light snow coming down. Zheesh!
Our DC trips have evolved over the years. Early on, I was eager to show my daughter as much as possible in what time we had. But as the novelty of zoos and museums have worn off, she's usually pretty content to have smaller adventures with Grandma around the Kalorama neighborhood where my parents live. However, there is so much to share in that great city and while it wasn't really planned as such, this particular trip became an occasion for my parents and even for me to share with Our Girl aspects of Washington that have long been important to each of us.
Sunday
Music in general and singing in particular have been lifelong passions of my father's. He has been a member of the Choral Arts Society of Washington (CASW) basically since we moved to the DC area in 1976. Growing up, the annual Christmas concert at the Kennedy Center with the National Symphony was a very important family event. My own love for choral music didn't emerge until college but the seeds were surely planted early. Our Girl had yet to attend one of Grandpa's concerts when my father asked during our visit in December if we'd like to come to the Brahms Requiem performance when we came in April. I was a little worried about Our Girl's ability to sit through it so I stalled on a decision. But he kept asking so once our travel plans were finalized, I figured it was worth trying. Our Girl was a bit apprehensive but once assured she could bring a book just in case, she agreed.
Photo via WBRI
It didn't occur to me until we arrived in DC why this particular performance was so important to my father. While I knew the group had just hired a new conductor for the fall, I did not grasp that the Requiem concert would be the final Kennedy Center performance for Norman Scribner, the founding conductor of the CASW, the man who had built the organization over 47 years. Scribner has been an important person in my father's life for 36 of those 47 - and, I suppose, my own vicariously. The Brahms Requiem is Scribner's favorite piece and thus an appropriate send off. The performance was about as close to perfect as you'll ever hear, capped by the most sincere and richly deserved standing ovation I've ever witnessed. Chorus, orchestra and soloists all deferred tribute to the man of the hour. There was not a dry eye in the house. Our Girl even made it through without a book.
Monday
For the past several years, my mother has served as a docent at the Freer Gallery, one of two Smithsonian museums devoted mostly to Asian art. The museum has become every bit as important to my mother as singing is to my father, if not more so. The Freer and neighboring Sackler are currently exhibiting a rare and wonderful treat: the complete collection of Hokusai's 36 Views of Mount Fuji! I've been in love with Hokusai's woodblock prints since childhood and his Great Wave off Kanagawa, the most famous of the 36 Views collection, is most certainly my favorite work of art in the whole world.
Image via Random knowledge
There are actually 46 prints in total and it was quite exciting to see them all together in one place. After our visit on Monday, we also took a quick peek into the African Art Museum next door. With that excursion, I have now been to all of the museums on the National Mall during my lifetime.
Tuesday
I've been saving one of my personal DC favorites for when I thought Our Girl would be ready for it. Until recently, she has been very uneasy in movie theaters but as many who've followed my blog already know, we've managed to see quite a lot of films over the past several months. As such, I felt it was time for her to see To Fly, the Air and Space Museum's original IMAX film, screened every day since the museum opened in 1976. For me, To Fly never gets old. I am not ashamed to admit that I am afraid of heights and To Fly allows me to test the limits of that fear without even getting up from my seat. At one moment, you are riding along in a car when suddenly the Earth drops out from under you. At another, you are practically poured out onto the New York skyline. Our Girl got scared and clutched my arm a couple of times and I must admit to some jumpiness of my own. But we both survived.
Image via MacGillvray Freeman Films
Afterwards, we went upstairs to take in a planetarium show, too. She had been to a planetarium before. There's one at the Fairbanks Museum in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. But not surprisingly, the Smithsonian is in a different league. They do a basic night sky show once a day but they also have what are essentially movies projected on the ceiling. We saw Infinity Express, narrated by Laurence Fishburne.
Wednesday
For the most part, Our Girl was eager to do "whatever Grandma wants to do" but she did express an interest in visiting the Natural History Museum - my own childhood preference, too. The museum has been transformed in recent decades and now only barely resembles what I remember from my youth. The big elephant still dominates the atrium and the dinosaur bones and the Hope Diamond still draw crowds but there's plenty new to explore. If anything, I find the museum a bit overwhelming. It vies with Air and Space for the title of world's most visited and the crowds can certainly be oppressive. We had a good wander, though, beginning in the sea exhibit, then heading to the mammals through human origins. The human origins exhibit was new to all of us and very impressive.
Food
Washington is a great city for restaurants and my parents are always very generous in sharing their favorite spots. After the concert on Sunday, we went to Mourayo, a Greek restaurant near Dupont Circle. I had the grilled lamb chops which were absolutely divine. My Wife is a big lamb fan and I was sad she wasn't with us for it but I'll have a good recommendation for when we're all there together. They don't have a children's menu per se but they came up with a great bowl of pasta for Our Girl. Between that and the ample supply of wonderful bread, she was a happy camper.
On Tuesday, my parents took us to Pizzeria Paradiso, also near the Circle. Our Girl and I split a 12-inch paradiso pie with prosciutto on half - delicious. They have an outstanding beer selection, too.
On Wednesday, on our way back from Natural History, we stopped at FroZenYo, one of my mother's favorites. I had cake batter yogurt with whipped cream and gummy bears. I also got to finish Our Girl's mint chocolate chip, one of the fringe benefits of fatherhood.
Final Thoughts
I love the Smithsonian but it is draining, especially for a kid. I'm very glad to have made the trips downtown this visit but for future adventures, I think I'd like to invest more of our time in exploring the Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan areas near my parents. There's plenty to see, including the Phillips Collection and Textile Museum. I've never been to either. I enjoy our DC trips, but it's always good to come home, too, even if it's snowing in late April.
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Labels:
art,
family adventures,
film,
food,
music,
on the road,
Washington DC
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Family Adventures: The Cost of an Early Spring
After a glorious week of sunny days and temperatures in the 70s, we got back to more typical early spring weather this weekend: rainy and chilly. Due to our mild winter in Vermont, there are already buds on the trees - about a month earlier than usual. It will be nice to see green soon but, as we will address shortly, the early spring has come at a cost. On to the highlights of a busy weekend...
Maple Open House Weekend
Early spring, a.k.a. Mud Season, is arguably the most miserable time of year in Vermont. As the snow melts, all of our charmingly rustic dirt roads turn to goop. Winter's beautiful white is gone and the glorious green of seasons to come has not yet taken hold. Instead, there's wet, brown muck.

Photo via Elsie's Daughter
The annual payoff for this gloomy time of year is an awfully good one: maple syrup, a substance for which Vermont is justifiably well-known and very proud. This weekend was the official open house weekend for the sugar shacks statewide. Unfortunately, everything I wrote last week about this being a good year for maple sugaring was completely wrong. Once the trees bud, the sap stops running. It's all over. Last year, they were able to tap the trees until mid-April - brutal.
Undeterred, we dutifully visited our closest sugaring house, owned and operated by the family of one of Our Girl's good friends. They didn't have any grade B, our favorite, and are unlikely to given the weak harvest. We got some grade A medium amber and also some maple sugar for toast and such - a perfectly respectable haul but one hopes for better next year for their sake more than ours.
Broomball
Lost again, 1-0. It's a distressing pattern. I do feel like we get better each week and I think we can be particularly proud of how we played in the first period as most of the action was in our opponents' end of the ice. I'm working on being a better passer and that was going well - for a while.
What's killing us is a lack of subs. There were only six of us on Saturday night, just enough to field a team. For next season, we need to find people who will show up. Those of us who've been playing regularly have improved and others would, too. Playing thirty minutes with barely a chance to catch your breath between periods is just too much. It was my own errant pass that started the other team on their breakaway for their only goal. I take full responsibility. But, if I hadn't been exhausted, it might not have happened.
Green Mountain Film Festival
Focus on Film is currently in the midst of the 15th Annual Green Mountain Film Festival. Most of the festival takes place in Montpelier but there will also be screenings in St. Johnsbury next weekend. We went to see A Cat in Paris this morning. The film was shown at the City Hall Arts Center, a fairly large space that I was sure couldn't be filled on a Sunday morning. Boy, was I wrong! This was the festival's big kid-friendly feature but there were plenty of all age groups in attendance. Everyone applauded at the end, too. I love it when people clap at the end of a movie.

Image via Unseen Films
The film is very charming, well-deserving of its Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature. The story is pretty straight-forward: a mute girl living with a single mom and a cat who goes on nightly adventures. There's more, of course, but I won't spoil the fun for anyone interested in seeing it. The animation was very nice, mostly cell-animation, I think. The plot is simple, easy to follow and moves along at a fair clip. My Wife didn't like the Olive Oilish chests on the women and I didn't care for the lines on the faces - looked like whiskers on the men and freckles on the women but they just made everyone look untidy. But overall, all three of us enjoyed the film very much. Four out of five stars from me.
Editorial Note: Suze's comment below made me think that perhaps one might get the wrong idea from my previous paragraph. There's not a thing wrong with freckles on women or whiskers on men. But they were drawn similarly so it looked like the women had whiskers high on their cheekbones. It just didn't look right.
My Wife commented that perhaps next year, we'll see nominated movies before the Oscars. I think she may have been a little embarrassed at the Oscar party that we hadn't seen more of the films. Seeing as Our Girl has come to terms with the fear of the dark element, our cinema attendance has increased dramatically over the past several months. I think we'll be in respectable shape in time for next year's party.
Coffee Corner
The half stack was plenty - and glorious. I love a good pancake - a spongy one that melts in your mouth. In truth, I probably could have had more but it seemed silly to do so just to prove a point. I was happy with my meal.
Phoenix Books

Image via Essex Shoppes & Cinema
Our final stop on the way home was our local independent book store, Phoenix Books in Essex. Business must be going well as they're opening a second location in Burlington. The reason for our visit today, however, was an art display by Our Girl's after-school art program. We got to see animal paintings by Our Girl and her friends - impressive work by all, especially considering the age. She loves art and I'm very pleased that we've found such a meaningful outlet.
Maple Open House Weekend
Early spring, a.k.a. Mud Season, is arguably the most miserable time of year in Vermont. As the snow melts, all of our charmingly rustic dirt roads turn to goop. Winter's beautiful white is gone and the glorious green of seasons to come has not yet taken hold. Instead, there's wet, brown muck.
Photo via Elsie's Daughter
The annual payoff for this gloomy time of year is an awfully good one: maple syrup, a substance for which Vermont is justifiably well-known and very proud. This weekend was the official open house weekend for the sugar shacks statewide. Unfortunately, everything I wrote last week about this being a good year for maple sugaring was completely wrong. Once the trees bud, the sap stops running. It's all over. Last year, they were able to tap the trees until mid-April - brutal.
Undeterred, we dutifully visited our closest sugaring house, owned and operated by the family of one of Our Girl's good friends. They didn't have any grade B, our favorite, and are unlikely to given the weak harvest. We got some grade A medium amber and also some maple sugar for toast and such - a perfectly respectable haul but one hopes for better next year for their sake more than ours.
Broomball
Lost again, 1-0. It's a distressing pattern. I do feel like we get better each week and I think we can be particularly proud of how we played in the first period as most of the action was in our opponents' end of the ice. I'm working on being a better passer and that was going well - for a while.
What's killing us is a lack of subs. There were only six of us on Saturday night, just enough to field a team. For next season, we need to find people who will show up. Those of us who've been playing regularly have improved and others would, too. Playing thirty minutes with barely a chance to catch your breath between periods is just too much. It was my own errant pass that started the other team on their breakaway for their only goal. I take full responsibility. But, if I hadn't been exhausted, it might not have happened.
Green Mountain Film Festival
Focus on Film is currently in the midst of the 15th Annual Green Mountain Film Festival. Most of the festival takes place in Montpelier but there will also be screenings in St. Johnsbury next weekend. We went to see A Cat in Paris this morning. The film was shown at the City Hall Arts Center, a fairly large space that I was sure couldn't be filled on a Sunday morning. Boy, was I wrong! This was the festival's big kid-friendly feature but there were plenty of all age groups in attendance. Everyone applauded at the end, too. I love it when people clap at the end of a movie.
Image via Unseen Films
The film is very charming, well-deserving of its Oscar nomination for Best Animated Feature. The story is pretty straight-forward: a mute girl living with a single mom and a cat who goes on nightly adventures. There's more, of course, but I won't spoil the fun for anyone interested in seeing it. The animation was very nice, mostly cell-animation, I think. The plot is simple, easy to follow and moves along at a fair clip. My Wife didn't like the Olive Oilish chests on the women and I didn't care for the lines on the faces - looked like whiskers on the men and freckles on the women but they just made everyone look untidy. But overall, all three of us enjoyed the film very much. Four out of five stars from me.
Editorial Note: Suze's comment below made me think that perhaps one might get the wrong idea from my previous paragraph. There's not a thing wrong with freckles on women or whiskers on men. But they were drawn similarly so it looked like the women had whiskers high on their cheekbones. It just didn't look right.
My Wife commented that perhaps next year, we'll see nominated movies before the Oscars. I think she may have been a little embarrassed at the Oscar party that we hadn't seen more of the films. Seeing as Our Girl has come to terms with the fear of the dark element, our cinema attendance has increased dramatically over the past several months. I think we'll be in respectable shape in time for next year's party.
Coffee Corner
“I went into a restaurant. The menu said, ‘Breakfast anytime.’ So I ordered French toast during the Renaissance.” - Steven WrightIn my opinion, the three most beautiful words in the English language are "Breakfast Served Anytime." Such is the promise at Coffee Corner, just down the street from City Hall. Our wait for a table was a bit long and I was more than a little grumpy by the time we were seated but all turned out fine in the end. I had a half-stack with a side of corned-beef hash. I initially ordered the full stack but our waitress advised against. "Most people don't finish the full stack," she said, "I don't want you to waste your money." So, I ordered the half and she promised to bring me more if I was still hungry. Fair enough.
The half stack was plenty - and glorious. I love a good pancake - a spongy one that melts in your mouth. In truth, I probably could have had more but it seemed silly to do so just to prove a point. I was happy with my meal.
Phoenix Books
Image via Essex Shoppes & Cinema
Our final stop on the way home was our local independent book store, Phoenix Books in Essex. Business must be going well as they're opening a second location in Burlington. The reason for our visit today, however, was an art display by Our Girl's after-school art program. We got to see animal paintings by Our Girl and her friends - impressive work by all, especially considering the age. She loves art and I'm very pleased that we've found such a meaningful outlet.
Labels:
art,
broomball,
family adventures,
film,
food,
good reading,
Off My Duff
Monday, September 19, 2011
Family Adventures: Letterboxing
My Wife has discovered a new family hobby for us: letterboxing. Learn all about it here. The basic idea is, someone plants a waterproof box somewhere. They put a rubber stamp and a small notepad in the box. They post clues to finding the box online. The searcher finds the box, stamps their own notebook and marks the notepad in the box with their own stamp or signs it. Done. It's basically a treasure hunt. The boxes are planted throughout North America and beyond. There are 178 listed for Northern Vermont alone, including quite a few within easy striking distance of our house. So, we decided to give it a go.

We started with the Mills Riverside Park Series. Sadly, we were only able to find two of the three in the series. We couldn't find #1. One of the clues for #1 is "Check out the amazing tree." This is Vermont, for crying out loud! Throw a rock in any given direction. It'll bounce off of one amazing tree and hit the one next to it. There has been some flooding in the area, as you may have heard, and it's not difficult to imagine that box might have been washed away. We did find #2 and it was in excellent shape. #3 hasn't fared as well. The box had been crushed and the notepad was completely soaked. The stamp was in good condition, though.
Overall, I enjoyed it and I think it has a lot of promise as a hobby for us. It's hiking-light compared to our Long Trail and Side-to-Side projects. It's also driving-light, which I definitely like. Some supplies to bring for next time: gloves for poking around in the dirt and underbrush for the box, hand wipes and/or sanitizer and perhaps some extra Ziplocs to reinforce boxes that have sustained damage.
We also went "apple picking." Apple picking the past couple of years has basically involved driving to Chapin Orchard, buying a couple bags of apples, then finding a nice place to sit with our cider and doughnuts: perfect.



Finally, we stopped by the Jericho village green to see the new sculpture display by Our Girl's after school arts program. This is her section of the larger whole which follows:


Overall, it was a great, adventurous weekend. The equinox is near!
We started with the Mills Riverside Park Series. Sadly, we were only able to find two of the three in the series. We couldn't find #1. One of the clues for #1 is "Check out the amazing tree." This is Vermont, for crying out loud! Throw a rock in any given direction. It'll bounce off of one amazing tree and hit the one next to it. There has been some flooding in the area, as you may have heard, and it's not difficult to imagine that box might have been washed away. We did find #2 and it was in excellent shape. #3 hasn't fared as well. The box had been crushed and the notepad was completely soaked. The stamp was in good condition, though.
Overall, I enjoyed it and I think it has a lot of promise as a hobby for us. It's hiking-light compared to our Long Trail and Side-to-Side projects. It's also driving-light, which I definitely like. Some supplies to bring for next time: gloves for poking around in the dirt and underbrush for the box, hand wipes and/or sanitizer and perhaps some extra Ziplocs to reinforce boxes that have sustained damage.
We also went "apple picking." Apple picking the past couple of years has basically involved driving to Chapin Orchard, buying a couple bags of apples, then finding a nice place to sit with our cider and doughnuts: perfect.
Finally, we stopped by the Jericho village green to see the new sculpture display by Our Girl's after school arts program. This is her section of the larger whole which follows:
Overall, it was a great, adventurous weekend. The equinox is near!
Labels:
art,
family adventures,
food,
hiking,
letterboxing,
Off My Duff,
photography
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