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looking in the mirror

Art history aside (since I know too little to go down that road, I say with shame), artist biographies aside, are there pieces of art you identify with?

There must be.

When I first saw this portrait of Jacqueline Roque, one of Picasso's wives, I identified with her sharp edges, because I always felt my own needed softening.



'Jacqueline with Crossed Hands'
Pablo Picasso
1954
Oil on canvas
23.6" x 31.5"
Musée Picasso, Paris, France.


On the other hand, Jeanne, soft and pliant in the yellow sweater is more the direction I would like to move.

Or maybe somewhere between.






'Jeanne Hébuterne with Yellow Sweater' ('Le Sweater jaune')
Amedeo Modigliani
1918-1919.
Oil on canvas
39 3/8 x 25 1/2 inches
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

New York City

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Maybe


STORY 1

An old farmer in Iowa grew wheat, soybeans, alfalfa, and hay for many years on his 2,000 acres. Then one year ethanol producers demanded more and more corn, so the old farmer decided to plant corn in all his fields. His neighbor came to visit. "Such good luck, corn is up from $3.50 a bushel to $5 next season!"

"Maybe," the farmer replied. And he sold his future corn at $5 a bushel, expecting to harvest 180 bushels of corn per acre. ($1.8 million)

In the spring devastating floods swept through levees and rose to record levels in Iowa, ruining more than half of the old farmer's corn crop. He would have to BUY the future corn he'd sold, at the current rate of $7.80 a bushel, a much higher rate than expected, in order to provide the corn he'd promised his buyers.

An old farmer in Michigan did the same with his fields, switching to corn from soybeans and hay. His neighbor said the same as the Iowan farmer's neighbor, "Such good luck, corn is up to $5 a bushel!"

"Maybe," the Michigan farmer replied. With the bad luck of massive flooding for the Iowan farmer (and also for farmers in Illinois, and in Indiana, and in Missouri, and in Wisconsin and in Minnesota) costing them millions of acres of lost crops and futures selling, which turned into having to purchase corn to fulfill contracts with buyers, the demand for corn only rose, pushing the price up and up so that the old Michigan farmer would earn more on his corn crop than he ever dreamed (currently $7.80/bushel @ 180 bushels/acre).

~ ~ ~

STORY 2

Farmer Don had a little 5 acre farm with beautiful, mature trees surrounding his house, providing shade in the hot summer. His neighbor came to congratulate him, "you are so lucky to have such beautiful tall trees to protect your house from the hot summer sun."

"Maybe," replied farmer Don.

Then a violent wind storm tore through the farm and split the prettiest maple with a honeybee hive in two, causing the tree to fall across his driveway.

"What terrible luck!" his neighbor said.

"Maybe," replied farmer Don. But he happened to have six strong men visiting who helped him chop up the pieces of fallen tree and move them out of the way. The men all told him, "what terrible luck to lose this tree full of honeybees!"

"Maybe," replied farmer Don.

When the men were gone and he began to clear away the fallen tree he looked up and saw the thin, old catalpa tree that had always been dwarfed by the maple before it had fallen in the violent wind. He was looking at the open sky around the catalpa tree when his neighbor came by, and he too looked up at the opened space allowing sun to fall on the catalpa tree, with rich but few white blossoms and heart-shaped leaves.





"Look! How lucky you are that the maple tree fell so your catalpa tree can thrive and grow bigger, providing beauty and grace to your farm."

"Maybe," replied farmer Don.





















These stories are based on the old Taoist story "Maybe.":

There is a Taoist story of an old farmer who had worked his crops for many years. One day his horse ran away. Upon hearing the news, his neighbors came to visit. "Such bad luck," they said sympathetically. "Maybe," the farmer replied. The next morning the horse returned, bringing with it three other wild horses. "How wonderful," the neighbors exclaimed. "Maybe," replied the old man. The following day, his son tried to ride one of the untamed horses, was thrown, and broke his leg. The neighbors again came to offer their sympathy on his misfortune. "Maybe," answered the farmer. The day after, military officials came to the village to draft young men into the army. Seeing that the son's leg was broken, they passed him by. The neighbors congratulated the farmer on how well things had turned out. "Maybe," said the farmer.












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living at the cemetery


At age 78 my father died before my mom, of lung cancer within just six weeks of diagnosis, although he had never smoked a cigararette, cigar or pipe. Mom had a long, gradual loss of brain function to Alzheimer's, and when Dad died she was at that stage when she seemed pretty normal on the surface, until she'd do or say something odd. For instance she would get up at 2am, take everything out of the refrigerator, and spread it out on the kitchen table for breakfast, then go wake whoever was sleeping to come and eat.

(After Dad died, my sister Nancy took care of Mom for a grueling and heartbreaking six months in our family home, until Nancy thought she'd lose her mind, and we moved Mom into a charming home where people with dementia were given expert and loving care, where she lived until she died in her sleep 18 months later.)

In the busy days when we were working out arrangements for Dad's funeral (he was a small town minister, so choosing the right minister and deciding which of the two town funeral homes were tough decisions), Mom would wake up each morning and ask, "Where's Daddy?" even though she saw him take his last breath on his hospice bed set up in the dining room, surrounded by all but one of their 8 children, some of their spouses and some grandchildren. We would tell her, each time, "Dad died, Mom." And she'd begin to wail, as if hearing it for the first time. "How did he die? Oh, I can't believe it!"

After the funeral and hubbub were over and it was just the two of them at the house, Nancy was daily repeating this answer to Mom's morning question, with the same resulting fresh grief. One day Nancy realized she needed to utilize "Alzheimer's logic" and not worry about little things like telling the truth - not easy for a minister's daughter.

So when Mom asked one morning, "Where's Daddy?" Nancy replied, "Dad lives at the cemetery now, Mom."

Mom: "Oh! Really! Oh, that's nice."

It clicked, it was fine. No more grief. In fact whenever friends came to pay a visit, she would tell them "Carl lives in the cemetery now," to explain his absence.

I leave you with a portrait of Mom at the start of her brilliant life (at about the same age as I am in the top photo), before graduating high school and starting Smith College at age 16, before being crowned Best Athlete in both schools (field hockey in which she could play both right and left wing, swimming, tennis, basketball), before developing her encyclopedic mind, before expert proficiency at the piano, before writing scores of songs (including this one written to the tune Finlandia by Jean Sibelius; this one is sung on Mother's Day at churches throughout the U.S., because there are very few hymns written about family), before devoting her life to God as much as any nun except that she married, before loving each of us 8 kids with Mother's Day cards at breakfast, telling us she wouldn't be a mother if it weren't for us.

Mom's birthday is tomorrow, June 26. I didn't even remember that until now, a few hours after posting this. I guess she is in the air.

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hand thrown

When Gwen posted a watercolor ode to her hand thrown mug made by a potter friend, I remembered the feel of bygone hand thrown mugs wistfully.

But oh! We have a hand thrown earthen mug in our very own home that has never been filled with anything but pens. With mixed shame and pleasure, I rescued it from a little seen alcove table in the sewing/treadmill room. Lesley had bought this beautiful piece of craft from a fellow art student named Rochel and given it to Don, but the handle-less vessel didn't call to his hand, or to mine at the time.


















I abandoned my factory made snowman mug, also given to Don, by one of his students, and poured hot coffee into the earthen mug.








How had I settled for the straight, smooth factory ceramic when I could have felt the slight curve and the subtle striations in my hand and the slightly thicker glossy glazed lip on my lips, and looked at the artistic Rothko squares instead of a cartoon snowman?

And I never hold a mug by the handle anyway.

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the 'bastard'


Please click on the images to see the details better.

This old 7-foot cabinet stands in our family room. It was named "the Bastard" affectionately by a local antique dealer because of how it combines several furniture styles: bits of Empire, Rococo, Neoclassical, etc, and the extra wooden base added at the bottom for height.

My mom's mom, Grandma Olive, made a living as an artist~illustrator~designer as a single mom in the 1920s and -30s when she and my grandfather were divorced. My mom was just 6 then, in 1924. I think I met Grandma Olive at least once (she lived several states away), but she died in1960 when I was 4; I have no memories of her. I wish I could ask her about many things, including this cabinet, which belonged to her.



Grandma Olive painted the Romanesque scene on the door of the cabinet, above. Here's a detail, below.



Mom told me that Grandma Olive was always picking up stray pieces of furniture at a bargain on the back streets of NYC (they lived across the bay in Bayonne, New Jersey), then taking them home to rejuvenate with her artistic imagination.






When I got this cabinet after my parents died, it was hard for me to put anything on the shelves besides "pretty" things - like the vases on top. But something in me rebelled against pretty decorating for the sake of form and not function, so now I keep my oversized books and some of our CDs there. Since I think books are beautiful, and piles of books even more so, I am okay with my own "bastardization" of this old treasure.

I dream of someday writing a book about four women: Grandma Olive, my mom, me, and my daughter Lesley. In it I would have to "create" Olive, since all I have are some things she touched, created, repaired, loved, and a few words about her from my mom and dad, and my older siblings. Although Olive had, and created, many beautiful things, I've read a couple of her letters that show material things weren't all to her. She had a big heart, but didn't always know how to share it.

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standard rural




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Cloud Gate


I was in Chicago with five friends for the weekend to celebrate Inge's birthday, happy me! It's just a 4-hour drive, and we don't get there often enough.

Inge's sister flew in from Germany, and three friends from Minneapolis took the low cost intercity Megabus, which turned out to be a 13-hour nightmare Friday of three miles forward and two miles back through the flooded plains of Wisconsin. Horrible! I hope they're home by now, since the bus driver for yesterday's return trip didn't seem to have a clue about the floods and after 4 hours on the road last night they were headed BACK from Milwaukee toward Illinois!

But we had a fantastic couple of days in the city, with gorgeous blue skies.
I had never seen the stainless steel bean sculpture by British (but Bombay-born) Anish Kapoor called "Cloud Gate" in Milennium Park. (Please click on the link in "Cloud Gate" to see the bean shape, which I didn't photograph.) It's inspired by liquid mercury, which I remember playing with as a kid when a thermometer broke. Do you see my reflection, below? (Sorry, I don't know why the image doesn't enlarge when you click on it. That feature is so inconsistent for me!)
The weekend was clouded for me big time by the death of Tim Russert. I still can't believe he's gone. No one will be able to take his place. And in one of the most stimulating presidential election years ever!




I added a closer picture for you, Sharon. Me in the bottom right wearing my new $7 linen skirt from Filene's Basement.
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after




After days of fits and outbursts
from sky to ground . . .



















. . . light softened into evening,
and I was healed,



I adjusted . . .

. . . as if an angry word had never been spoken.
The torn tree still lies in sawed pieces. The honeybees still swarm around their hive in the fallen limb. The leaves on the standing remnant bend in the breeze.

I bend with nature, I submit - holding on, like a spider on a blade of grass.


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tapping the maple


After Anet's neighbor's tree fell in a strong wind, we got ours.



While a group of 20 of us played outside Sunday (some of Don's family were visiting for the day), the weather started to change. Before we realized what was happening, sirens were blowing in town, and our neighbor Bill came over to warn us to get inside.

Just before we got to the basement, the funnel cloud was forming above our house, and this maple tree, the home of the honeybees, split at the Y and fell across the driveway.


We waited out the storm in the basement - my first time ever to do so, and I live in a tornado state!

Then the lumberjacks chain-sawed, tugged, rolled and dragged the fallen timber out of the way.












Only one bee sting, poor Mike.



If you're going to have people visit for a day, be sure to provide thrilling entertainment, and Nature activities. Oh, and if you have a tree fall in your yard, be sure to time it for when there are six burly types to clean it up.

We're so grateful no one was hurt.

(Well, besides Mike's bee sting, and Clyde having a branch fall on his head while he was using the chainsaw.)









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swallowtail















Mid-spring (now), two large flowering shrubs/trees bloom. The white one is a mock orange, whose light, delicate blossoms emit a heavy fragrance.

The pink one is a, um, I don't know what it is. I can smell no discernable scent, although Don can.

















In our yard, these trees are not visible to each other.

They stand about 200 feet apart, on either side of the house.

Every year the swallowtail butterflies make a frenzied path between them, drinking, drinking, drinking. Such immoderation.

First at the mock orange.
















Then at the, um, whatever-it-is-pink tree.









Each swallowtail adult lives about one month. There are 500 species of swallowtail. You can see one of them here is predominantly yellow, while the other is black.

I just added this different swallowtail to show another color combination:




I never knew that a gentleman's cutaway coat is called a swallowtail.

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