Weekly notes on Southern art, architecture, food, and travel
As always, all images unless otherwise noted copyright Deep Fried Kudzu. Like to use one elsewhere? Kindly contact me here.
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Robert Johnson’s Come on in my Kitchen in newly-restored audio
Here, the monument for Rezin P. Bowie, brother of Jim Bowie and inventory of the Bowie knife, from a 2007 visit I made to the Roman Catholic Cemetery in Port Gibson, MS
Born from a Duel: A history of the Bowie & other knives in Louisiana, from 64 Parishes:
Tujague’s, from a 2016 visit — the sign has since been restored and is now on display at SoFab.
Meet the Neon King of New Orleans at Garden & Gun — Nate Schaeffer’s shop here.
“By the 1950s, New Orleans had more neon than Las Vegas. Canal Street had six hundred signs within a few blocks.”
I missed this from late last year, but Dezeen reports on this development for a school in Uniontown, Alabama:
Architect Danish Kurani has developed a prototype for a “connected” classroom, designed to enable expert teachers to remotely provide lessons to students in rural communities.
Kurani completed the first iteration of the Connected Classroom at Robert C Hatch High School in Alabama’s rural Black Belt region, in partnership with nonprofit Ed Farm and the State of Alabama.
Domilise’s, from a 2012 visit
Todd Kliman’s Submitting to the Beast: A father and son in New Orleans—feasting and flaneuring at the Oxford American
Lake Pontchartrain, 2023
The Library of America’s Story of the Week is “The Magnolia of Lake Pontchartrain” by Margaret Fuller:
I think the LoA’s link to the actual story may be routing to an incorrect page — this one seems to be right. And here it is as PDF.
BIG’s design for Nashville’s upcoming Tennessee Performing Arts Centre can be viewed here.
In the latest New Yorker, I noticed an ad for The Folio Society with an image of books including To Kill a Mockingbird. Theirs is illustrated by Nate Sweitzer.
At Christie’s, A tale of two Matildas: how the Gray Stream family assembled one of America’s finest collections of Fabergé, jewels and more
Unseen for more than a century, Imperial Fabergé masterpieces, custom Cartier designs and Diego Rivera paintings are amongst the treasures lovingly collected by Louisiana businesswoman Matilda Geddings Gray and her niece Matilda Gray Stream. Links to the June auctions are at the bottom of the page.
xoxo!












































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