Birthday!

We’ve been at Pensacola Beach!

Shug and Shugie at Pensacola Beach, FL

The baby knew exactly what to do with his shovel and bucket!

Shug and Shugie at Pensacola Beach, FL

…and our newly-turned three year old had the best time ever!

Shug and Shugie at Pensacola Beach, FL

That was a *great* trip! Shug had his birthday supper at McGuire’s and even put a celebratory dollar bill on the ceiling. Loved it.

Happy birthday, my perfect-perfect angel!


Are you wondering about the oil? We didn’t let it dampen our fun, but yes. There was. I’ll post all about that tomorrow with lots of pics.

Sid Boyum & More

I’ll be back with regular posts on Wednesday, but have to mention…

There’s an article in the Madison, Wisconsin State Journal about Sid Boyum’s art environment. He passed away in 1991, and his son, who inherited the home/yard/art and had planned to make the property into a museum, has also now passed away. Some of his larger pieces can be viewed here. An article from 1999 here.
Nice piece in the Montgomery Advertiser about the cultural exchange between Alabama and Italy. Charlie Lucas and Yvonne Wells are among the artists who have traveled there as part of the program to exhibit and speak.
More on the Cathedral of Junk in Austin. Sticking around maybe?
Just have to mention my friend Henk’s website on visionary art environments in Europe too. Love it.

Joe Minter, His Vision Of The Oil Spill, & His New Show

Yesterday I went and visited with Hilda and Joe Minter for a while; I had something I thought Joe could possibly use for his sculptures and when I got there, he showed me a piece inside his home that he made with some bottlecaps I had brought over earlier this year – this face with the bottlecaps + chain for hair + Coke bottles and case:

Joe Minter 062210

Well, Joe makes tribute or memorial vignettes in his art environment (African Village in America) and I was certain he had done something about the oil disaster. Sure enough:

Joe Minter 062210

It reads,

“B.P. Stop
The End
Offshore Drilling
How Today
Oil In Our Water
G-d Forgive Us
Save Us 2010″.

Here on the right is the barrel plus a black tarp to represent the oil and all the animals representing all the suffering of marine life:

Joe Minter 062210

The left has a representation of the drilling rig. Joe adds a couple of plastic bottles with a mixture added to reinforce that oil and water literally don’t mix:

Joe Minter 062210
Afterwards, we just talked and walked around; I had never noticed these oxen before (you could come here every day for a month and see something new each time):
Joe Minter 062210

Here’s Moses with his staff, “Let My People Go” and wearing broken chains with locks at the bottom:

Joe Minter 062210

Some of my favorite pics taken previously:
Joe Minter's African Village in America Art Environment, Birmingham AL

Joe Minter's African Village in America Art Environment, Birmingham AL

Joe Minter's African Village In America, Birmingham Al
We later started talking about the show that’s opening this weekend at the Hoover Public Library. This is one of the smaller pieces that will be on display for sale – an airplane:

Joe Minter 062210

One piece that won’t be at the library but he would love for more people to be able to view is this crucifix:

Joe Minter 062210
Joe loves visitors; you can drop by to see him at the end of Nassau Avenue SW in Birmingham. If his truck is in the driveway, it’s a good sign that you can get a tour.
The reception for Joe and Hilda is this Sunday, June 27 from 3p-5p at the Plaza Art Gallery and Reading Garden at the Hoover Public Library. The show will go through Saturday, July 31.
A set of my pics of Joe’s art environment over the past several years is here on Flickr.

American Artisan Festival, Nashville TN

Sunday, we went to the American Artisan Festival in Nashville.

Whereas we usually take our time and do a good amount of ‘visiting’ with everyone at festivals, this time we made an effort to breeze through (plus, it was 95*). Here are some of the highlights:

Fantastic: Martin Obakke and Celena Cavala call their art ‘The Filigree‘:

Martin Obakke & Celena Cavala, American Artisan Festival, Nashville TN

Sam Cheek from Notasulga, AL was there with his birdhouses:

Sam Cheek, American Artisan Festival, Nashville TN

James and Catherine Neill from Ozark, MO had some really great woodcarvings:

James & Catherine Neill, American Artisan Festival, Nashville TN

My favorite – the one thing I really-really wanted to bring home from the festival – was this Jonah in the Whale. Would’ve been perfect in Shug’s room!

James & Catherine Neill, American Artisan Festival, Nashville TN

One artist that I missed especially this year was Holden McCurry – this is a pic from his tent a couple of years ago:

Besides the prayer towers (above) he also makes these great journey boats:

In mid-July, he’s going to be at the Craft Fair of the Southern Highlands in Asheville, and that is one of the *very* best shows anywhere.

It was time for a late lunch after the festival, so we had Pancake Pantry for the first time (it’s a Nashville tradition).

Pancake Pantry, Nashville TN

Gracious at the pancakes! Av got chocolate chip and I got Santa Fe cornmeal with bacon, cheddar, and green chiles. They also had sweet potato, pecan, wild blueberry, raspberry, silver dollar, buckwheat, peach, and more on the menu. Blintzes and latkes and grits and country ham, too! It was good. Not life-changing, but really good.

Now here’s the part that made me beam with pride: the boys always share what we eat but we also ordered them a grilled cheese sandwich to split. I didn’t realize what the side item was on the sandwich, but when they brought it out, there was a large pile of potato chips on the plate. Guess what?
Shug pointed at them and said, “what are those?”! I am a proud mommy.


I spent some time today with my friends Hilda and Joe Minter. Can’t wait to show you some of Joe’s new art. Tomorrow!

Tie-Dye Shirts

Like probably most toddlers and preschoolers, our boys have got a big schedule full of group activities this summer. They are having *so* much fun (and I am getting the *best* art coming home, too!).

For one of the activities they’re doing, they are to wear tie-dye shirts (everyone is). For some reason, Shug’s shirt – along with three other kids in this class – didn’t get done in time. Well, I felt so badly about these four kids being the only ones that weren’t going to have tie-dyes to wear last week that I just made them on my own.
I haven’t made anything tie-dye since college but gosh it was so easy and fun! I’ve even had a great idea about something a little non-traditional to tie-dye in the next few days that I think will be really neat.
If you ever want to tie-dye, it’s so simple…and then there’s that wonderful feeling of taking off the rubber bands and seeing how everything turned out.
Supplies:
Tie-Dye fabric dye (I used Tulip brand in green, light blue, and dark blue with the squeeze bottles)
Garbage bags – approx. 1 per shirt
Paper towels
Saran Wrap
Rubber bands
Plastic gloves
Directions:
If the shirts are new, prewash them.
Make your setup. The fabric dye will easily run through and make a mess, so lay out the garbage bags first, then cover the garbage bags with paper towels.
Prepare the dye to manufacturer’s directions.
Take the shirt and make it wet (wring it out, but make sure it’s damp).
Wear your gloves when you’re coloring the shirts, when you’re removing the rubber bands, and when you’re rinsing them in the sink.
To make the bullseye design, pinch the shirt (both layers – front and back together) either in the middle or top-middle as in pic 2 below. While holding the shirt up, still pinched, you’ll see how it naturally makes folds as in pic 3 – that’s great. Keep this shape, and add rubber bands down the length of the shirt so as to secure it with all the natural folds as in pic 4:

With the dye in the squirt bottle (shaken well), apply colors to your liking all down the fabric. If you leave just a little space without any dye between the colors, it makes it look even more interesting. You’ll also get a little bit of a line where all the rubber bands are, too. Make sure you go all around the fabric to get all the sides well covered:

As with all the t-shirts in this post, you want to let them dry to the fabric dye maker’s instructions. In this case, they were to dry covered with Saran wrap for 6-8 hours. I was not looking for the t-shirts to come out super-vibrant, so I washed them after 4 hours. This is how the shirt looked after 4 hours when I took off all the rubber bands:

Next, I did a shirt with the swirl design. As in pic 1, take both front & back layers of the shirt, pinch slightly, and turn clockwise while the shirt is laying flat. Keep going – keep turning clockwise until the entire shirt looks like pic 2 – hurricane shape. Now put two or three (or more) rubber bands around the shirt to keep it flat while keeping the shape:

Color it however you like:

…after four hours, it opened up to show this design:

The next shirt I did with an accordion pleat. Start at the bottom of the shirt and make small, tight accordion pleats all the way up:

Next, secure with rubber bands all across the shirt. The accordion pleated shirt is the one in the middle in this pic:

Color:

Four hours later:

The last shirt I did freehand – no bunching, swirling, folding, etc. I just laid it flat and squirted it all over with the dye:

Wear your gloves for this part:
Once the four hours was up (the longer you let the dye work, the more vibrant the colors will be, so you may want to let them sit up to eight hours), I took each shirt inside and rinsed it thoroughly in the sink until the water ran completely clear when I squeezed the shirt. Once all the shirts were done in the sink, I washed them in cold water in the washing machine on a regular cycle, and dried them.

Here’s how they turned out, clockwise from top left: accordion pleat, freehand, swirl, bullseye:

Of course, you could always make a tie-dye cake too!

This Weekend

In Alabama:
Oooh I forgot when this was first posted to mention that Pielab in Greensboro is having its Bake-Off on Saturday. Drop off for pies is between 3p-4p (categories: pecan pie, lemon pie, cobbler, custard pie, sugar-free pie, savory pie, quiche, fruit pie, chocolate pie, kids pie (under 18)). Winners will receive a prize and will be featured in the upcoming Hale County PieLab Recipe Book. PieLab does so much good for the community. It’ll be fun no matter what!
Caribbean Heritage Reggae Festival, Birmingham (warning! loud website.)
In Georgia:

In Mississippi:

Blues Festival, Bentonia

In Tennessee:

Photobucket
RC & Moon Pie Festival, Bell Buckle – this is **fun**

American Artisan Festival, Nashville – this is a *great* art festival

Blackberry Jam, Franklin
My friend Kelly Ludwig is opening her exhibit, “Detour Art – Outsider, Folk Art, and Visionary Environments Coast to Coast” this weekend at the Historic City Hall Arts & Cultural Center in Lake Charles. The exhibit consists of about 90 works, including those by Thornton Dial, Mose Tolliver, Jimmy Lee Sudduth, Howard Finster, Minnie Adkins, Linvel and Lillian Barker, The Baltimore Glassman, Sultan Rogers, Mary T. Smith, and James Harold Jennings.
Birmingham is hosting the National Sacred Harp Convention this year, again at First Christian Church on Valleydale Road. It is truly something to see / hear / participate (you can just walk in and sing with them). No matter what religion you are, this is gorgeous, moving, incredible music. Undeniable. See you there!

This is a video of Shape Note singing I made at the Archives building in Montgomery – it has more than 20,000 views on YouTube:

Farewell, Cathedral Of Junk. Austin Just Got Less Weird.

Austin, the city that prides itself on being weird and staying weird (even having an annual Keep Austin Weird Festival) just got less weird.
The Austin Chronicle reported that Vince Hanneman (friend of my friend Scott Stevens, who has his own art environment in Austin) has decided to tear down his Cathedral of Junk.
Back in March, the city cited Vince and the Cathedral for code violation. The Cathedral has in the past appeared in *several* books and television shows, and there was even a huge effort this Spring to bring the size of the structure down so that it would meet municipal requirements and stay as an Austin cultural icon.

Image used courtesy That Other Paper under Attribution – Share Alike 2.0 Generic. Thank you!


The Statesman ran an article back in late March that read in part:

The Cathedral of Junk has to go.

The enormous stack of old hubcaps, bicycles, blenders, crutches, urinals, computer guts, lawn mower wheels, kitchen utensils, shopping carts, typewriters, sewing machines and other stuff reaching 33 feet toward the sky in a South Austin backyard is a building, the city’s code compliance officers say. Worse still, it’s a building without a building permit.

Image used courtesy Mr. Kimberly under Attribution – Noncommercial – Share Alike 2.0 Generic. Thank you!

Fans and friends of Vince Hannemann, the artist who began creating the Cathedral of Junk behind his Bubbaland home on Lareina Drive in 1988, say it’s art. Either way, it’s beloved and famous. The Cathedral, featured on RoadsideAmerica.com and a book called “Weird Texas,” is a well-known tourist destination for folks who vacation in, say, VW buses and are bored with normal stuff like Six Flags.

“This whole structure is wired together with wires, and I don’t think an engineer would stamp it as structurally sound,” said Ronald Potts, an assistant division manager for the city’s code compliance department. He points out that people climb up into the tower. “There’s hallways. There’s ladders. There are people going in and out of there, so it is a structure or building, by code.”

On Wednesday, the city posted the Cathedral as a dangerous structure, Potts said.

Image used courtesy CC Chapman under Attribution – Noncommercial – No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic. Thank you!

The Chronicle’s article from this morning mentioned that it was a “genuine piece of roadside Americana” and had been “featured on a postcard issued by the city.”

Vince’s statement was:

Your efforts have helped soothe my bruised heart. Nevertheless, I feel obligated to tell you that our efforts have been in vain. The City has made me alter the Cathedral so much that little of its original charm is left. They are still wanting a building permit for what is left. Therefore, I will be continuing to dismantle what remains. Also, visitors will be turned away. Thank you everyone. It’s a sad day for me, but much more so for Austin and, by proxy, the world.

Chattanooga Market And Canned Meet (yes, meet.)

On Sunday, we were in Chattanooga and met the boys’ Uncle Doug who had flown into town for a couple of days for a project of his. The first place we went together was the Chattanooga Market – what a fantastic place:

Chattanooga Farmers Market
All this gorgeousness plus more fruits, vegetables, pottery, wooden cutting boards, handmade toys, art, candy, fresh eggs, orchids, a glamorous older lady selling fudge…

We had lunch there, too – we all shared fried pickles plus Doug had a hotdog, Av had a hamburger from the bbq stand advertising possum (although they weren’t really selling it), and the boys and I shared a lamb sandwich from the Yellow Deli (kind-of interesting: they’re a group of people living in a commune, working for free, with a shared religion).

Chattanooga Market

We ate lunch in an area in front of the stage while a really great group was playing:

Chattanooga Market
After lunch and shopping, we all went to the Chattanooga Choo-Choo which is also a hotel (you can sleep inside the train cars and according to the reviews at TripAdvisor it will either be wonderful or terrible). Shug loved roaming all over the train engine and both boys *really* liked the large model train exhibit:

Chattanooga Choo-Choo

Model Railroad, Chattanooga Choo-Choo, Chattanooga TN

Model Railroad, Chattanooga Choo-Choo, Chattanooga TN
It was time to take Uncle Doug back to his rental car for the trip back to the airport afterwards. We all sure did miss him.
It was still mid-afternoon, though, and we had heard that there was a kosher- or kosher style- bakery in town, so drove over for a bagel or a black & white or a whatever, and they’re closed every weekend, both days (odd!). It’s actually a couple that have relatives that belong to the Seventh Day Adventist church – and there’s a large community of SDAs around Chattanooga – so they cater for both Jewish and SDA business especially since many who follow that religion keep some kosher eating restrictions.
Well, we may have missed out on babka or rugelach but right across the street was a sign for “Gigi’s Cupcakes” so guess what:
Gigi's Cupcakes, Chattanooga TN

*Oh* those were fantastic. We got four different cupcakes so we’ll have a couple in the refrigerator for the next day or two also: Italian cream, something super-chocolate, wedding cake flavor, and red velvet. Can’t even tell you how good those are.

Av knows that I like to see the architecture on college campuses – especially if it’s Greek Revival – so before we left for home, we went to Collegedale where the Southern Adventist College is (turns out, they aren’t as wild about G/R as I am). The library there is named after the McKee family, who owns the company that makes Little Debbie snack cakes in this same town.

Southern Adventist University, Collegedale TN
We were just about to leave when Av decided he was ready for a fresh drink, so we stopped at the grocery store, Village Market, right there at the campus. I knew that vegetarianism is practiced by many members of the Seventh Day Adventist church (they have a position statement on it) – and I used to be a vegetarian myself – so I was excited that they might have a really fantastic produce section. It was okay.
What I really have to show you is this – a whole long aisle of faux meat in cans with faux names like Fri-Chik, Fried Chick’n, Prime Stakes, and Skallops:

Meet Not Meat

…so if you were going to have to come up with a faux name for ham spread, you’d naturally call it…
WHam
The SDA representative to the UN wrote this month an entry in the Washington Post Faith blog about the church’s “connection between the physical, mental and spiritual. In a society in which science and faith are sometimes portrayed as opposing forces, Adventists have a rich tradition of being as enthusiastic for spiritual insight as they are for scientific progress that relieves human suffering.” He goes on to discuss a new documentary about this connection in the church’s teachings. It’s been on some PBS stations and now out on dvd.
This isn’t my religion but I’d love to view the film. Anyone seen it?

Fun Weekend & Other Things Too…

In Alabama:
Jazz Fest, Alex City
Delmore Days at Athens State, Athens
Riverfest, Gadsden
Down Home Psaltery Festival at Tannehill, McCalla
Depot Days, Stevenson
9-1-1 Festival, Haleyville
In Georgia:
Northeast Georgia Art Tour Weekend – four counties, you drive & pick itinerary, sounds wonderful
12 Rivers Art Festival, Sautee Nacoochee (this is the community that also has the Folk Pottery Museum)
Scottish Festival, Blairsville
In Louisiana:
Louisiana Seafood Festival (last year’s dates on website but it’s this weekend), New Orleans
Melrose Arts & Crafts Festival at Melrose Plantation, Natchitoches
The Day the War Stopped, St. Francisville
In Mississippi:
Blueberry Jubilee, Poplarville
In Tennessee:
Hogeye Festival, Livingston
Bonnaroo, Manchester
Great news: Weidmann’s in Meridian is going to reopen under new ownership. A portion of the Meridian Star article reads:
First opened by Felix Weidmann in 1870, the restaurant was run by the same family all the way through the 1990’s.

Under the Weidmann family, Weidmann’s became one of the most well-known restaurants in Mississippi, beloved for its history, food, and quirky atmosphere. Among other things, the restaurant was known for its black bottom pie, peanut butter crocks on each table, and hundreds of pictures of famous patrons hanging on the walls.


“You could go anywhere in the U.S. and tell somebody you were from Meridian, and they would ask you about Weidmann’s,” Martin said. “We thought that was a valuable part of our city’s heritage, and that we could not allow it to fade away.”

Frazier said his goal is to blend Weidmann’s history with the modern practicality of the renovated building.

“We won’t be the same restaurant,” he said. “We can’t be the same restaurant, but I think we have to bring back some of it. You can’t turn your back on 140 years of history.”

To bring back that legacy, Frazier is planning to offer some of the menu items from the “old” Weidmann’s, along with new dishes.

He’s also brainstorming ways to bring back some of the old atmosphere. He said he hopes to recover some of the pictures that once hung on the wall, but that many of the quirky aspects of the “old” Weidmann’s will be impossible to resurrect. The peanut butter crocks on the tables, for example, are against today’s health codes.

Frazier also wants to make Weidmann’s accessible to more Meridianites by lowering prices, which were relatively high under McGehee.

“In a sense, the restaurant belongs to the citizens of Meridian,” said Frazier,” and it needs to be accessible to them… We’re ready to welcome Meridian back to their Weidmann’s.”

When it reopens, Weidmann’s will serve lunch and Sunday brunch along with dinner. Frazier said that, thanks to many requests, vegetable plates will be on the lunch menu.


In that spirit of community, Frazier is reaching out to the public in his plans for Weidmann’s, asking for e-mails with suggestions for improvements to the restaurant.

“I’d…like to hear from the public as far as what they would like to see there,” he said. “I’d also like to hear their memories of (Weidmann’s).”

Suggestions can be e-mailed to weidmanns1870 AT yahoo –dot– com.

The 2010 Alabama Places in Peril list has been published.
Sad, sad, sad: P&J – in business for over 130 years – is having to bring in oysters from California to keep its doors open.

“We don’t want to become a K&B, McKenzie’s or Schwegmann’s,” he said. “We want to prayerfully get our waters back. We want our family of farmers to be able to pass on their tradition to their kids. We want to be there for them when they come back to be able to provide for our restaurants.”

Auburn’s Rural Studio is taking part in a contemporary architecture exhibit called 1:1 Architects Build Small Spaces at the Victoria & Albert Museum in the UK
Great weekend to go to the farmers’ market
Anyone else watching the new ‘Work of Art’ show on Bravo? When do we get another Project Runway season? At least the new Top Chef starts soon…
Dear Top Chef,
I hope Washington D.C. will be nice. But you really should be in New Orleans.