As always, all images unless otherwise noted copyright Deep Fried Kudzu. Like to use one elsewhere? Kindly contact me here.
Affiliate links are sometimes used. That means that if you purchase something via one of the links, it costs you nothing extra, but may generate a commission, offsetting the cost of DFK… e.g. as an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Also: remember that Bookshop is fab because they’re giving orders to indie booksellers. Grateful for your support. xoxo!
pics from a Gee’s Bend visit in 2009
At the 5th Avenue Bergdorf Goodman, a 900sqft installation just inside the entrance featuring Greg Lauren’s partnership with Gee’s Bend quilters. Inside, a listening station where customers can hear recordings of the quilters, and portraits of the quilters on a recycled muslin quilt handing from the ceiling.
William Edmondson pieces from the Memphis Brooks in 2017
The artist KAWS has donated a William Edmondson piece, likely the long-time missing Martha and Mary sculpture, to the American Folk Art Museum and will be displayed in the Multitudes exhibit AFAM will open January 21 of next year. It is the one the NYT wrote about in A ‘Holy Grail’ of American Folk Art, Hiding in Plain Sight :
“It was like finding the Holy Grail,” Foster said. “Edmondson worked in Nashville, so who would ever dream that a piece would be in St. Louis?”
not bhut bhindi. Isom’s Fruit Orchard, Athens AL, last month
Apparently one of the highlights of this year’s RHS Chelsea Flower Show was a new variety of okra, ‘Bhut Bhindi’ which grows to almost five feet tall and the okra itself about one foot long.
Who else is wondering how tough a foot-long okra is?
The new American Masters: Helen Keller is out; it would be great if people could get a much better sense of who she was — her politics, especially. This piece in the NYT is thoughtful.
The statue of her at the Capitol Rotunda in Washington replaced the one of Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry (he was my first cousin, five times removed). Very interesting, though: graduated from Georgia and Harvard Law, served in the Mexican-American War, in the AL State Legislature, the US House of Representatives, and the Provisional Congress of the CSA. He was lieutenant-colonel in the CSA, later an advocate of free education in the South. He was president of Howard College, which is now Samford University, and I understand his statue is there now, but I haven’t yet been to see it since the move from Washington. Lots more, including appointments to Spain, and recipient of the Royal Order of Charles III. The Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia chose to remove his name last year due to his involvement in the CSA.
Here, from a visit several years ago, the JLM Curry home in Talladega County, Alabama — it’s on the Register:
The Eudora Welty statue in downtown Jackson, 2015
This 1970 NYT interview with Eudora Welty:
…the first thing you learn about Eudora Welty is that one of the most admired of living writers hasn’t learned to be a grande dame.
…“I’ve got ham and snap beans and grits and salad out in the kitchen, will that be all right?”
After writing ‘Where is the Voice Coming From’:
“Had anybody burned a cross on my lawn, he wanted to know. I told him, No, of course not, and he wanted to know if he could call back in a few days, ‘in case anything develops.’ I told him I couldn’t see any sense in his running up his phone bill. The people who burn crosses on lawns don’t read me in The New Yorker. Really, don’t people know the first thing about the South?”
A Show with its Host City, New Orleans, as the Protagonist in the NYT
“This is a condition of living in New Orleans,” said Ms. Nawi. “We were thinking about the ways that New Orleans is a nexus of so many definitive social, political and climate issues of our era.”
An interview with John Berendt, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (here at Bookshop / here at Amazon)
View this post on Instagram
The fruit illustrations for Moschino were done by Dylan Sartin, a Mississippi tattoo artist
my fridge with H-E-B’s That Green Sauce, 2015
From a Texas Monthly piece on Meta’s vision of shopping at H-E-B in VR:
On the one hand, it’s cute to see that a brand-new corporate behemoth with a market cap that outstrips the GDP of all but seventeen countries wakes up to the world the same way the rest of us do: confused, lonely, and thinking about barbecue.
Opry, 2019
The Grand Ole Opry is hosting its 5000th Saturday night broadcast this weekend
Super random.
The Enduring Appeal of Laura Ashley
How to come out of the collective Great Unpleasantness better, in the Harvard Business Review
In San Benito, Homecoming Mums Are an Over-the-top Texas Tradition
Yes to Yinka Ilori’s Lego laundrette
This series, The 212, Revisiting New York institutions that have defined cool for decades, from time-honored restaurants to unsung dives in the NYT is terrific
What Kathleen Purvis thought of this year’s SFA Symposium in Oxford, and I’m still ready for new leadership
Astros fans: How Mattress Mack Pays for his Sports-Related Mega Giveaways — I thought it was an insurance policy, but nope
Mobile’s 1897 Shephard House, a Queen Anne by George Franklin Barber, is on the market
Dollywood is serving their interpretation of poutine, with sweet potatoes: crispy sweet potato cross-cut fries topped with Applewood-smoked bacon, white cheddar cheese sauce and crispy onion straws
There’s an extinct volcano under the Mississippi coliseum in Jackson, Mississippi about a mile down
dogtrot in Winston County, Alabama, 2006
The Whidby Dogtrot on an island just north of Seattle was designed by SHED. Gorgeous. From their description:
For clients transitioning into retirement, the design challenge was to create a compact house for economy of operation, ease of maintenance, and a space that maximized the natural beauty of the site. In addition, the house needed space for guests, visiting adult children, hobbies, music, and a home office. The dogtrot form was used as a way to organize these programmatic needs into two sections — one with the master suite, living, kitchen, and dining area, and the other as a flex space.
Abita Mystery House, 2017
A journal dated 1859 and titled “Tracking 264 Negroes between Swift Creek, Bibb County, Georgia Sumter County, Georgia, Spring Creek, Georgia and Cowarts, Georgia” had an estimate of $500-1k but the hammer price was $32400. The journal originated with John B. Lamar, brother-in-law of the older brother of Thomas Reade Rootes Cobb, who owned the T.R.R. Cobb House in Athens, Georgia. The T.R.R. Cobb House hopes to have it on exhibit in 2022.
Ground Zero in Clarksdale, 2016
Bill Luckett, who started Ground Zero Blues Club in Clarksdale MS died this week; the new Ground Zero being built in Biloxi should be fully open in January.
Nashville Goo Goo store, 2016
The Goo Goo Cluster shop in Nashville will reopen Nov 5 after its $2M renovation and will offer interactive classes, a full-service chocolate bar, a design-you-own confection station, and alcoholic drinks will be served.
Fannie Lous Hamer Memorial, Ruleville MS, 2015
Fannie (The Music and Life of Fannie Lou Hamer) is now playing at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago
Dr Bob art at Crabby Jack’s, 2016
A Visit With Dr. Bob, New Orleans’s Beloved Folk Artist at AFAR Magazine
“I was a young juvenile delinquent going to bars,” he says. “I had some cash and was buying some cigarettes and, if you could do that—be nice or leave—you could do anything.”
When William Faulkner and Langston Hughes Wrote Children’s Books — but Faulkner’s was just one book named The Wishing Tree, made by him, for one child. The NYT laments:
Except for the author’s name, there seems little reason to publish it now. Although it appears in a charming edition with lavish illustrations by Don Bolognese, it is a curiosity rather than a book that a child would rejoice to read and read again. I can’t believe that a collector would read it either.
The Adams French mansion in Aberdeen, Mississippi, is on the market (still).
I love this design for Houston’s Urban South Brewery combo plate beers
View this post on Instagram
It’s birthday season in our family, and we’re thinking about Halloween coming up too. Hope your trick-or-treat bag will be full of Reeses. xoxo!