I never imaged that until we went to the Nasher Museum of Art last week.
“Kill the Indian, Save the Man” by Bishop Ortega is a powerful piece. The ponytail in his hand rips my heart.





I never imaged that until we went to the Nasher Museum of Art last week.
“Kill the Indian, Save the Man” by Bishop Ortega is a powerful piece. The ponytail in his hand rips my heart.





I use ArtGeek.io to learn if and when there is art I want to see. I got one of their rare emails today with info about Impressionist and Post-Impressionist exhibitions around the US this summer.
I am a huge fan of Wasily Kandinsky and there is an exhibition going on at the Guggenheim in NYC into September.
With my kid unemployed due to a layoff and after getting the patio done, I’m feeling kind of strapped. Not painfully broke. But, not free to just fly up for a couple of days, either. I checked MegaBus and I could do a round trip for $204 without spending a night in the city.
I would get on the bus in Durham at 9:20pm, change buses in DC at after a 2 hour layover and be in NYC by 8:45am. Head home that night at 11:30, layover for 4 hours in DC and be home by 1:30pm.
I’m debating with myself if I want to see that art badly enough to take that ride.
Edit to add: We have decided 3 things. 1) Chuck gets to come with me for a longer art trip. 2) We’re taking the train because Amtrak will be more comfortable and is not crazy expensive from Burlington, NC to NYC. 3) We’re waiting until next year to have a little time for our finances to recover from the patio,
My younger sister desperately wanted pierced ears when she was in elementary school. Our mother told her that she could get some self-piercing earrings if she wanted it that badly. They were hoops that slowly squeezed themselves through your earlobes. And she toughed it out. I thought “If M can do that, so can I. ” and I tried them out.
Nope.
I didn’t make it 24 hours. Those things hurt. My little sister is tough!
A couple of years later, when I was in junior high (before they included 6th grade and started calling it middle school), a friend got her ears pierced at the mall and I got permission to get mine done, too. That gun was genius. Pop! and it was done. I kept them clean and they healed up nicely.
Several years later, I was working at a jewelry store, living on my own, and they did piercings with the gun. I got a second piercing in each ear to wear studs over hoops or other dangling earrings. My mother was not impressed. She asked me when I was going to get my nose done. For. A. Week.
All I could do was roll my eyes and wait for her to get tired of it.
A little while later, might have been a year, might have been a few months, M got one extra hole in one ear. She called me and asked “When is your mother going to quit asking me when I’m getting my nose done?” I said, “Give it a week and she’ll get bored with it.”
I could hear the eye roll over the phone.
Time passed. Our youngest sister went to college.
When she came home with her nose pierced (having skipped over ears entirely), our mother had the grace to say, “I should have shut up about that. Shouldn’t I?”
When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.
~ Wendell Berry
You can listen to him read it here.