Winter Weekend Randomness

What a nice day!  There was no one on my list today who was counting on me to show up anyplace or do anything, so I just made it up as I went along.

Last night, I had attended a fascinating presentation in a large, packed lecture hall at Willamette by the brilliant, droll and unpretentious art historian Roger Hull heralding the Manuel Izquierdo exhibit at the Hallie Ford Museum.  I think I audited every class Professor Hull taught after I moved to Salem and before he retired.   And in 2005, I spent a month in Florence under the guidance of him and his wife, the artist Bonnie Hull, and literature professor, my friend, the late Adele Birnbaum.  What an amazing adventure!

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Since his retirement, Professor Hull has become the leading authority on the Spanish/Northwest sculptor, Manuel Izquierdo.

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And was instrumental in bringing the show to the Hallie.

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Last night was also the first opportunity to see Dr. Hull’s beautiful book, Manuel Izquierdo, Myth, Nature, and Renewal.

UnknownI had received an invitation to attend the opening of the show and the unveiling of the book immediately following the lecture, but I am not really comfortable in large, crowded gatherings with lots of noisy conversations and people balancing wine and hors d’oeuvres.  So, I just decided I would go back to the Hallie Ford this morning and have it all to myself.

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But first, out in the garden with the dogs to find the handsome man’s birdbath frozen solid.

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And one valiant rose in bloom, ironically named “Cinco de Mayo.”

IMG_2493Most unexpectedly, I was not able to park right in front of the Hallie, or anywhere nearby, and I could see why across at the capitol mall.  As is common on Saturday, a demonstration was taking place there.  I walked in that direction until I could see that many of the participants were toting big guns and carrying flags saying things like “Don’t Tread on Me.”  Ah, well. I was afraid if I joined them I would be tempted to tell them that while I certainly believe in the Second Amendment I just think that perhaps they might be interpreting it too broadly.  I wasn’t looking for trouble, especially with a lot of angry looking men carrying big guns.  And, then too, I didn’t think I might pick up a cute guy there either.

So I turned back toward the Hallie, walking by the beaver family whose water source was iced over too.

IMG_2496Here’s a view of the Hallie seen through one of my favorite trees.

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Inside, I was greeted by my friend the artist Bonnie Schulte who is on staff there.  Here she is next to Izquierdo’s “Antelope Flower.”

IMG_2502I wasn’t the least surprised when Bonnie confided that she and the sculptor had been more than casual friends for a time in the Nineties.  In fact, I learned that he had spent time with her in the cabin on the hill where I lived when I first came to Salem and where Bonnie had lived before I did.

I can only take in so much at one time, so I spent an hour there and will go back many times before the show ends.

Adoption Day!

On this date in 1970, I became a mother. Here is the first picture we saw of our beautiful daughter, taken a couple of weeks before we got to bring her home.

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I had spent the previous weeks making these eyelet curtains shot with pink ribbons and found this antique basinet at a junk store.  I painted it and lined it.   Her room was all ready for her.SCAN0113

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So this is our house and I am your mom.  I hope that’s all right with you.

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This whole business was pretty exhausting, so a nap was next on the agenda.  Cousin Rosemary had crocheted this soft blankie and it became her favorite.  She still has it.

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Soon it was time to get dressed up and go to church for a proper naming:  Katherine Miller Urbanski.

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And people came from a long way away to meet her.  Here are four generations.

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Katherine was called Kate in the family, for her great-grandmother — Maud Kate Miller Harrison, on whose lap she sits here.

January 19 has always been an official holiday in this family.

 

We’re all in our places (Finally!) with sunshiny faces.

Lula is swimming in the beautiful, warm Hawaiian Pacific.71587_10151421007509789_2144487200_n-1

Meg and Blue have safely arrived at Pawali at long last.

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Blue seems to be considering a swim.

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But decides that for his first day at the beach he’ll just roll in the sand.

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Meanwhile, back on the mainland, Katherine and her dogs, true Northern Californians, bundle up on Limantour beach.

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And here in Oregon, our honored senior Kobe wears his warm coat for his morning outing

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before settling in for his morning nap.

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Then Rosie knows the coast is clear for her to come downstairs.

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It is indeed an unusually cold morning, so I am glad that Meg left behind the down coat and monkey hat.  No use for those on Maui.

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I need something warm to wear as I go out to break the ice on the humming bird feeder.

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Then Roxie and I are off to The Courthouse where she needs a coat too while she waits for me to work out before taking her to The MInto.

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And The Minto is a foggy wonderland.

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But this leafless big-leaf maple, covered with frost, shows off its swelling buds, ready to go as the days grow longer.

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We stop by Cascade Baking Co. on the way home to pick up some flat bread and tapenade  to take to a potluck lunch at Susan’s new place

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And definitely in her (new) place with a sunshiny face is Susan, where Roxanne, Karen, Lizzie and I had a happy time in her sunny new kitchen, enjoying fine company, jolly conversation, and good food, including Roxanne’s signature composed offering — this time, winter fruits, including a perfectly ripe pear.

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And I got home just in time to find Kobe waking up from his afternoon nap and ready for his dinner.

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And now I’m off to usher at the symphony where I’ll get to hear Andre Watts.  It was pretty much a perfect winter day.

Ike Box and West Texas

I have scheduled in lots of fun things to do this week since MM and Blue departed.  I do miss them, but have mostly been too busy to pine.  I tried out a new class at The Courthouse and lived to tell about it.  I met with Connie at the library to work on our book. And this afternoon I met a dear friend Jim Sellers at the Ike Box in down town Salem for coffee and non-stop conversation.   I am amazed that I had never been to this charming spot before and plan to be a regular customer.  Jim said he thinks it used to be a funeral parlor.

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I thank him for introducing me to it and for bringing and lending me this beautiful book of the art at  Crystal Bridges Museum of American art, (which he discovered while on a road trip to visit presidential libraries) in Bentonville, Arkansas.  I did not know about this place either and am definitely going to recommend a visit there to all my Oklahoma relatives.

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I first met Jim when we were volunteers for an ESL program in my neighborhood.  Always on the go, Jim is next off for a hike in Big Bend in February and will be driving from El Paso to Van Horn and then south.  After the hike, he’ll be heading back to the beautiful Guadalupe Mountains and on to Carlsbad Caverns.  I had to tell him about the Marfa Lights, the Chinati Art Collection, and my favorite Wild-West-Texas movies, No Country For Old Men and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada.  Lots of blood and violence of which I admit, I am not a fan.  Lots of Tommy Lee Jones of which, I admit, I am a fan.