Category Archives: 2) Frequent Destinations

wasabi chi – suspicious sushi in Des Moines

After hearing about good reviews for Wasabi Chi – an Asian restaurant specializing in sushi in Des Moines – we gave it a try last Saturday night. The place was very busy at about 7 p.m. and our server was very good.  The tempura was good – crispy, quality ingredients – vegetables and shrimp, piping hot.   We tried two sushi roles that our server said were popular – and they came out quickly and were huge (about 8 pieces each). But they both were not what we expected, way too busy with too many competing flavors, and the fish itself seems strange – almost ground and not cold like we’ve come to expect sushi. Neither seemed very fresh or raw  – one roll (King Crab Crunch) appeared to be cooked fish although the menu indicated it featured raw fish. (Since it’s a tempura roll it was presumably somewhat cooked.)   We didn’t like the taste of the other one with tuna much either  (Marilyn Monroll).

Maybe we ordered the wrong things but we both felt vaguely ill after the meal and aren’t likely to return. Oh well. Fortunately there are other good sushi options in Des Moines – Miyabi remains our favorite. We also liked Haiku near Drake during a recent visit.

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who’s who in Toluca Lake (LA)?

So I’d never heard of Toluca Lake, a neighborhood of Los Angeles until about a month ago when my brother and his family moved there. Now I’m noticing it more – along with all things L.A. – and according to the latest issue of People Mag – Miley Cyrus lives there. Golly. And fun fact: The oldest Bob’s Big Boy in America is just across the border in Burbank! (Wonder how it stacks up against the Big Boy of our youth in Royal Oak, Michigan?)

Decided to see what other celebs have lived there and here’s what the internet tells me – I’m pretty sure some of these people are no longer alive (Frank Sinatra, Lawrence Welk?):

Statue in front of Bob’s Big Boy restaurant in Burbank, California.

Others:
* Steve Abbott,actor
* Julie Andrews, actress and singer
* Jonathan Antin, hairstylist
* Drake Bell, actor and singer
* Jack Black, actor
* Brooke Burns, actress
* Ann Blyth, actress and singer
* Steve Carell, actor
* Peter Casey, television writer
* Bing Crosby, singer and actor
* Billy Ray Cyrus, actor and singer
* Doris Day, singer and actress; animal rights advocate
* Kat Dennings, actress
* Rick Dees, radio personality
* Roy E. Disney, director and producer
* Hilary Duff, actress and singer
* Kirsten Dunst, actress
* Amelia Earhart, aviatrix
* Zac Efron, actor
* W. C. Fields, actor
* Larry Fine, actor
* Redd Foxx, comedian and actor
* Andy García, actor
* Jenny Garth, actress
* Harold Greene, news anchorman
* Andy Griffith. actor
* Christopher J. Harrell, musician, philanthropist
* Brett R. Henry, photographer and writer
* Steve Hofstetter, comedian and radio personality
* Vanessa Hudgens, actess,singers
* Jennifer Love Hewitt, actress
* William Holden, actor
* Bob Hope, actor
* Moe Howard, actor
* Wayne Knight, actor
* George Lopez, actor, comedian
* Leonard Maltin, film critic
* Garry Marshall, director and producer
* Eric McCormack, actor
* Roger Miller, song writer and singer
* Jeffrey Dean Morgan, actor
* José Offerman, Major League baseball player
* Jonas Brothers, singers (Joe, Nick, and Kevin)
* Markie Post, actress
* Brenda Song, actress, singer, model
* Frank Sinatra, singer, actor
* Kelly Sweet, singer
* Alan Thicke, actor
* Ashley Tisdale, actress, singer
* Forrest Tucker, actor
* Jim Tully, author
* Denzel Washington, actor
* Scott Weiland, singer, lyricist
* Lawrence Welk, band leader
* Dawn Wells, actress
* Eric West, Cinematographer
* Henry Winkler, actor
* Cary Woodworth, actor, musician
* Joanne Worley, actress, comedian

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toluca_Lake

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Vodka Made in Ferndale (Mi) – why not? (I guess)

News that there is now someone producing vodka in Ferndale, a Detroit suburb near where I grew up, first struck me as odd, then as amusing and then I thought, well why not? Ferndale was a worn out place in the 1970’s, when I lived in Michigan, but when I’ve returned home of late, I’ve found it emerging as a hipster haven, with interesting boutiques and restaurants. So vodka production – bring it on. The company is called Valentine Vodka and according to a recent story in Midwest Living mag, it was started by a former Wall Street trader who suddenly felt inspired to return to his native Detroit and start producing domestic vodka (to save us from having to drink that Russian stuff, perhaps.) Apparently Valentine Vodka also has a “speakeasy-esque lounge” for visitors. (If only I liked vodka.) It’s good to see people producing stuff in Detroit – more encouraging than the depressing documentary I watched recently about the city (Detropia).

Other made-in-(or near)-Detroit products launched by entrepreneurs (and mentioned in this same Midwest Living story) include:

– Peteet’s Famous Cheesecakes in Oak Park (started by a guy after his real estate business crashed).

– Corridor Sausage, producing artisanal sausages near Eastern Market downtown

– Love’s Custard Pies – another Eastern Market hotspot serving southern-style custard and fruit pies

– City Bird – a “hip housewares and gift shop” near Wayne State’s downtown campus.

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Looking for a “family camp” in L.A. akin to San Francisco’s “Camp Mather” or “Camp Sacramento”

Water Fall near Camp Mather

Friends who live in San Francisco  have raved over the years about Camp Mather (above), a  “family camp” run by the city’s Park and Rec department that is a great affordable family vacation option for  residents of a famously unaffordable city. The camp  is outside  Yosemite National Park . (Interesting aside, there has been some controversy with the Camp – with some saying it’s too much of a “carefully kept secret” that most San Franciscans don’t know about…more below). Friends in Sacramento rave about a similar offering there called “Camp Sacramento.”

So I’m wondering if Los Angeles offers something similar, now that my brother has moved there with his family.  To date, the information I’ve found suggests that L.A.’s Park and Rec may have some options (known as”out of town camps”) but they’re pretty limited and several camps have long been closed. The best bet I’ve seen so far is Camp Seeley but it’s unclear if like Camp Mather (I think), this camp offers not just facilities but programming for families.

Here’s some info I’ve dug up to date:

CAMP SEELY
Camp Seely is located in the San Bernardino Mountains, 65 miles from City Hall, nestled in a forest of tall pines at an elevation of 4,200 feet. Close to Lake Gregory and the Village of Crestline, it is located on Highway 138, four miles from Lake Silverwood. Camp Seely is owned and operated by the Los Angeles Dept. of Recreation and Parks, under permit from the National Forest Service.

The facility includes 60 cabins (each sleeps 4-5 people), a large kitchen, dining hall, rustic lodge, modern restroom/shower facilities, playing field, game room and children’s play area.

Out of Town Camps

The City of Los Angeles offers year-round group camping opportunities at its out-of-town camps.  The fees include rental of individual or dormitory style cabins, depending on the camp, and full use of kitchen and lodges.  Groups must provide their own food.  Weekend rentals are available from Labor Day through mid-June.  During the Summer months (Mid-June until Labor Day), rentals are on a week-long basis (usually Sunday through the following Saturday). Camps vary in size and maximum camper occupancy.

Out of Town Camps
* Select facility name for site specific information
Name Address Maximum Occupancy
Camp High Sierra P.O. Box 711, Mammoth Lakes, CA 93646 6 per site
Camp Radford 3250 Radford River Rd., Angelus Oaks, CA 92305 260 (Camp Temporarily Closed)
Camp Seeley 250 N. Hwy. 138 P.O. Box 3372, Crestline, CA 92325 270
Camp Valcrest HC 01 Box 18, La Cañada, CA 91011-9706 60 (Camp Temporarily Closed)
Decker Canyon Camp 3133 S. Decker Canyon Rd., Malibu, CA 90265 150 (Camp Temporarily Closed)
For more information and/or reservations, please call theCamping Section Office at
(213) 485-4853. Monday through Friday 9 am to 5 pm

##

Camp Mather is the San Francisco family camp that was built as a sawmill for the construction of the O’Shaughnessey Dam in the 1920’s. 150 miles east of San Francisco near the Hetch Hetchy Valley. The border of Yosemite National Park is a mile up the road, Yosemite Valley is 18 miles south. The camp is beloved by many as an off-the-grid refuge from city life and is a treasure for generations of SF families.

Camp Mather is a camp owned and operated by the City and County of San Francisco. It is located 15 miles front the entrance to Yosemite National Park, in the High Sierras at an elevation of 4,520 feet.  Each year applications are  submitted for attendance to camp through a lottery. It’s a very competitive process,  because there are more applicants than there is space available during  the camp season. Camp Mather Family Lottery registration opens on January 6 (10am), and closes on February 5 (5pm). Camp Mather Family Camp lottery registration is online only at sfreconline.org. There is a $100 registration deposit required at registration. This $100 will be applied to your final bill if you get a  reservation or will be refunded if you don’t get a reservation.

Info from 2008: Camp Sacramento family camp offers affordable, fun-filled vacation experiences without breaking the bank Sacramento, California, May 12, 2008— Camp Sacramento is now taking reservations for its 2008 summer camp season. This summer, as gas price
s keep residents closer to home and families look to get more for their money, Camp Sacramento is already seeing a sizable increase
in its camp reservation rates. Perhaps the most striking thing about Camp Sacramento is its affordability. A family of four can enjoy a four-day vacation experience, meals and  activities included, for as little as $573.00.
Camp Sacramento is a City of Sacramento-operated camp that is located in the EldoradoNational Forest, just over an hour’s drive from Sacramento. The camp provides families a complete vacation experience that includes supervised recreation programs, river play, beautiful scenery, great food, friendly staff, and lots of leisure time for parents.This summer, Camp Sacramento is offering families the choice of four-day mini camps or week-long vacation sessions. Camp guests are provided three meals each day and lots of nature-inspired experiences.Prospective campers can visit the camp’s website, http://www.campsac.org, to get more information
and check camp rates. They can also speak to a CampSacramento representative by calling 916-808-6098.

About Camp Sacramento (from 2013)

Camp Sacramento is situated in the Sayles Flat area of the Eldorado National Forest. It sits on a 14-acre property owned by the U.S. Forest Service and leased by the City of Sacramento. There are 61 cabins of various sizes scattered throughout the property. These cabins have electricity, but most don’t have any outlets other than the light bulb on the ceiling and the porch light. They are rustic yet charming – most of them were built in the 1930s. The cabins don’t have running water, but there are centrally located restrooms available complete with electrical outlets and private shower stalls. Camp facilites also include a dining hall, a lodge, a camp store, a camp nurse’s office, a softball diamond, a half basketball court, a volleyball court, a campfire pit, arts & crafts areas, ping pong tables, horeshoe pits, and the scenic American River. Camp Sacramento offers eight mini Camp (4 days/3 nights) and four week-long (6 days/5 nights) vacation sessions during its 2011 Family Camp season. We provide guests with 3 meals a day and a vacation full of recreation activities. This is all included in the camp fees. Come and join us as we begin our 90th year of Family Camping Adventures.The last week of the season at Camp Sacramento is Senior Adventure Camp, open only to adults age 50 and older. 

SHARING CAMP MATHER, SAN FRANCISCO’S SECRET
JEWEL, WITH ALL SAN FRANCISCANS
Summary of Recommendations 1. Improve publicity and accessibility to CampMather.
2. Study and improve the usage of the CampMather facilities and grounds.
OVERVIEW
Cam
p
Mather is a fam
ily cam
p located in Tuolum
ne County near the north
entrance to Yosem
ite National Park. Located approxim
a
tely 180 m
iles east of San
Francisco at an elevation of 4,520 feet, Cam
p
Mather is operated for San Francisco
residents and their f
a
m
ilies by the San Francisco Recreation and Park Departm
e
nt (RPD).
It has 90 rustic cabins and 20 tent sites, each able to accom
m
odate up to six people, on
approxim
a
tely 400 acres. Full board, a cam
p store, and several recreational program
s are
provided for the cam
pers. During a 12-week cam
ping season, two weeks of which are
reserved for seniors, approxim
a
tely 6,000 persons, in 1,100 fam
ilies, take advantage of
the Cam
p
Mather facilities. The cam
p can accom
m
odate 529 people at each session.
The num
ber of applications for cabins and tent sites exceeds the available spaces.
The privately run Strawberry Music Festival, draws another 10,000 people in total
to Cam
p
Mather on the Mem
o
rial Day and Labor Day weekends.
Cam
p
Mather is financially self-sufficient and, in past years, has contributed in
excess of $300,000 annually to the RPD general fund. Cam
p
ing fees and revenue from
SMF and other concessions exceed the expense of operating Cam
p
Mather. In a tim
e of
budget crisis, Cam
p
Mather could produce additional revenue.
Cam
p
Mather was described several years ago in the press as “the city’s most carefully kept secret,” one that most San Franciscans don’t know exists. The location,lack of publicity, a complex application process, and failure to provide information about Camp
Mather in languages other than English limit access to Camp Mather for many SanFrancisco residents. The Grand Jury defines “accessibility” as awareness of Camp Mather and its availability to residents, an application f
o
rm
that is easily read and
com
p
leted, an equitable selection process, and availability of
adequate transportation to
the Cam
p
for people who want to use it.

from 2012, alas: L.A. spent $2 million to keep up camps closed for more than 10 years

The city has paid for caretakers to live at Camp Valcrest and Camp Radford, closed for 13 and 20 years, respectively, an audit by City Controller Wendy Greuel finds.

August 29, 2012|By Frank Shyong, Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles park officials spent $2 million to operate two campgrounds that have been closed for more than 10 years, according to an audit released Wednesday by City Controller Wendy Greuel.

Camp Valcrest in the Angeles National Forest and Camp Radford in the San Bernardino Mountains have been closed for the last 13 and 20 years, respectively, because necessary repairs were deferred. But the city Department of Recreation and Parks has paid $2 million for caretakers to live at the camps since they closed and nearly $100,000 for water to be trucked to Camp Valcrest, the audit states.

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New Le’s Chinese Bar-B-Que in Des Moines – not, alas, Honolulu’s Char Siu House

  • Le's Chinese Bar-B-Que

Wandering around Honolulu’s Chinatown in January 2011, I chanced upon an amazingly good Chinese BBQ (known in Chinese as Char siu, meat seasoned with five spice, honey and other things that turn the outside skin or meat bright red)  at a hole in the wall aptly named Char Siu House (photo below), with a small counter and butcher’s block and maybe three card tables for people who want to eat in rather than carry out (like me.) I had some delicious pork, moist, full of flavor, crispy red skin. As I was eating, a food tour suddenly arrived and the guide noted that this was the Honolulu’s best Chinese BBQ place, or some such.

With this memory in mind, I finally tried New Le’s BBQ here in Des Moines (photo above)- in what passes for a Chinese ,or more accurately, an Asian,  neighborhood – on Second Avenue. (The street has  a popular Asian market, Double Dragon, that I go to every once in awhile for hard-to-find-elsewhere items and just because it’s an interesting place full of unfamiliar foods. There’s also a few Thai and Vietnamese Po restaurants.)  Le’s  has been around for years and an Asian friend recommended it. But it looked so uninviting from the outside that I passed it by – until yesterday.  I was surprised to find it was far more cheerful inside. Instead of a drab butcher shop, I found a slightly less drab restaurant with lots of empty tables (midday on a Saturday), a lit-up display on the wall of the Chinese entrees available and a case full of bbq-ed meat that left little to the imagination (still-intact ducks with spindly necks and heads, dangling from hooks,  looking like they’d been flattened by a  steam-roller; a pigs head). I ordered some duck, pork and ribs – and we tried them last night. The red crispy ribs were best – moist well-seasoned meat, tasty-edible skin.  The pork was first runner up – moist meat with a smokey flavor but lots of fat and crispy skin that wasn’t as edible as it looked. Even more of the same with the duck. Oh well.

Picture of Char Siu House, Honolulu Chinatown

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Los Angeles hot spots thanks to Delta Sky magazine!

It’s time to start collecting tips on Los Angeles which is back on my personal map-of-the-world (after 24 years or so) thanks to my brother, who has just moved there with his wife and love-her-to-pieces baby. So here’s a start, thanks to Delta Sky Magazine.
The magazine also has some recommendations from the actress Judy Greer who I didn’t realize is a fellow Detroiter. (You may not recognize her name but you’d recognize her distinctive face – she was in The Descendants (the wife of the guy who had an affair with George Clooney’s wife.)Los Angelesstarstruck

1 City 5 Ways

Marukai

Stop at Marukai in Little Tokyo. Photo by Andrea Bricco.

The sum of Los Angeles’ neighborhoods equals one hot melting pot. For an eclectic taste, head to Little Tokyo, Little India, Chinatown, Boyle Heights and Glendale and sample their bakeries, cafés, temples, curio shops, galleries and more.

TANVI CHHEDA, February 2013

A delicious Phoenix Bakery creation. Photo by Andrea Bricco.  

CHINATOWN
Morning // Phoenix Bakery
Dating back to 1938, this downtown bakery and pastry shop offers sponge cakes and butterflies (fried won tons glazed with honey) that have a cult-like following.

Midmorning // Wing Hop Fung Ginseng
The place to load up on loose teas (the blend of jasmine and green tea is a must-try), dried herbs, Yixing clay teapots and more.

Afternoon // Thien Hau Temple
This Taoist temple is dedicated to Mazu, the goddess of the sea; Guan Yu, the god of wars and brotherhood; and Fu De, the god of the earth, wealth and merit.

Midafternoon // Broadway Street
From curio shops to jewelry stores, this street adorned with tiled murals is perfect for ambling and discovering hidden gems.


Courtesy of Los Feliz Lodge.

GLENDALE

Where to Stay // Los Feliz Lodge
Sure, we love the cozy vibe and kitschy design at this bungalow-style lodge, but it’s the well-stocked kitchen, garden patio and laundry facilities that had us at hello. Plus, it’s three miles west of Glendale.

Lunch // Sasoun Bakery
This casual spot draws crowds for its lahmajoun, Armenian-style pizza made with ground beef, fresh tomato, parsley, onion and garlic.

Dinner // Carousel Restaurant
Snag a patio table at this lively restaurant and sample a blend of Lebanese, Armenian and Greek cooking. Start with the hummus followed by falafel, shawarma and kebabs galore.

Evening // Alex Theatre
Catch an Armenian concert at this historic theater that opened in 1925 as the neighborhood vaudeville and movie house.


Breed Street Shul photo by Andrea Bricco.

BOYLE HEIGHTS

Morning // Breed Street Shul
This synagogue, set in a stunning 1922 Byzantine revival building, is being restored and is a testament to the Jewish community that once called Boyle Heights home.

Morning // Lupe’s Tortilleria
It may not look like much from the exterior, but at Lupe’s, handmade corn tortillas are legendary. Lupe sells tortilla flour, too, so you can make them at home. 2710 Cesar E. Chavez Avenue.

Lunch // Manuel’s Original El Tepeyac Café
Order the Hollenbeck burrito stuffed with pork, rice, beans, guacamole and topped with chili verde at this local institution.

Afternoon // Mariachi Plaza
Come here on Saturday afternoons and be serenaded by mariachi players in charro suits. Along with the vibrant murals, their music completes the neighborhood’s rich portrait. East First Street and Boyle Avenue.


Jain Temple photo by Andrea Bricco.

LITTLE INDIA

Morning // Jain Temple
At this domed temple and cultural complex in Buena Park, you’ll enter into a marble-clad shrine with 47 idols that are anointed and adorned during festivals and holy days.

Lunch // JayBharat
This diner specializes in Gujarati snacks such as khandvi—thinly rolled sheets of garbanzo flour with shredded coconut, cilantro and mustard seeds.

Dinner // Udupi Palace
At this South Indian café, order the kancheepurum idli—steamed rice paddies studded with bits of ginger, coriander and cashew.

Evening // Saffron Spot
Finish at this ice cream parlor and snack bar with rose falooda, a milkshake-like drink of rose milk and vermicelli noodles topped with soaked basil seeds.


Shin-Sen-Gumi photo by Andrea Bricco.

LITTLE TOKYO

Where to Stay // The Standard
This downtown favorite from hotelier André Balazs combines 207 sleek rooms with a heady dose of whimsy.

Morning // Walking Tour
The Japanese American National Museum offers a monthly tour, stopping at a WWII Japanese American veterans monument, the Higashi Hongashi Buddhist Temple and the garden at the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center.

Lunch // Shin-Sen-Gumi
Devotees of Hakata-style ramen swear by this restaurant where the thin noodles are topped with scallions, red ginger and sesame seeds.

Afternoon // Marukai
Pick up edible souvenirs (and nonedible ones) such as green tea KitKats, plum wine and everything sushi imaginable at this beloved Japanese market.

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Get your tickets to Carmina Burana in Des Moines April 13-14, 2013!

Cover of the score to Carmina Burana showing the Wheel of Fortuna

The choir I sing in – the Drake University Community Chorus – has been painstakingly practicing “Carmina Burana” in great anticipation of our performance of the famous piece with Drake’s crackerjack student choirs and the Des Moines Symphony on April 13 and 14.  One and all are cordially invited.

Here’s some more details:

Masterworks 6: Carmina Burana – Celebrating All Things Drake!

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Performance Information:

Purchase Season Tickets

Location: Civic Center of Greater Des Moines

Description:

Joseph Giunta, conducting
Gregory Oakes & Clarence Padilla, clarinets
Carrie Ellen Giunta, soprano
Christopher Pfund, tenor;  Robert Orth, baritone
The Drake Choir, The Drake Chamber Choir & The Drake University/Community Chorus
Aimee Beckmann-Collier, Director
The Drake Chorale
Linda Vanderpool, Director
Heartland Youth Choir
Barbara Sletto, Director
Drake University Orchestra+
Akira Mori, Director

BRAHMS  Academic Festival Overture
KROMMER  Concerto for Two Clarinets & Orchestra in E-flat Major
ORFF  Carmina Burana

The Des Moines Symphony began in 1937 as the Drake/Des Moines Symphony and with these concerts, we celebrate that important partnership and honor the Orchestra’s rich history with Drake University. You’ll experience Orff’s monumental and provocative Carmina Burana with double choirs—musical grandeur and power that will raise the roof of the Civic Center! These concerts are presented by EMC Insurance Companies. Concert Prelude Talks begin 45 minutes prior to each Masterworks concert in the East Lobby.

+Joining the Des Moines Symphony for Brahms’ Academic Festival Overture.

Tickets start at just $15 for adults and $7.50 for students and are available through the Civic Center Ticket Office and Ticketmaster.

Bust of Carl Orff in the Munich Hall of Fame (2009)

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the interplay between fashion and impressionism – at the Met in NYC

Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity

Looks like I will not make it to New York City until the summer – or late September – which unfortunately means I won’t get to go to an exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that sounds great.    Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity, running through May 27, combines paintings by artists including one of my favorites Edouard Manet with the fashions of the artworks’ time, illustrating the role of fashion in the  work of Impressionists and others of the period.  Great idea and from the reviews I’ve read, the exhibit works!
I have two Manet posters in my bedroom – see below – in The Balcony,  two women and a man stand on an outdoor balcony wearing markedly beautiful clothes;  in the other, Olympia is famously unclothed.)

Artist Édouard Manet

Here’s more on the exhibit. Can hardly bear to read – I so long to go!
Impressionism, Fashion, and Modernity at The Metropolitan Museum of Art presents a revealing look at the role of fashion in the works of the Impressionists and their contemporaries.  Some 80 major figure paintings, seen in concert with period costumes, accessories, fashion plates, photographs, and popular prints, highlight the vital relationship between fashion and art during the pivotal years, from the mid-1860s to the mid-1880s, when Paris emerged as the style capital of the world.  With the rise of the department store, the advent of ready-made wear, and the proliferation of fashion magazines, those at the forefront of the avant-garde—from Manet, Monet, and Renoir to Baudelaire, Mallarmé, and Zola—turned a fresh eye to contemporary dress, embracing la mode as the harbinger of la modernité.  The novelty, vibrancy, and fleeting allure of the latest trends in fashion proved seductive for a generation of artists and writers who sought to give expression to the pulse of modern life in all its nuanced richness. Without rivaling the meticulous detail of society portraitists such  as James Tissot or Alfred Stevens or the graphic flair of fashion plates, the Impressionists nonetheless engaged similar strategies in the making (and in the marketing) of their pictures of stylish men and women that sought to  reflect the spirit of their age.

Artist Édouard Manet
Year 1868

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Don’t miss the Des Moines Art Center’s “Transparencies” show of glass artwork

Jim Dingilian fills liquor bottles with smoke and then, using custom-made tools, scrapes away the soot to create astonishingly detailed scenes. “Missing Sentinels among Halted Construction” is from 2012. (McKenzie Fine Art/Special to the Register)

When I lived in, and later visited, upstate New York, I used to enjoy going to the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, N.Y. which became increasingly sophisticated in its exhibits over the years.  We got a glimpse of some cutting-edge glass artwork yesterday, near my present home, at the Des Moines Art Center.  We  thoroughly enjoyed an exhibit of work by 10 artists from around the world who do some remarkable things with glass – and I’m not even talking about Dale Chiluly here (whom some think is overexposed but I still like his work.)

Among our favorites from the show is the work (above) by Jim Dingilian (U.S.)  who somehow manages to create paintings inside of old liquor bottles – apparently filling the bottle with smoke and then somehow removing portions of the smoke stains to  create very intricate images of old cars and couches and landscapes. I still don’t quite get how he does it. Judith Schaechter, another American, does eery but gorgeous Medieval-type stained glass windows (see below) with characters that look like they walked out of a Tim Burton movie. How fun would it be to go to a church with her windows! (Don’t think that will happen anytime soon.)

There’s also (see further below) a mesmerizing  installation by Ray Hwang (from Korea) in a darkened room that almost defies easy description – but I’ll give it a go. It combines light, video and the image of a chandelier created by thousands of crystal beads upon a plexiglass panel  – to create the sensation of a chandelier that gradually lights up during   a rain storm. Okay, I didn’t do it justice. You have to see it.

Judith Schaechter creates stained glass using centuries-old techniques from medieval churches. But the stories her windows tell, as in “Mad Meg” from 2010, are the products of her own imagination. (Judith Schaechter/Special to the Register)

The DSM Register also has a good  slide show and story about the exhibit. See: http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20130218/LIFE/302180015/Eye-candy-Art-Center-showcases-glass-art-from-around-world

The Transparencies show was small so we spent another hour or so wandering around the rest of the museum, admiring old favorites (by Edward Hopper, John Singer Sargent, Anselm Kiefer, Grant Wood) and catching some new views – including an interesting installation by Ai Weiwei, the dissident Chinese artist/activist, and a crazy video of a McDonald’s during a flood, slowly filling up with water (complete with poor Ronald bobbing in the waves), as well as work I’d never seen before  by Alex Katz, Cindy Sherman and others.

Although it’s difficult to photograph, Ran Hwang’s 2010 “Garden of Water” shimmers with light from a video, projected onto Plexiglas panels pinned with thousands of crystal beads. (Leila Heller Gallery/Special to the Register)

TRANSPARENCIES
Contemporary Art & A History of Glass

February 22 — May 22, 2013
Anna K. Meredith Gallery


Above: Monir Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, born 1924)
Convertible Series, Group 10, 2011

Transparencies brings together a group of international contemporary artists whose work explores glass as both medium and as subject matter. Each creates contemporary art that connects with the history of glasswork, from luxury objects such as chandeliers and mirrors to household items like drinking vessels and light bulbs. Many forms of glass are represented, from delicate, hand-worked mirrors to industrial sheets of Plexiglas, as well as works that despite appearances, are not made of glass at all. The artists selected for Transparencies come from around the world, and vary widely in their art-making practices. Some have always worked with glass, both actually and conceptually, while others have only explored it occasionally. Combining sculpture, video, and installation with traditional forms of artisan techniques such as stained glass and blown glass, Transparencies explores the role of glass in today’s contemporary art world as well as our everyday lives.

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Filed under Des Moines, museum exhibit, THE ARTS

Dreaming of Ragbrai (July 21-27) on a sunny March morning

How amazing – the sun is shining today upon brown and muddy Des Moines. I can hear birds chirping and see squirrels racing across soggy lawns still littered with patches of melting snow.  Perfect morning to daydream about riding bikes through central and southern Iowa during Ragbrai this July. The DSM Register, conveniently, provided a detailed description of the route today and it looks do-able. It’s also very convenient for those of us living in Des Moines, since it passes through the city for the first time in many years. If the weather isn’t beastly hot – as it was last summer – I hope to do Day 3 (49.9 miles from Perry to Des Moines) and Day 4 (49.9 miles from Des Moines to Knoxville with highlights including mimosas at the Rosey Acres Winery, ice cream at Jersey Freeze in Monroe, beer at Peach Tree Brewing in Knoxville, as well as a visit to the home of the designer of Iowa’s state flag – that would be Dixie Gebhardt.)

You still game Anne??

DCGebhardt.jpg
Dixie Cornell Gebhardt in about 1917.

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Filed under biking, Des Moines, Iowa