Saturday, September 19, 2015

Weird doesn't describe it: Our night with the Strandbeests at the Peabody Essex Museum 9/17/15

That about sums up how I felt Thursday evening. We started in Cambridge, MA at our annual trek East to see the hilarious Ig Nobel awards at Harvard. However, this year we coupled that event with this trip to the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, MA. 

Who knew that in the town infamous for its Witch Hunts of the late 17th century was also a place with a long history? I did, but Peter didn't, so it was time to bring him to this place of curios.


A Museum of Art and Culture

The roots of the Peabody Essex Museum date to the 1799 founding of the East India Marine Society, an organization of Salem captains and supercargoes who had sailed beyond either the Cape of Good Hope or Cape Horn. The society’s charter included a provision for the establishment of a “cabinet of natural and artificial curiosities,” which is what we today would call a museum. Society members brought to Salem a diverse collection of objects from the northwest coast of America, Asia, Africa, Oceania, India and elsewhere. By 1825, the society moved into its own building, East India Marine Hall, which today contains the original display cases and some of the very first objects collected.
I learned of the place because it was renovated in 2003 by Moshe Safdie: World-renowned architect, urban planner. Of course I rushed over to check it out, my curiousity for modern architecture in tow. The building was not very impressive to me, but the reconstructed Chinese Yin Yu Tang home was a very cool thing to visit, especially since we had recently been to China.
Well on this night, with extended museum hours, we arrived at 9p.m. to see the "sneak peak" of an upcoming exhibit. This was not the first "peek," as Theo Jansen and his Strandbeest have been in the area for a while now and there were a few public events:
We really wanted to see the Crane's beach event, but alas...so much to do, so little time.
There is a plethora of video on these most oddly compelling creature/sculpture/art thingies, along with advance press that describes Theo's beests:
 "PEM presents the first major American exhibition of Theo Jansen's famed kinetic sculptures. Dynamic and interdisciplinary, Jansen's Strandbeests ("beach animals") blur the lines between art and science, sculpture and performance. The exhibition celebrates the thrill of the Strandbeests' unique locomotion as well as the processes that have driven their evolutionary development on the Dutch seacoast. The kinetic sculptures are accompanied by artist sketches, facilitated demonstrations of the creatures' complex ambulatory systems, a hall of "fossils" as well as photography by Lena Herzog."



I could tell Puggles Pete was impresssed at this spectical of art. It was so right up his ally, and the artist was in the house and totally accessible, which was very cool.


Theo Jansen, the Dutch artist and creator of the Strandbeest.


Mr. Jansen used to be a physics dude prior to his art career. How do I know? Because I asked him of course!
We missed the talk that was a part of "Release the Beest" night, so we weren't quite sure who Lena Herzog was. We thought this may be her:
"Hey lady, where did you get your neat-o keen Strandbeest hat?"

You see, Lena was high on my list to check out and a strange blending of both of hubby and I's interests. Lena is the wife of famed documentarian Werner Herzog.


 She also is the photographer who collaborated with Theo and now they have a 20 lb. tome that the Museum is calling their exhibit catalog (of course Peter bought and carried it, that's what we do. We are collecting coffee table books of our journeys for our dotage when we can barely read and/or see):
So in answer to our curiosity on the Strandbeest hat lady (which we thought totally plausible as Werner's wife judging age and uniqueness of attire), we were so wrong. Of course if you are Werner Herzog, then your 3rd wife can indeed be a trophy wife who is almost 30 years your junior. And if Mr. Herzog is 73, you can do the math and see that we were wrong), she'll just have to remain the mystery lady.

Peter likes PVC piping and you can sense it in his nerve-ending, almost visible glee at being here in this space with this exhibit, these creatures, and the man (whose work of course reminded me of Calder's).


My interest in PVC piping is tied to my career as a teacher. I brightened when I recognized the DIY whisper phones pieces that Peter and I purchased for one of my classrooms (so students can read to themselves and hear what they sound like).

We also were lucky to arrive just as Theo was finishing up demonstrating a beest walking:




Pretty bizarre right? 


Of course I thought since I made whisper phones, I could do this. I was so wrong.


These creatures, this work, is a little more advanced than my work (understatement here in case folks didn't get it). P.S. Maybe that's Lena on the floor. Another mystery lady photobombing my shot!




This one is my favorite.


The museum has a dead beest hanging in the entryway.

Finally, I so enjoyed seeing my hubby go from the sophisticated "college-level" geek at Harvard an hour prior to this, his boyish awe and wonder at the beauty of science:

Oh yes he did! He walked a beast and it wasn't our 110 lb. St. Bernard mutt. Here he is:


Another adventure to add to the annuals of my brain, record here for posterity, and return to in the dead of winter some day to rekindle that wanderlust spirit that imbues my soul.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Of all the crazy things I did this summer...(2015)


Okay, so I am a music lover. And a festival freak. Much less on the festival side these days, but still and always a music lover, so I have to pick and choose from a very wide and eclectic array of venues and musical talent. Let me tell you- it ain't easy. 

Gone are the days of continent hopping for a single concert (Leonard Cohen in Dublin was so very well worth it though), and even driving 2-3 states away has become much more work than it is worth to me (although we did manage 2 concerts in Texas in August- Damien Rice in Austin and Gavin James with a little Sam Smith in Dallas).


However, we do love us some local talent and the field is pretty crammed around here. 


To my (and many, many others) delight, there is a little outfit from our neck of the woods and my even smaller circle of friends that holds the connection to a rising star on the musical scene. There name now is "And The Kids," but it has been several other names over the last several short years in my aegis of the band.

For me it started with a sports connection among our kids. Rebecca played hockey with my son. Yup, you heard that right. Title IX baby- girls can play with the boys! That was pre-teen years. By teen years, she had found her way to music and a muse/mentor in the hills outside of our town at a place called the Institute for Musical Arts.

http://www.ima.org/playlikeagirl.info/Welcome.html

The original three- Rebecca, Zoe, and Hannah 

 There was even early Merc!

And Proud Moms (Joanne) displaying Merc!

Not having girl children, it was a lovely vicarious past time to go with my friend, and Rebecca's mom, Joanne, as the often "senior-most" of the ever growing fan base as these young ladies grew into their immense talent.


 I think this was among the first of my shows, on the birth of becoming a "groupie." I learned to take naps because sometimes the band didn't play until late- very late for an older groupie like me!

I followed them into some places and spaces that made me feel like a dinosaur, and this gig at the VFW in Florence (2012) was one of those places: 

 Hannah's dog, little dog was along for the show:


The group went through changes: name-wise, membership, and such. The root duo of Hannah and Rebecca was the carry through, and here they are in the summer of 2013 at the Green River Festival 





They even had a CD release party at the beloved Iron Horse in Northampton on 11/23/13


By 2014 they had a decent following of loyal and avid fans. My status as a fan kept slipping as the band got more radio play, gigs, and massive exposure. They went from busking on the streets of Noho to playing out all around the region and then even hitting the left coast (Northern, not Cali) and even sojourning to South by Southwest! 

When they hit Green River again in 2014, they had fans like this:


Those same fans found the band hanging with us this year at Green River (they didn't play there this year b/c they had their own gig later in the summer):



Grow and grow and grow did that fan base ever! I went all the way down to like 14 for a hot minute (of course I missed those 12 midnight gigs in NYC, and driving to Burlington in the winter wasn't in my DNA), but I definitely was a part of the "almost-connected" and avidly loyal home-based unofficial fan club. My husband and I started collecting merc, posters, anything we could get our grubby hands on:

Not on top of the bill, but on the bill none-the-less 















Hand-made CD's, now how cool is that !?!



And even a set list!!!

So, there you have it. The making of a fan. Not quite a fanatic, but definitely more involved than the fan letter I wrote to Sandy Duncan in third grade when I found out she had to have her eye removed or the little note pad I made with a picture of my idol- Tom Jones hand-drawn by yours truly on the front and my unsent letter of love I composed.

Then 2015 hit and many exciting things happened for And The Kids:


  • they signed a record deal with Signature Sounds
  • they got a booking agent
  • they made their first professional quality CD and had a release party for it at Signature Sounds
  • they were featured in an article in the Boston Globe
  • they went to Washington DC to record a "tiny desk" concert for NPR
  • they were included in the line up for a 5 band end of the summer  concert to be held locally at the Pines theater at Look Park
THRILLING, RIGHT??? You betcha! Here are some of the highlights from it all:


























Of course we bought the CD (and you to can) 


The link to their tiny desk concert on NPR:


And then the end-of-the-summer gig, which was a BLAST!

Parent of band member Rebecca
Parent (standing) of band member Hannah



Us (#1.5 Fans)

I gave one of the fans to a younger fan b/c she deserved it (she was really grooving to the music)!
ATK playing the Pines in their hometown- it was so sweeeeeet!

Hannah

Talia (a newly added member that the women met at IMA) sporting an old Student Prince hat.




Rebecca 


And a SOLD OUT crowd!

https://youtu.be/vCX8f6UfE54

and you thought this was the end, but NOOOOOOO....

there's more....