mojosmom: (Default)
The President on science:


Thursday evening I went to a program sponsored by the Friends of the Blackstone Branch Library (my local branch). We went to Special Collections at the University of Chicago's Regenstein Library to see three exhibits they have up: "Our Lincoln: Bicentennial Icons from the Barton Collection of Lincolniana", "Integrating the Life of the Mind: African-Americans at the University of Chicago, 1870-1940", and "East European Jews in the German-Jewish Imagination from the Ludwig Rosenberger Library of Judaica". I think Special Collections librarians must be among my favorite people. They have such interesting stuff under their control, and they just love to share it!

Last night, there was a fantastic jazz concert at Symphony Center. The first half was Maggie Brown and some of Chicago's top jazz musicians doing a program Songs of My Father: A Tribute to Oscar Brown, Jr.. He, of course, was one of Chicago's most famous jazz musicians, composers, educators. His children follow in his footsteps, though, sadly, Oscar Brown III was killed in an auto accident some years ago.

After the intermission, We Insist! Max Roach's Freedom Now Suite (for which Oscar Brown, Jr., wrote the lyrics). Originally recorded in 1960, with Abbey Lincoln on vocals and a host of other greats, it was banned in South Africa (such an honor!). DeeDee Bridgewater sang for us, and two of the original recording artists, Julian Priester on trombone and Raymond Mantilla on percussion, were part of the group. Max's daughter, Maxine, was in the audience, and participated in a pre-concert discussion of the piece.

When I was driving home from work, I noticed that the police were at the every ramp to Lake Shore Drive, getting ready to shut it down for the President's motorcade. I didn't want to get stuck on the bus, so I grabbed the train.
mojosmom: (CHB)
I went to the opening reception of the "One Book, Many Interpretations" show at the Special Collections Division at the Harold Washington Library Center this evening. Honey, let me tell you, they were pouring wine like it was water. "Um, I don't really need the whole bottle in that plastic cup", but the bartender kept on pouring. At least they had some really good food to cushion the tummy.

The show, which was the whole point of the evening, is absolutely incredible. I've mentioned this show before, but for those who've missed it, the Chicago Public Library invited bookbinders to bind copies of the books that have been chosen for the One Book, One Chicago program. The best of these are part of the show. Technically, all the books were awesome. I did feel that a few were not particularly inspired creatively, and some just didn't speak to me personally. But the overall quality was amazing. Even more amazing was that Lesa (the Exhibit Curator) was able to put this show together in just over a year.

Here's the book I submitted that didn't get accepted: The Coast of Chicago, by Stuart Dybek

There's a small catalogue, too.

Some of us were joking that we came for the people, not the books (there were a lot of CHB people there), but the truth is that, at any opening, you probably spend more time socializing than looking at the art. I'll definitely be going back.

Speaking of socializing, I told Bill D. that I was hoping to go to Venice in February, and that my sister had sent me lots of books, and he said he had lots of books, too, and, by the way, he has a friend there who's a paper marbler and has a shop and is a "sweet guy". I am going to have such a list! I love it.

And met a friend of Barb M's who is a photographer and who has a show opening Friday at the Fine Arts Building. There's an opening at the Center for Book and Paper Arts that evening as well, just a few blocks away, so I think I'll try to do both.

Then I came home, and one of my temporary crowns came off. I called my dentist's office, fully expecting nothing, but their voicemail gave her home #, so I called her and she said, basically, "you can just snap it back in with a bit of toothpaste and then come in on Monday to have it re-cemented and in the meantime, don't floss and don't eat on that side", so "snap" I did. Hope it lasts the weekend! (Did you ever think you'd hear a dentist say, "Don't floss"?)

January 2018

S M T W T F S
 12345 6
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 5th, 2025 06:21 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios