Since D.C.

May. 25th, 2011 10:23 pm
mojosmom: (Gautreau)
I haven't posted anything of significance since I came back from Washington, weeks ago! So this is a catch-up post.

Since then, I've been to Springfield for a conference, and stopped at New Salem Historic Site, where Abraham Lincoln lived for a few years (though it wasn't a historic site then!), on my way home. I hadn't been there since I was a kid, and they've build a fancy-schmancy new visitor's center, and, naturally, a gift shop. Few of the buildings are original, but they are all built the way they would have been at the time, and are furnished with period pieces, many donated by descendants of the original settlers. Like many such sites, they have interpreters, dressed in period clothing and conducting period activities, like blacksmithing. And if you've ever wondered what Abe did with those rails he split, here you go:
Split-rail fence - New Salem Historic Site

I've also been up to Milwaukee with a bunch of friends to see the Frank Lloyd Wright exhibit at the Milwaukee Museum of Art:
Milwaukee Art Museum
It was huge, lots of drawings and models, and some home movies! We have started talking about a road trip to Taliesin. We had an excellent lunch at a restaurant by the lake, in a park designed by Frederic Law Olmsted.

Unfortunately, my car met with an accident at the end of the trip. I was dropping people off at a friend's house, parked my car across the street, and when M. was pulling out of C.'s driveway, she didn't cut soon enough and backed into my car! Fortunately, no one was in it at the time, and it was driveable. It's currently in the body shop, though.

I've been to a couple of operas and plays, and last Saturday went to a workshop sponsored by the Network of Ensemble Theatres for artistic staff and board members of ensemble theatre companies to talk about ways to improve communications and understand the respective roles of each. I thought it was very useful. Teatro Vista's current play, Freedom, N.Y., opened about a couple of weeks ago, and we had a nice event at a pub down the street from the venue.

Thanks to Goldstar, I got a half-price ticket to the Alvin Ailey Dance Company at the Auditorium. It's Judith Jamison's last season as artistic director, and the 50th anniversary of Revelations, Ailey's iconic piece, which they danced at every performance. It's still wonderful.

Tonight, I went to a fascinating lecture at the National Museum of Mexican Art. In an event jointly sponsored by the Museum and the American Jewish Committee, Sophie Bejarano de Goldberg talked about the book she co-authored, Sefarad de ayer, oy i manyana (The Sephardic Jews of yesterday, today and tomorrow), a history of Sephardic Jews in Mexico. It's one of three Jewish communities in Mexico, the others being Ashkenazi and Arab Jews, and consists of about 1200 families (the entire Jewish population is around 40,000). She and her co-authors interviewed many people who came to Mexico during the third wave of Sephardic immigration in the '20s and '30s, mostly from Turkey and other parts of the Ottoman Empire (the first wave was in the 1500s, the second in the 1800s), and borrowed many documents and photographs to include. The Museum had some of those on display, including this Kaddish in Ladino (sorry for the lousy quality - I didn't have my good camera with me):
Kaddish in Ladino

Weekend before last, I braved the cold (yes, it was in the mid-'40s, and damp) and went to the Hyde Park Garden Fair to buy herbs. I finally got them planted on Sunday, when the sun decided to put in an appearance and it was warm! That same weekend, I was at my dry cleaners when I saw a sign for a yard sale to benefit victims of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. I wandered over there and came away with a bunch of books. Then this past Friday, I finally used the Groupon coupon I had for a used bookstore and came away with another whole slew of books.

In between all this, I've been sending paperwork hither and yon for my retirement. Social Security and state pension applications are in, but the IMRF (Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund) can't be submitted sooner than 30 days before my retirement date. So that will go in next week. I have also signed up for a second Italian class (a literature one) and a class on British women mystery writers between the wars, both of which meet on a weekday morning. I am so looking forward to being able to do stuff during the day!

I'm thinking about a trip to New York in July, maybe over my birthday weekend. There's a show at the Morgan Library, Illuminating Fashion: Dress in the Art of Medieval France and the Netherlands, that I'd like to see. If I go in July, I can also check out the Alexander McQueen exhibit at the Met, too.

They've just announced the schedule for the Printers Row Lit Fest, and I immediately ordered tickets for a couple of author events. I may order a couple more. They're free, so if I don't go, I'm not out any money and someone else will get in.

Busy!

Oct. 18th, 2009 09:14 am
mojosmom: (art)
I left Tuesday morning for Galena, and got to my B&B around 3:30, having made a few stops on the way. As I was approaching Freeport, I noticed signs for the Lincoln-Douglas debate site,
Lincoln-Douglas debate site - Freeport. IL
so decided to stop and check it out. As it was around noon, I figured I'd get some lunch, too. The site is in a small park next to the library, which has a café where I ended up having a bite. On the way back to the highway, there's a wetlands where I also stopped, and saw a gorgeous blue heron take off. A few miles outside of Freeport, I passed a sign for the Jane Addams Trail. "What's that?", I said, and turned around to check it out, ending up walking for about twenty minutes on a nice trail through a woodsy area.
On the Jane Addams Trail

The place where I stayed is an old Victorian mansion, built by a guy named Estey who was a pal of Ulysses S. Grant (who lived in Galena). The place is beautifully maintained, and the furnishings and décor are all period. Here's the very ornate, yet extremely comfortable, bed in my room:
Where I stayed

Being the end of the season, and midweek, a lot of places weren't open, so I expect I'll have to go back some weekend in the spring, but there was still a lot to do. The Galena History Museum must have seen me coming, because they had an exhibit of shoes! I toured Grant's home; I think he had one of the best views in town:
View of Galena from the home.

Galena has a lot of touristy shops, some tacky, some very nice indeed. Unfortunately, this one was closed:
Looking for a man? I did a fair bit of antiquing, ate in some nice restaurants and admired a lot of Victorian architecture.

I did find a couple of books in a lovely antiquarian bookshop, including one called Shakspere and Typography, in which the author attempts to prove that Shakespeare spent time working for a printer. I am always amused at people who try to show that, because he used certain terms or displayed knowledge of a field, Shakespeare must have been thus-and-so. If he'd been everything people claim he must have been, he'd have had no time to write plays!

I drove home on Thursday, deleted a bunch of emails, and uploaded my photos. That night, there was a benefit reception at the home of Teatro Vista's board president - yummy food and a raffle in which I won a $50 American Express gift card! - and then we all went to the show, The Elaborate Entrance of Chad Deity, by Kristoffer Diaz. It's just as good as the reviews say, and they are raves. It's getting all kinds of hot press, and there's talk of New York! You can see some video clips on the Victory Gardens website.

Tribune
Sun-Times
New City



Friday morning, I was up early and drove down to Springfield for a work-related conference. It was one of the best they've had. The speakers were uniformly not boring (which is rare - there's usually at least one who puts you to sleep) and the information was very useful. The meeting wrapped up around noon on Saturday, but I spent a couple of hours checking out some historic sites, including the Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices
Lincoln-Herndon Law Offices

and the Old State Capitol building, where there was a storytelling event going on in the House of Representatives chamber
House of Representatives

I then headed to the home of the lovely [livejournal.com profile] tzurriz, and had pizza with her family and a couple of wandering Bookcrossers, and received some Tim-Tams! Thank you, [livejournal.com profile] skyring!
mojosmom: (Turning pages)
I can't believe I never got around to posting about last weekend, and here this weekend is all over but the shouting, as they say.

Hyde Park Jazz Festival )

On Sunday, I went back to the Art Center, as there was an event to kickoff Chicago Artists Month. All of October there will be events going on all over the city (I should say, even more art events than usual, as there are always a lot anyway). There was some rather outré performance art; these kids seem to have mixed reactions, from intrigued to "what the heck?":
Watching and Listening.

Springfield )

Today, I went up north for the annual Lake County Women's Coalition Tea, this year honoring Women in Law Enforcement.

Now I have to do my homework for Italian class, and start getting ready for Charleston. I can't believe I'm leaving in just a couple of days! Looks as though the weather will be generally pleasant, but I'd better pack the umbrella. I'd also better figure out what books to bring to a) read, and b) release. By the way, I've booked a Gullah Tour for Friday at 11:00, if anyone is interested in joining me.

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