Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Sparing you the 5 bad Hopper puns that just sprang to mind

This weekend, we were entertaining the Southern grandparents. They haven't always been Southern, they just happen to live down in Dixieland now and venture north on occasion to make disparaging comments about the weather and the manners of complete strangers. Seriously, it's like being with former smokers who now can't stand to be within a quarter mile of cigarette smoke. Only much more annoying.

Whenever they come to New England for any period of time, they have a few rituals- if it's summer, they go to P-town, do the nostalgia tours of their hometowns, walk the beach in Newburyport (where they lived for many years) and scarf down as much Bertuccis pizza as they can without becoming sick. Aside: we may have snowy winters, but at least we have good pizza. Many (not all) Southerners view Dominos and Papa Johns as simply wonderful and live their whole lives in ignorance of places like Ernesto's and Pizzeria Regina and Bertuccis or even (my favorite, I'll admit) Papa Gino's. While Dominos certainly serves a purpose, it's not the pinnacle of pizza by any stretch and should only be turned to in the case of a pizza emergency.

Friday found us all at the Museum of Fine Arts for the Edward Hopper Exhibit. I am a proud art geek. I have a degree in art history and have been known to spend hours gazing at things many consider completely uninteresting. My dad's an artist and Hopper is his muse, so I knew we were going to have a good time, regardless of what went on inside the galleries. I am happy to say that the exhibit exceeded our expectations.

Hopper is the Hemingway of American Modernism. His style is stark, but it does the trick; it's all about what you don't see. The exhibit begins with many of his earliest etchings and oils and follows his style through various media. By the end of his exhibit- and life- you will see the icons for which he's most known and remembered.

Kiddo and I rented audio tours, which for four bucks (for hers, mine was slightly more) was well worth the money. She was able to zero in on paintings with the headphone icon and listen to descriptions of the works. That held her long enough for me to look around, then we did a short "lesson" about the various works, composition, the finer points of curation (she's getting good at telling why certain things are hung together). When she had finally had enough, I handed her my ipod and she sat on the big cushiony thing in the last gallery.

By the time we left the exhibit it was way past her usual dinner time so we hit the cafeteria for a slice of pizza. A man approached us and said "We followed you and your daughter through the exhibit. You're a very good teacher." It was lovely to receive praise from a complete stranger, but it also got me thinking about leading an outing for the Mamas and our assorted cubs this fall. We could pay our own admission and Kiddo and I would love to lead a scavenger hunt for some of the younger kids (that's how I always kept her occupied in the museum when she was younger- a clip board, some paper, and a whole lotta crayons). We also make Art in Bloom a yearly tradition and I'd love to organize an outing for that weekend in the spring as well. Let me know if you have any interest. Until then- get thee to Hopper. The exhibit closes on August 19th and advance tickets are required which include admission to the rest of the exhibits. General admission to the museum is FREE on Wednesday nights.

8 comments:

  1. Sounds great to me! I'd love to have someone teach me about art.

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  2. I LOVE art!I SO want to take Sweetie to the MFA, but haven't gotten there with her yet. Would love to have you be our Leader! Keep me posted.

    Thanks,

    Amy

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  3. I went to that exhibit. It was absolutely breathtaking. The last piece he did, of the empty room, made me cry.

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  4. Thank you so much! I'd love to take Sebastian...Ben's a little too young I'm afraid.

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  5. Great idea. And I want to add that MANY of the MA public libraries have passes to the MFA. We have a membership, which helps (a teeny bit) with the insane parking costs as well as admission costs, but we get passes thru the library as well for guests. We can get up to 4 passes.

    Kids are NEVER too young for the MFA. I've taken mine since infancy. They used to love the mummies, but now they're more into the furniture and the impressionist rooms. Babies do attend, as do families, especially on Wed nights when it's free. It's ridiculously expensive otherwise for a family.

    Now, what I want to know is, WHO are cape buffalo's parents. I lived in NBPT for 9 years and I know a LOT Of people. Are they north or south enders? Where did they live there? Who do we know in common. I betcha we know plenty of people. And this weekend is Yankee Homecoming. They must be going, right?

    M

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  6. Thanks for mentioning the library memberships- I had forgotten to add that. If you haven't done so already, check with your local library. Many town have memberships to the MFA, Museum of Science and Childrens' Museums that you can check out for 24 hours. I graduated from Simmons, which is right down the street and my alumni card allows me to check out a membership card from the library there.

    Also- my parents lived there in the 90's. The lived right in one of the new condo developments on the harbor ;)

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  7. I would LOVE to do this, although I may leave my 2-year old home with his grandma. As much as I believe little ones should be exposed to art too, I think I'd have a hard time relaxing when he starts to 'test' the security system.

    BTW, you do sound like a great teacher!

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  8. Hopperific! I'd love to get there before it closes.

    I haven't been since the Impling was a really little wee one. Somewhere along the way naps moved to an awkward time.

    Maybe we can just go without a nap for one day. How bad could it be?


    Don't answer that.

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