penny

Strawboys, Wrenboys and Mummers!

welcome

A Celtic Welcome

I just booked a flight to Dublin and Belfast Ireland for early December 2014.  I’m researching Mummers for a story.  I’m also researching Celtic Arts for a class I’ll teach at WCC for the Appalachian Summer Governor’s School.  Last but not least, I’m researching northern Ireland for a walking tour in 2015 or 2016.  This is a piece of Celtic Art that I did after seeing the Book of Kells in Dublin last year.  Let me know if you’re interested in walking along or if you’re curious about the mummers.

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Hauntingly Entertaining Work

Demented Clown!  Run!

Demented Clown! Run!

If you’re doing what you love, it isn’t work at all.  I know this has been said a million times, but let me give you yet another example.  I am an artist, a member of the International Travel Writers & Photographers Alliance.  Being the official photographer for the Haunted Graham Mansion’s spooky tours (THE HAUNTED MANSION, THE TRAIL OF TERROR, THE APOCALYPTIC NUCLEAR WARHEAD, THE PSYCHO WARD, THE BLOODY BARN and CLOWN HOUSE) is an entertaining “job”. It’s every photographer’s dream to have these interesting subjects to capture just that perfect action shot.  Visit the Facebook page to see more of my work.  Photographing in the dark when you can’t see the subject is challenge enough, let alone those subjects running from their captors.  I’ve actually had to reach out and touch the subjects’ hands or faces to be sure I’m pointing the camera at the correct spot when I’m taking cast members’ photographs. I’m dog-tired at the end of each Friday and Saturday from the last weekend in September to the first weekend in November.  Running all over the property, catching characters in their stations or manic beings and demented clowns spooking customers waiting in line for the tour is the best exercise I get. Then there’s the energy-draining time in the General Store photographing people in the coffin or family group shots on the Red Throne when customers get to act out their fantasies with daggers and chains or giant spiders and rubber rats.  Occasionally, a demonic clown with a chain saw will help create the fantasies that I get to photograph with the merrymakers. It is usually midnight before I leave. Energy draining. Yes.  Pure enjoyment. For sure!    
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Happening upon Art Nouveau

Firebird by Niki de Saint Phalle

Firebird by Niki de Saint Phalle

Characterized by eccentric features with an expressive use of symbolism and rich ornamentation, no straight lines or flat surfaces, with primarily organic themes, “Art Nouveau” appeared on the scene at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. Yesterday while I was in Charlotte for a Tourism Ireland luncheon, I took time to look around the neighborhood.  I had decided on the drive down that I would take time to see the Mint Museum.  I had an hour to kill before lunch so I parked at the Westin on College Street and walked around the corner to find I was only a block from ALL the wonderful museums and performance venues. I took this selfie outside the Bechtler Museum on South Tryon Street.  After lunch, I went back and toured the only museum open on a Monday, much to my chagrin.  I saw several modern artists’ work at the Bechtler.  The selfie piece is called L'Oiseau de Feu sur l’Arche  or Firebird (literally, Bird of Fire on an Arch) by Niki de Saint Phalle. It is 17 feet tall with 7,000 mirrors. Andreas Bechtler, Charlotte resident and chief patron for the museum, bought this piece and unveiled it November 2, 2009 as a key icon for the arts in downtown Charlotte. Born in France in 1930, Niki de Saint Phalle grew up in America and lived all over Europe.  Late in life, she claimed California as her home, where she died in 2002.  Mother, grandmother, sculptor, painter, actress and model, her art is boldly expressive. I found out while reading about her work that she was influenced by my favorite Spanish artist, Antoni Gaudi, a celebrated architect with mosaic sculptures and buildings all over Barcelona. Here is a picture of his Guell Park, the very definition of Art Nouveau.
Antoni Gaudi's Guell Park in Barcelona Spain

Antoni Gaudi's Guell Park in Barcelona Spain

I also read how popular Niki’s work is in San Diego, California.  Then I remembered taking several pictures of these two sculptures, Nikigator and "Poet and Muse" outside the Mingei International Museum, when I zoomed through Balboa Park last month.  Duh!!! Light bulbs go off!!!  It was her work.  Things started connecting in my brain. Suddenly I remembered being in Nice, France several years ago and admiring a sculpture of Miles Davis outside the Hotel Negresco. It was a voluminous brightly colored tile and mirrored mosaic of the musician. Her work again! I personally love highly saturated color and I love, love, love happy art.  There’s enough drab and drama in the world.  Make me smile!  Gaudi and Phalle are my inspiration!  I’m collecting broken tiles and colored glass to build my own sculptures.  Watch out back yard!
Balboa Park

Niki de Saint Phalle's "Poet and Muse" in San Diego

 
Nikigator by Niki de Saint Phalle at Balboa Park, San Diego, California

Nikigator by Niki de Saint Phalle at Balboa Park, San Diego, California

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Give me a Kiss Woman!

Give me a Kiss, Woman!

Give me a Kiss, Woman!

Here’s a picture I took of my favorite piece of art in San Diego.  The young couple was kind enough to pose for me.  The sculpture they’re imitating is by J. Seward Johnson, the grandson of Johnson & Johnson fame.  He is a well-known contemporary artist specializing in “art for the public”, for people who feel intimidated by museums.  The original version, bronze, was temporarily exhibited during the 2005 anniversary of V-J Day (victory over Japan) in Times Square. This iconic twenty-five foot version is constructed in painted styrofoam and aluminum.   An original photograph of the real couple was taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt shown on the cover of Life Magazine portraying an American sailor kissing a nurse, August, 1945. Life Magazine claimed copyright infringement. I couldn’t find any information whether there was legal action or not. In the short 5 days in San Diego, I managed to make a quick tour of Balboa Park on a complimentary press pass.  The famous San Diego Zoo is in the park, but time would not allow that visit.  I quickly went through the San Diego Museum of Art.  I was impressed with their permanent collection.  I need to go back and spend some time in the San Diego area!!!
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Winston-Salem Journal writes about Chestnut Creek

http://www2.journalnow.com/content/2010/aug/12/111925/galax/   By Lisa O'Donnell | Journal Reporter Published: August 12, 2010 Updated: 08/11/2010 07:25 pm GALAX, Va. - Take N.C. 89 north off of U.S. 77 and you will come within hollering distance of Cumberland Knob, the birthplace of the Blue Ridge Parkway, and the Blue Ridge Music Center, where the surrounding mountains ring each summer with the high lonesome sound of fiddles and banjos. Cross over into Virginia and this mountain-hugging road eases into the outskirts of Galax and becomes Main Street. Here, you will find Jimmy Edmonds building world-class guitars in a shop tucked behind a lawn and garden store. Continue north and you will pass Felts Park, where 40,000 people flock each year to the Old Fiddler's Convention against the backdrop of furniture factories. Barr's Fiddle Shop, a legendary music shop that is home to spontaneous jams, will soon be on your right. And up on your left, in a renovated bank, sits the Chestnut Creek School of the Arts, a new player in the city's arts scene that hopes to take advantage of the area's confluence of culture and nature to make Galax a destination spot for tourists. Galax is one of many small towns across the country that is looking to tourism to help revitalize their economies, said Neville Bhada, the vice president of communications with the Southeast Tourism Society. "Communities are trying to see what they have in their own back yard to promote," Bhada said. And Galax's back yard is plush with music, natural beauty and artists versed in such traditional crafts as quilting and weaving. The Chestnut Creek School was developed to give tourists a unique opportunity to learn such things as how to build a guitar from one of the area's master craftsmen. When not in class, visitors can rent bikes and take a ride down the beautiful New River bicycle trail or stop by the historic Rex Theater to take in a show. Penelope Moseley, an artist who has lived in Galax for about 30 years, is among a handful of people who recognized the potential for an arts school in the city, which is about 70 miles north of Winston-Salem. About eight years ago, she heard a local economic development leader talk about a new incubator that would help small businesses. "Afterward, I thought, ‘The arts need incubating, too,'" Moseley said. Her idea was to model the school after the Penland School of Crafts and the John C. Campbell Folk School, two schools in North Carolina that draw people from around the world. At the time, she and others in Galax were teaching art to students in a house in Galax. "The classes we had in the house were going well," she said. "And we knew there was a need for them." She and other local leaders were able to secure sizable grants that paid for a feasibility study and a beautiful old bank on Main Street that had sat empty for several years. The 8,000-square-foot bank, which was built in the 1920s, was renovated and opened in April. It serves as the school's headquarters and includes a gallery and several classrooms equipped with instruments, sewing machines, looms and spinning wheels made by a local woodworker. Unlike Penland and John C. Campbell, which are located in rural areas, classes at the Chestnut Creek School will be spread around Galax. A pottery studio recently opened in a building down the road from the school. The next phase of the school will be a wood-wrights shop where people can learn how to make instruments from such people as Wayne Henderson, an internationally renowned luthier who lives in the area. The school holds classes for local people who want to learn a skill and uses local artists to teach classes to visitors. Those visitors will be spending money at local bed-and-breakfasts, cabins, restaurants and shops. Chris Shackelford, the director of the school, said that eight new businesses have opened in the area in response to the school's opening. One such business is a coffee shop that opened next to the school. Outdoors-oriented businesses, such as outfitters, are likely to benefit as well. For out-of-town students who enjoy the outdoors, Galax offers an abundance of opportunities. Besides the parkway, one of the big draws is the New River bicycle trail, which stretches 57 miles from Galax to Pulaski. Or visitors can spend their off-time tubing, fishing or paddling down the New, which is fairly tame in the Galax area. Just west of Galax lies the rugged beauty of Mount Rogers National Recreation Area and Grayson Highlands State Park, two of the most stunning places to hike and camp in our neck of the Southeast. Classes on tap for this fall include introduction to weaving, clogging, novel writing and wood carving
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Contact Me
If you would like your vacation or tourism property covered in a feature story, contact me,
Penelope Moseley
276-733-9704
paw@penelopesart.com