Saturday, August 4, 2012

The Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden

“Civitas” [1988] - Audrey Flack (left) and “Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh (right)
Civitas [1988] - Audrey Flack Karma [2011] - Do-Ho Suh

“Monumental Head of Jean d'Aire” from “The Burghers of Calais” [1884-86, enlarged 1901-10] - Auguste Rodin (left) and “Overflow” [2005] - Jaume Plensa (right)

The Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden is adjacent to the Museum (NOMA) in City Park, New Orleans. Admission is free. We were surprised by how much we liked this 5 acre park. We were expecting a sterile sculpture experience, but we alas, we were wrong. First, the sculptures (57+ pieces) are amazing. You may not care for them all, but there is guaranteed to be a piece or two to make you stop, gawk, and wonder how you could get it into your own garden. Second, the setting works well. Under mature live oaks and other trees, there is a sense of, well, maturity about the garden. The setting and layout lends itself to discovering hidden pieces, like an Easter egg hunt; you can’t take the whole garden in a glance by any means. It takes several laps around to begin to appreciate the layers and different views of the works.

Garden Vistas with Lagoon

Hercules the Archer” [1947] - Antoine Bourdelle (left) and “Riace Warriors I, II, III, IV” [1983-1988] - Elisabeth Frink (right)
Hercules the Archer [1947] - Antoine Bourdelle Riace Warriors I, II, III, IV [1983-1988] - Elisabeth Frink

Heroic Man” [1930-34] - Gaston Lachaise (left) and “Monkeys” [1998-2001] - Rona Pondick (right)
Heroic Man [1930-34] - Gaston LachaiseMonkeys [1998-2001] - Rona Pondick

 Views of “Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh
“Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh “Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh 

“Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh (left) and “Standing Man with Radiating Words” [2006] - Leslie Dill (right)
“Karma” [2011] - Do-Ho Suh   “Standing Man with Radiating Words” [2006] - Leslie Dill

Two Views of “Large Seated Cardinal” [1983] Giacomo Manzu
“Large Seated Cardinal” [1983] Giacomo Manzu“Large Seated Cardinal" [1983] Giacomo Manzu

The Labors of Alexander” [1967] - Rene Magritte (left) and “Window and Ladder - Too Late for Help” [2008] - Leandro Erlich (right)
“The Labors of Alexander” [1967] - Rene Magritte  “Window and Ladder - Too Late for Help” [2008] - Leandro Erlich

“Three Figures and Four Benches” [1979] - George Segal (left) and “Una Battaglia (A Battle)” [1971] - Arnaldo Pomodoro (right)
“Three Figures and Four Benches” [1979] - George Segal “Una Battaglia (A Battle)” [1971] - Arnaldo Pomodoro


Venus Victorius” [1914] - Pierre Auguste Renoir with “Reclining Mother and Child” [1975, 77] – Henry Moore in the background (left) and golden archer, unidentified (right)
“Venus Victorius” [1914] - Pierre Auguste Renoir with “Reclining Mother and Child” [1975, 77] – Henry Moore in the background golden archer, unidentified

Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden
Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden Brochure and Map of the Garden

Rise of the Amorphophallus

Amorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New Leaves
Amorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New LeavesAmorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New Leaves
Sometime in mid-July, just when we have lost hope that they will come back, these Amorphophallus bulbifer emerge from the ground almost overnight. The foliage and mottled stems are striking to look at. Three years ago we posted about the A. bulbifer and the stray Arisaema consanguineum that is mixed in. The A. consanguineum comes up a full month to two months before the A. bulbifer.

We’ve never seen these A. bulbifer bloom. Then again, they might be a little shy given what their generic name means. According to Quattrocchi amorphophallus has it origin in the “Greek amorphos ‘shapeless, deformed, without form’ and phallos, ‘a penis, wooden club,’ referring to the shape of the spadix.” We promise not to stare too long.

We got a few bulbils (where the specifc epithet comes from) from the Missouri Botanical Garden back in the 1990s and they have since steadily spread.

Amorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New Leaves – These Are Really Just One Big LeafAmorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New Leaves – These Are Really Just One Big LeafAmorphohallus bulbifer Stems and New Leaves – These Are Really Just One Big Leaf

Pillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol Hill

Pillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol HillPillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol Hill
On my way to Terra Plata I caught a glimpse of this mural, a collaboration between Northwest School and local artist Derek Wu. A women (Marz Martinez our research reveals) rips open the gray and reveals buzzing bees. What does it all mean?

Plymouth Pillars Park is just across Boren Ave from the mural. The small park overlooks the city and contains four columns from the Plymouth Congregational Church which was demolished in 1966. Ah, progress. But at least we have the bees across the street.

Let There Be BeesPillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol Hill    Pillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol HillPillars Park, Bees Mural, Capitol Hill

Nearby Plymouth Pillars Park  (left) and Tunnel Boring Machine (right)
Plymouth Pillars Park Tunnel Boring Machine

Sedona, Center for the New Age - Mural

Sedona, Center for the New Age - Mural
We were walking on our way to Elote one hot night when we stopped to snap this photo of a mural on the side of the Center for the New Age in Sedona, Arizona The building is located on Oak Creek in the shade of huge sycamores. We have never been inside the center - though the aura pictures blipped on our skeptics’ radar. (Most of the example aura pictures we’ve seen look like a photo of people wearing colorful clown wigs.)

Yes, the appetizer at Elote called “Elote” was delicious. Elote is Spanish (Mex) for corn. The appetizer is fire roasted corn with spicy mayo, lime and Cotija cheese - was delicious. Wonder if your aura would be different after eating a bowl of it?

The Tanks Roll Across the Fremont Bridge - Mural

The Tanks Roll Across the Fremont Bridge - MuralThe Tanks Roll Across the Fremont Bridge - Mural
In the basement of the building that now is home to the Dubliner, Frame Up Studios, Pie, and Bluebird, Hotel Hotel there are other small businesses where you can get a tattoo, a haircut, a wax, and eat Russian dumplings. Most of this building’s first floor and basement used to be home to a City People’s Mercantile. There is a sort-of inner courtyard of the building that used to be where City People’s kept their plants for sale. Now it is just an undefined sort of space. But it does have this mural of what looks like - and we have labeled - tanks rolling over the Fremont Bridge.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Binomen Art - Yucca


Yucca Spelled With Blossom Parts
Yucca Spelled With Blossom Parts
This clump of yucca was featured previously in the Kähler and Yucca gloriosa ‘Variegata’. This year it bloomed in the summer, which is odd, because the plants have bloomed all times of the year except summer in the past. When they bloom in cold weather the flowers get soggy and the spike doesn’t last long. This time, the flower spikes lasted a long time and were greatly appreciated by the bees.
Of course, yucca is a member of the Agave family. Quattrocchi gives the generic name origin as:
“The vernacular name in Peru or in the Carib for manihot or cassava, misapplied to these plants, yucca for Manihot esculenta.”

The specific epithet is because this yucca can stab you so gloriously! Seriously, we are still nursing slash marks on the arms from merely trying to clean out debris that collected in the inner parts. Oh well.
The generic name is spelled out here with cut up blossoms which have a very faint smell to them. The petals and most parts of the flower are waxy to the touch.

Yucca Spelled With Blossom Parts (left) and Yucca gloriosa ‘Variegata’ Spikes (right)Yucca Spelled With Blossom Parts   Yucca gloriosa ‘Variegata’ spikes

Yucca gloriosa ‘Variegata’ Spikes (left) and Inside a Yucca Blossom (right)Yucca gloriosa ‘Variegata’ Spikes  Inside a Yucca Blossom