Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Rockport Art Association
'via Blog this'
Donna and I walked passed this building this afternoon. It's a pretty street.
Please visit the above link to retreat into the Motif #1 of the fourties.



Pigeon Cove and vicinity: Donna and I spending the weekend on Cape Ann
Rockport in 1873- Another old hardcover I can't get through fast enough.
Donna and I are spending the weekend on Cape Ann, my not having begun any typing until the end of the
evening.



Echoes from Cape Ann : Donna and I spending the weekend in Rockport
When I have an afternoon to read a lot of poetry I may like to return to this volume. It began to rain after breakfast, which Donna and I had on Atlantic Road in Gloucester, below Good Harbor Beach, but with a view of it. It rained until we were at Front Beach and the Burial Ground in Rockport. We just finished filming her by the (indoor) pool and spa.
There is a claim that Cape Ann was not named for Queen Anne, but for Anne of Denmark. It dates from the 19th century.



Monday, September 3, 2012
Gloucester:Thatcher Road last September, Atlantic Road this year:Spectacular View with Donna
'via Blog this'



The light reflects off my laptop screen- I was thinking use my webcam to film, it so happened it was easier to use a digital still camera.



Sunday, September 2, 2012
After a year of red, I gave Donna a white rose; stayed in bed Saturday.
From: Scott Lord <scottlordnovelist@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Sep 1, 2012 at 2:48 PM
Subject: Fwd: > THIS WEEKEND ON ROCKY NECK
To: scottlordnovelist.porcelinclub@blogger.com
From: Judy Robinson-Cox <judy@robinson-cox.com>
Date: Fri, Aug 31, 2012 at 6:45 AM
Subject: > THIS WEEKEND ON ROCKY NECK
To: newsletter@rockyneckartcolony.org
Go to mail.rockyneckartcolony.org/weekend.html if you are having trouble viewing this email.
T H I S W E E K E N D O N R O C K Y N E C K ... A N D B E Y O N D |
Marie Sweeney Exhibit at Gloucester Stage Company, Aug 30 - Sept. 16FRI, August 31, Reception following the 8 pm performance
A special Art Opening reception will be held on Friday, August 31 following the 8 pm performance. Please note that viewing of all Art Exhibits are on performance days only; GSC ticket holders can begin viewing an exhibit when the theater opens one hour before curtain of each performance time. For more information, please visit the Gloucester Stage Company website at www.gloucesterstage.com or call the GSC Box Office at (978) 281-4433.
SAT, Sept 1, 11am to 3pm : Shep Abbott at White Elery House |
Sat/Sun/Mon Sept 1-3 |
Aug 31 - Sept. 3 : Mali on Rocky Neck and Through the YearsGoetemann Residency Studio, 51A Rocky Neck Ave.Reception: Saturday, Sept. 1, 3-5pmExhibition Hours |
SAT, Sept. 1, 1-5pm : Reception for Moodscapes, watercolors by Marion HallAugust 31-Sept. 13, Khan Studio and the GMG Gallery, 77 Rocky Neck Ave., Gallery 3 |
SUN, Sept. 2 12-1pm : See the Parade of Sail from Rocky NeckSUN, Sept. 2, 2-4 : Reception for Stevie Black, Rocky Neck Gallery |
http://www.rockyneckartcolony.org/
Rocky Neck Art Colony, PO Box 60, Gloucester, MA 01931
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Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Donna and I study-Brattle Street Cambridge: Henry Van Brunt-architectural essays
Greek lines and other architectural essays
Please glance at the writing of Henry Van Brunt on art, the Ideal and Aphrodite.
I just referred to Donna as Phi Beta Sexy, she majored in the philosophy of religious art. Today she liked one of the houses on Brattle belonging to the above author. Its a Houghton Mifflin and I used to collect them if printed before 1900. Actually I was looking for Elmwood, the home of James Russel Lowell from his birth untill his death, and I found a beautful yellow house on the corner of Brattle and Elmwood Ave. We had begun with the idea to visit Mount Auburn Cemetary, where Amy Lowell and Longfellow are buried (see previous blog entries), but as we have been there together before decided to return to the Longfellow House. Elmwood was also built during the time of Washington's Command in Cambridge. She wanted, after having seen it at first sight, to tour the Hooper-Lee-Nichols House, built in 1685 ( I have the date 1883 for the Brunt House, but there's a note that reads 1765 for either the Longfellow or for Elmwood, I have to double check).
We continued waling down Brattle Street and decided to tour the Longfellow House.
I signed the guestbook to the Henry Wadsworth Longefellow House and we ascended the stairs to begin the tour. And then we found out the don't allow pocket books or purses, and based on a previous agreement she and I had from other museums- it's just part of our dating- we politely declined the tour and left. Meaning it did more for us as a couple to live by our arbitrary agreement that she feels more confident with her purse, than had we actually seen the museum.
And as to whether it was Elmwood or not, I think the world of Amy Lowell the poet, and for some reason it was a beautiful garden and a nice piece of architecture- leave it to poetry untill I track it down whether the poet's house is on a corner of Brattle. A cool artist pulled into his drive way later while we were admiring the brass statue's on his front lawn, which is also poetic since it looked like a private reside and were were trying to quickly see whom the statues were of before continuing onward.


