Retreating

Altered Fluid members (thanks to David and Robert for the photo)

A week ago I returned from my most recent trip to Gettysburg.  This time I went with my writing group on our yearly Altered Fluid writing retreat.  We rented two amazing houses approximately six miles east south-east of the battlefield.

I found myself making multiple trips to the battlefield for my own research, and every day I’d take a group of writers out and give them my own version of a tour of the battlefield.  No one dozed off on me, so I’ll consider that a success.

This is the first time I’ve visited Gettysburg while writing about the battle. It is an amazing but humbling experience to spend an evening reading and researching about men of the 19th Indiana Regiment, and then walk the National Cemetery the next day and see the names of some of those very same men etched in the stones that fan out along the ground.

Overall, I didn’t get as much writing done over our five days as I would have liked, but it was still a great time, both because of the location and the company.

Iron Brigade monument in Herbst/McPhearson woods

envelopeWith all of the talk of change being passed around in D.C., I would like to suggest a new policy:

For the foreseeable future all 401K statements need to be mailed in red envelopes. That way I know to pull it out of the mailbox and insert it directly into the paper shredder.

Wow, I really didn’t need to see that statement!

Museum Exhibit

img_2250

Everyone knows that art is subjective. In the scale modeling world that has never been truer. Discussions as to whether building models is to be considered “art” or merely kit-assembly are as old as the hobby itself. Add into these discussions the variables of what materials were used, how much of the piece was scratch built by the modeler, the skill apparent in the final product, and one can see how this discussion can end in no single satisfactory answer.

But, perhaps, a fitting answer to the question can be found if the said models end up in a museum. This past weekend I was fortunate enough to attend the opening of the latest exhibit at the Belskie Museum of Art & Science, in Closter, NJ, and see two of my pieces on public display (the Mobile Bay and Monitor dioramas). The exhibit is “The Best of the Belskie Museum from 2001-2008”, showcasing the most popular exhibits from the time frame. Approximately two years ago my friend Gary Kingzett orchestrated a ship model exhibit that went over really well. He approached me to donate models for this exhibit.

Along with two dozen or so ship models they also have paintings, photographs, soft materials and sculpture. So, while I’m still not convinced my models are to be considered art, it’s gratifying to see them displayed amidst so much of it. A highly recommended exhibit in a small but very cool museum.

I love the smell of paint thinner in the morning…

staplers.jpg It smells like… staplers!

With the Chanel gig completed, I’m looking to finish up a lot of other projects. One is this group of four red Swinglines. One is spoke for as a Christmas gift, but I figured it best to get them all done at the same time. No sense in opening up a window to vent the airbrush booth in this frigid weather for just one piece.

On this date in Gettysburg

 “Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that ‘all men are created equal.

Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived, and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle field of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of it, as a final resting place for those who died here, that the nation might live. This we may, in all propriety do. But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate, we can not consecrate, we can not hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have hallowed it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here; while it can never forget what they did here.

It is rather for us, the living, we here be dedicated to the great task remaining before us, that, from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they here, gave the last full measure of devotion, that we here highly resolve these dead shall not have died in vain; that the nation, shall have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people by the people for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, “Nicolay Copy”, one of five surviving hand-written copies of the Address, and the one Lincoln read from at the dedication.

Chanel Mobile Art

I have been working at the Chanel Mobile Art project in Central Park.  The event has opened to the public and runs through November 9th.  The exhibit houses approximately 10 art installations, including painting, photography, film, and sculpture.  Each visitor gets a personal tour,  guided by an MP3 player (which thankfully is NOT an iPod!) and makes for a unique experience.  As I heard a visitor remark yesterday, “Say what you will about liking the art or not, but you’ll never experience anything like that again!”

Writing Anywhere

mall.jpg My current job has me working night hours in Central Park.  I’ve got into the habit of showing up for work early and sitting in the Mall to do my daily writing.  For non-New Yorkers, the mall is best explained as “the filming location for EVERY movie scene of a couple walking during the fall in NYC”.  Lots of foot traffic, but it isn’t distracting, and you can’t beat the scenery.  Being outside has also proved that not having internet access while I write is actually a good thing.

Pizza in Central Park

Did someone say pizza?The Chanel project continues in Central Park.  I’m finally, after two weeks, into the groove of the 6 p.m. to 2 a.m. schedule, enough so that I can get some things done during the day and get back to writing.  I guess the two week acclimation period is just another indicator that I’m not in my early twenties anymore (when I used to work the night shift aboard ship with no problem).

Here’s some information: The raccoons in Central Park go nuts over pizza.  We see them every evening, stealing cookies from the catering table and generally being nosey.  On Saturday night, though, we had pizza and they went nuts.  Literally under foot, four of them at a time working together to get to the pizza boxes, multi-pronged approaches from opposite sides of the tent.  Quite funny.

Oh yeah, and the building continues to go up. It looks like the cross between a UFO and a conch shell.

The skeleton structure2.jpg pizza2.jpg

USS Intrepid Underway

This past Thursday, October 2nd, the floating museum USS Intrepid returned to her west side Manhattan berth, after a yard period and exile to Staten Island.  Intrepid was launched in 1943 and served through WWII and Vietnam.  She doesn’t look a lot like she did back in 1943 anymore, due to upgrades and refits, but she’s still an impressive ship.

The tow was right at mid-day, and there were a surprising number of spectators on the 14th street pier here in Hoboken.  I say surprising because I only found out about the move the day before, and honestly a big gray boat moving along the Hudson isn’t that odd of an occurrence.  I met some very nice people, and some tourists from Boston shared their picnic lunch with me.

It’s great to see Intrepid sporting a new coat of paint.