Back To Kenny Hill's Sculpture Garden

Posted by ginger On Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Besides my home, being with my family wherever on earth we may be, my favorite place in the whole wide world is Kenny Hill's Sculpture Garden in Chauvin, Louisiana.  Here are pics from our latest visit:

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Rather than list it here again (because I've posted our visits here before), Kenny's story is here at the Nichols  State site.  My entire set of pics from the sculpture garden is here on Flickr.
Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA

Kenny:
Kenny Hill Sculpture Garden, Chauvin LA
Kenny, wherever you are living right now, I get it.  Thank you.

Nitrate Village One

Posted by ginger On Tuesday, May 15, 2012

There are planned communities of today like those we all think of on 30A, and before that the government was putting together huge neighborhoods to support certain efforts, like this one I saw in Sheffield, Alabama with...well...cute red-roofed bungalows.

In 1918, the government built a neighborhood of 85 homes -- red tile roofs, white stucco exterior -- a school, parks, and barracks for personnel working in Nitrate Plant #1. As this was during WWI, patriotic sentiment was probably particularly high and the neighborhood was laid out in the shape of the Liberty Bell.

It all came about from a 1917 contract between the US and Airnitrates Corporation, a subsidiary of American Cyanamid, to build the largest plant in the world for the manufacture of ammonium nitrate. During construction of the plant, some workers were even housed in family tents and the workers consumed daily '7 tons of meat, 6 tons of bread, 9 tons of potatoes, 2000 dozen eggs, 1-1/2 tons of evaporated milk, and several tons of other miscellaneous groceries.' The plant was completed in eight months and eight days. (Architecture and Building, Vol 51)

Nitrate Village One, TVA, Sheffield AL

In 1922, it was reported to a Congress subcommittee of appropriations that Nitrate Village One consisted of 2600 people, and the representative asked for $2000 to pay for a teacher ($1500) plus an extra $500 for incidentals, explaining that any unspent balance would be returned to the Treasury. (Sundry Civil Appropriation Bill, 1922)

The planning was done by the firm of Mann and MacNeille of NY, who were brothers-in-law. More about them and their other work here.
Nitrate Village One, TVA, Sheffield AL

Nitrate Village One, TVA, Sheffield AL

Liberty Bell shape:

View Larger Map

Breaux Bridge, And Everything On A Hog Is Good

Posted by ginger On Monday, May 14, 2012

We took the boys to lunch at Cafe des Amis in Breaux Bridge for lunch one day -- I had the crawfish cornbread appetizer for my entree and Av had the pecan crusted catfish, and the boys snacked on some of these plus some other things.
Cafe Des Amis, Breaux Bridge LA
It wasn't as fantastic as I wanted it to be, but it was maybe a little better than Mulate's, which was originally here in Breaux Bridge but closed last year (their New Orleans location, though, is still going).  The best thing of all at Cafe des Amis was Kelly Guidry's art (above).

Before leaving town, we ran over to Poche's for some boudin balls and a couple different kinds of boudin, below -- pork and crawfish.  Nice:
Poche's, Breaux Bridge LA

Their sign outside the market:
Poche's, Breaux Bridge LA

This Week's Various

Posted by ginger On Friday, May 11, 2012

The Oxford American and NPR have collaborated on a small series called 'Southward', specifically 'The Visual South' -- part 1 is Unseen Scenes of Guantanamo, part 2 is Photography is Like Chicken, part 3 is Tourist Towns, part 4 is Getting Lost in Mississippi, part 5 is Personal Portraits.

---
The aisles at the Tuscaloosa Home Depot don't have the ordinary numbers, but go by each year (14 of them now) that Alabama has won the National Championship:
Tuscaloosa Home Depot

---
The Pentagon's Innovative Readiness Training program brought medical staff and attention to the Black Belt; they saw 12,000 people in two weeks.  From the AP:

In return for the care, the troops get the occasional donated meal or a hug from patients, plus valuable training. Their work is part of a program that sends guard members and reservists into some of America's poorest communities, where they learn to set up health clinics and other projects and deal with large numbers of people, just as they might do after a natural disaster or in a foreign county.

---
The Garden of Eden art environment in Lucas, Kansas has reopened after a renovation headed by the Kohler Foundation.

---
I've known about Roku for a while, but this week I got to know Roku and it is a fantastic little (really, little) box.  All my Netflix Instant + Amazon Prime + Pandora channels + News (like...NPR: listen to Fresh Air whenever) + specific channels not available anywhere else + tons more.  The unit is well less than $100 and there are no monthly fees.  That's it.  Thank you, Roku.  Thank you, early Mother's Day present.

---

Ginger, Instagrammed
Me!  Instagrammed.

William Edmondson

Posted by ginger On Thursday, May 10, 2012

Last fall, we went in search of William Edmondson works -- he was born in the early 1870s to former slaves ('Edmondson and Compton slaves' he said) and went on in 1937 to become the first black person to ever have a one-man show at MoMa.  He did not attend.
Mt. Ararat, Nashville TN

In a press release that year, the Museum stated:
Mr. Edmondson, a Negro of Nashville, Tennessee, has had no art training and very little education. He was a hospital orderly for years and a worker at odd jobs. Four or five years ago he became a tombstone cutter and developed an interest in sculpture, which he claims to fashion at G-d's command.


Mr. Edmondson's sculpture comes within the category loosely called "modern primitive." Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Director of The Museum of Modern Art, says of his work: "Recognition of the achievements of naive or self-taught artists is one of the discoveries of contemporary taste. Usually the naive artist works in the easier medium of painting. Edmondson, however, has chosen to work in limestone, which he attacks with extraordinary courage and directness to carve out simple, emphatic forms. The spirit of his work does not betray the inspiration which he believes to be his active guide."

There has been significant damage to the monuments at Mount Ararat; none of his stones remain here, either being stolen or donated.  I think the top of this stone below is related to some of the more plain monuments he made, but the lettering here is not his, as his letters on monuments are broad outlines.  I took pictures of a few more interesting ones overall, no matter if they were Edmondson's works or not.  Edmondson himself is buried in this cemetery, in an unmarked grave.
Mt. Ararat, Nashville TN

Edmondson has been quoted:
This here stone and all those out there in the yard come from G-d.  It's the work in Jesus speaking His mind in my mind.  I must be one of His disciples.  These here is miracles I can do.  Can't nobody do these but me.  I can't help carving.  I just does it.  It's like when you're leaving here you're going home.  Well, I know I'm going to carve.  Jesus has planted the seed of carving in me.

This is what some of Edmondson's monuments looked like.

Edmondson's 'fame' came quickly as it was only in the early '30s that he picked up his chisel and by '37 was showing at MoMA.

Mt. Ararat, Nashville TN

Mt. Ararat, Nashville TN

Cheekwood Art and Gardens in Nashville currently has the largest collection of Edmondson pieces, but when we were there in October, we were told they were out on loan to another institution.

---
This work of Edmondson's is on auction now; estimate $20-$30k.  The catalog lists it as 'critter' but I think it's one of his rabbits, showing a fair amount of environmental wear.

Gallery pieces here and here.

Parkway Bakery Po Boys

Posted by ginger On Wednesday, May 09, 2012

We took the boys for their first Parkway Bakery poboy:
Parkway Bakery, New Orleans LA

Parkway Bakery, New Orleans LA
They love poboys and gumbo anyway, but Shugie especially was *wild* about theirs.

Parkway Bakery, New Orleans LA
Around Thanksgiving, Parkway comes out with a turkey and dressing with cranberry sauce po boy.  Yum!

In York, Alabama

Posted by ginger On Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Joe Minter's Freedom Riders

Posted by ginger On Monday, May 07, 2012

One of the newest pieces Joe Minter has in his art environment is this assemblage in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Freedom Riders:

Joe Minter

Joe Minter

Joe Minter

Last year when I visited the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson, they had this display of Freedom Riders' mug shots:
Freedom Riders, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson MS

Freedom Riders, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson MS

Freedom Riders, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson MS

This Week's Various

Posted by ginger On Friday, May 04, 2012

As always, unless otherwise noted, all pics here copyright Deep Fried Kudzu. Ask me before using in any fashion. Thank you.

---
The T-P reports on best food at Jazz Fest.  Crawfish Monica of course!

---
Love these beeswax candles -- you'll see why.

---
Yessssss -- Downton Abbey paper dolls!

---
Munch's 'The Scream' sells for $119.9MM this week at Sotheby's.

---
Hot Chicken Festival, Nashville TN
(line at the 2010 Hot Chicken Festival we went to)

The new Bolton's Spicy Chicken and Fish that was open in Nashville (the O'Bolton's) has closed but the original remains.

---
Pimento Cheese from Savage's

Tupelo Honey in Asheville has a new Pimento Cheese of the Month Club -- well, actually every-other-month. A year is $199 with free shipping if it's ordered before 5/13.

---
The Commercial Appeal writes about a philosophy teacher at Rhodes College in Memphis s who iis doing a project called 'American Values' in which she asked people to send her photographs of themselves holding handwritten signs of what's important to them:
At this point, she has more than 400 portraits of people from nearly every state -- one of the rules of the project is that participants must be American or living in America -- holding up signs that read everything from "Trust" to "Freedom" to "Coffee."

 'Family' is 5x more popular than anything else. On exhibit at Marshall Arts Gallery in Memphis.

---
Last Friday, the South Alabama Writers' Symposium was giving Fannie Flagg its Harper Lee Award for Alabama’s Distinguished Writer of the Year -- and who else rolls in? That's right.

---
There's a show on NatGeo called 'Rocket City Rednecks' but seriously someone shooting a rifle today from a moving car at the Saturn V rocket in Huntsville...

---
Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens, Summerville GA

The AJC writes about the 'Resurrection of Finster's Paradise Garden' -- and Finster Fest is this weekend.  Creative Loafing chimes in too.

---
The NYT reviews “Ghost Brothers of Darkland County” in Atlanta, the Southern gothic musical by Stephen King and John Mellencamp.  "...a tense sibling rivalry between a novelist with a dark streak and a blue-jeans-wearing crooner. Frank (Lucas Kavner) and Drake McCandless (Justin Guarini) are surely meant to evoke younger versions of the famous team that created them."  The reviewer didn't absolutely hate it, but wasn't a fan, either.

---
Harold's Barbecue is staying open after all.  After being in business for decades, the outpouring of support and business after last week's story of their closing has the owners reconsidering.

---
Cornbread

Winning recipes from the National Cornbread Festival here.

---
The LA Times does Salvation Mountain: Then and Now.

---
Lonnie Holley

We lost sweet Georgine Clarke, the mother of Kentuck (and leader of so much other good) this week.

---
The American Queen is again river boating on the Mississippi after four years of being away (including a stint in a federal repo compound).

---
The James Beard Awards are in, and Hugh Atcheson won in the 'American Cooking' award for his cookbook, A New Turn in the South.

John Farrer, Gears

Posted by ginger On Thursday, May 03, 2012

One of the wonderful things about seeing my friend Wade Wharton at his reception by the Huntsville Art League for his 'Metamorphosis' show back in March was spending time with him and his family, the unexpected but simply *wonderful* treat of bumping into friends Joyce and Rand, getting together with my friend, the landscape painting artist Conor O'Brien, and then being invited by John Farrer for us all to visit his studio afterwards (last visit here).

This was a fabulous, fabulous evening.

What John's working on now for an installation in B'ham:
Mechanical Sculpture by John Farrer

Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful -- can't wait to see this when it's completed and in the space.
Mechanical Sculpture by John Farrer
I've seen the drawings and it is going to be magnificent.  More of John's projects at his site here.