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Eggleston’s famous freezer image, a dye-transfer print, from a visit to the Ogden in 2017
At The Guardian: ‘He couldn’t be happier’: celebrating William Eggleston’s incredible photography
A new exhibition brings together new dye-transfer prints of the classically American photographer’s work
When Kodak discontinued its dye-transfer products in the 1990s, the Egglestons began buying up any stocks they could find. They also began a difficult project: deciding which of William Eggleston’s thousands of photos might enjoy a final blaze of color-saturated glory. In the end only about 50 photos could make the cut.
Thirty-one of them are included in William Eggleston: The Last Dyes, an exhibition through 7 March at the David Zwirner Gallery in New York. The show may be the last ever exhibition of photographs, by Eggleston or anyone else, produced using dye-transfer.
and at Aperture:
The Emotional Saturation of William Eggleston’s “Last Dyes”: In the 1970s, Eggleston’s pictures were called “perfectly banal.” Fifty years later, the intensity of color in his dye-transfer prints is rarified and precise.
BTW, the Black Keys’ new Peaches! album (out May 1) includes another Eggleston image.

An Edmondson eagle on view at the MFAH, from a 2015 visit
The Christie’s Outsider Art auction going on from February 11-27 has final results published; for the most part works seem to have landed in their estimate. Outliers included some Bill Traylors, a very pretty Minnie Evans work, James Castle, this William Edmondson basin — and his seated girl realized almost $230k.

Alabama Booksmith
Garden & Gun with One of Alabama’s Most Unusual Bookstores is Also one of the Best, on the Alabama Booksmith in Homewood.
“He has read all the books that he sells,” (Ann) Patchett says. “Who does that? There’s no, like, ‘Well, maybe that’s good,’ or ‘I read a good review of it.’ If it’s there, it’s because he wants to sell it. And not only does he know his inventory, he knows his customers personally, so he is truly matching up the person with the book. I mean, it’s bespoke bookselling.”
The New Yorker just posted (I did not see this in the print, maybe overlooked): The Unlikely Success of a Strange Alabama Bookstore.
Almost every single book is signed by the author, books cover-out, Blockbuster Video style. It’s certain I wouldn’t have my special Eugene Walter collection if it weren’t for the Alabama Booksmith.
If we hung out in college, on trips to Birmingham, there’s no doubt you and I visited its predecessor, the Highland Booksmith on Highland Avenue (then maybe a few minutes at Lodestar Books just to be cool). At Highland, the labels on the shelves were embroidered, a detail I thought lent the establishment and thereby me as teenage patron an air of incredible sophistication.
I’ll definitely be there for this:

from 2016; they’ve since moved
Some conversation on Tujague’s (170 years in business this year) and specifically an off-menu dish there, the chicken bonne femme with an incredible amount of garlic. Recipe in the comments here.

The Tennessee Williams home in Columbus, Mississippi, from a 2017 visit
Blanche Marvin, who was possibly inspiration for Tennessee Williams’ Blanch in Streetcar, passed away earlier this month.
Moreover, she insisted that Mr. Williams had adapted a consoling remark that Ms. Marvin had offhandedly made to him into Blanche’s indelible final line: “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.” (though her claims are doubted, if considered at all by the Williams scholarly circle)
In 2007, The Times called her “that rarest of things, a bully who is on the side of the angels.”
At Inside Hook: Fred Minnick’s New Bourbon Book Is a Personal Revelation
How a two-decade quest for a forgotten whiskey saved the spirits writer’s life
Ernest Hemingway’s Pilar Marlin flag just sold at auction for $170k.

I’m not certain which of Joe’s pieces are in this particular exhibit; this is a pic from a visit we had in January 2023
The National Center for Civil and Human Rights in Atlanta has Reclaiming History: Selections from the Tinwood Foundation on view. It includes pieces by Mary Lee Bendolph, Hawkins Bolden, Archie Byron, Thornton Dial, Sr., Lonnie Holley, Joe Light, Ronald Lockett, Joe Minter, Mensie Lee Pettway, and Mary T. Smith.

A Japanese magnolia bloom displayed at this week’s FPGC (garden club). Sending sweetest wishes for warmer, comfy weeks ahead! xoxo