Weekly notes on Southern art, architecture, food, and travel
As always, all images unless otherwise noted copyright Deep Fried Kudzu. Like to use one elsewhere? Kindly contact me here.
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Hunt Slonem’s Abstraction with Birds at the Dayton Art Institute, from a 2022 visit
The latest issue of Veranda features Hunt Slonem’s Massachusetts chalet which includes mention of his furniture by New Orleans’ Henry Siebrecht, including a Gothic Revival sofa and twin Siebrecht armchairs, the only matching pair Hunt says he’s ever seen.
I found a trade handbill of Siebrecht’s listing ~1853 that he was an upholsterer and furniture manufacturer at 41 and 43 Royal Street — that’s right there at Canal, in the stretch that was known as ‘Furniture Row’ — and he advertised pieces he had coming in from Paris along with curtains, curtain trimmings, and paper hangings (wallpaper).
At the bottom, the sheet mentioned that he stocked mosquito bars (canopies), bedding, spring mattresses, hair and moss mattresses, and carpets.
Brennan’s, from a 2015 visit
Poppy Tooker on 80 Years of Brennan’s
BTW, a Homeworthy from this week in Madison, Georgia (home of the owners of Boxwoods Gardens & Gifts in Buckhead) had big Brennan’s vibes in one of the rooms:
A visit to Parnassus Books in Nashville late last year
From Literary Hub, A Bookstore Boom in a Time of Literacy Decline
Sarah Arnold, at Parnassus Books in Nashville, offers what I find to be the most humanly persuasive explanation for why people are flooding into bookstores even as reading scores fall: loneliness. “Technology and social media promised to bring us together,” she told me, “but more often it feels like they siphon each of us into a solitary lifestyle, and it’s hurting us.” Bookstores are filling a social void. People can come to Parnassus on almost any given night for an author event or a book club meeting, or simply browse and strike up a conversation. This helps explain how the bookstore boom and the literacy crisis can coexist.
Tintypes at The Met, from a visit last year
The Long Exposure, about modern-day tintype photographers in Mississippi, at Country Roads
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