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Showing posts with label the hub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the hub. Show all posts

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Expose Yourself to Art




For our last big trip of Spring Break, the family headed out of the Burrow and went to Los Angeles so we could take in the Renoir and American Stories exhibits at LACMA. After the amazingly long drive (traffic was well, you know), we arrived and prepared to meet the Masters, as it were. The kids were really good, but they got a bit restless after seeing that there were only rooms of paintings in our first exhibit. But who can really blame them? After seeing Copley's Watson and the Shark there is little that can be that exciting! The hub and I would have loved to meander slowly and see the brilliant way the museum set out the exhibit, but we understood that little ones (even little 11-year-olds) need to experience art at their own pace and develop an appreciation. Also, they were hungry. What's a mom to do? Feed 'em.

So we lunched and found the sculpture garden where everyone perked up, and pictures were taken and art was squealed at. Gavin, especially, wanted his picture taken with every sculpture, which wound up being funny and a tad annoying. We also walked around the La Brea Tar Pits, which is right next door. This was both interesting and smelly, and the kids were fascinated and saddened by the poor ancient animals' fates.

We completed our tour with a journey through the Renoir exhibit, which was absolutely wonderful. Renoir's paintings (yes, lots more paintings) are incredible, and it was a bit humbling to see these great works that we may never have the chance to see again (a fact I kept reminding the kids about). All was great until the room full of nudes, which brought all kinds of reactions.

Mine: "Aw crap. This could be bad."
The Hub: Much study and gazing is needed in this section.
Grace: "Mom, don't you find this a bit disturbing?"
Sean: "Mom . . . ." (I cut him off before he could even ask in his much-too-loud-for-indoors-voice and explained about nudes and artists and drawing the human form, etc. which might have been more information than he needed, but he seemed content after my explanation.)
Gavin: Let's just say, the Maillol sculpture Action in Chains truly touched him -- or was it the other way around? My son just could not keep himself from poking the belly button of this nude female form. It could have been so much worse, I know (think "Tune In Tokyo"), but I was still mortified, and we rushed from the room of nudes into, well, another room of nudes. Oh, that Renoir . . .

After contemplating a painting titled Large Bather and realizing that the large bather Renoir painted was indeed smaller than myself, we marched out in disgust (okay, that was just me) and up to the third floor where there is a nice permanent Warhol exhibit. Along with the other crazy pop art and modern sculptures, the Warhols were a huge hit with the kids. Add to that the fact that all fingers and other body parts stayed away from the tempting art and you can say that this was the kids' and our favorite place. Gavin and Sean even tried to mimic the dance steps featured in one of Warhol's paintings, which was really cute.

It was a wonderful day and a good chance to talk about the art and the artists the boys and I have studied these past few months. It was gratifying to hear them discuss Homer and Matisse and recognize a Cassatt painting from one of their books. We even had a cute moment at the end where we all sat in chairs and looked at a series of prints by an unknown-to-us artist. I asked each child which painting was his/her favorite and why. The answers varied, and the reasons covered everything from deep thought to surface impressions, but that was okay. I assured them that all their answers were correct because with art all things are possible and nothing is ever wrong.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

If only there were pictures . . .

I am without a camera. My latest one bailed on me last Sunday night. This is the second camera to die on me in the past six months. So, needless to say my postings will be bereft of visual confirmations until I can purchase a new camera. And this was the week to have a camera on hand. Some things that will not be shot for posterity (that really is a leading sentence . . . ):

1. My boys fully engulfed in their maps of the San Diego Wild Animal Park and not watching the path, other people, their own feet, and so forth.
2. The tiniest elephant in the world -- seriously, I thought it was a toy. With the proper zoom lens, this would have been the cutest picture EVER! Baby elephant, born on Valentine's Day, walking with his mom at the Wild Animal Park. I could just cry.
3. My boys cuddling their stuffed lion cub (Sean) and meerkat (Gavin) as we exited the park. Sean named his "Cuddles," and Gavin named his "Aurora." (Gavin always names his stuffed animals after girls. Not sure why. A little afraid to ask. )
4. My daughter and the hub getting ready for their first snowboarding experience! Gloves, hats, bibs, snow jackets, boots -- the works! They looked fabulous and so excited.
5. My daughter and the hub lying prone on the couch after their first snowboarding trip, still happy but exhausted.
6. My daughter and the hub limping and groaning the day after their first snowboarding trip, not quite as happy but talking about going again.
7. Crane Fly Land -- Lately, our home has been swarming with these prehistoric bugs. They are loud and seem drunk because they cannot fly straight at all. There are so many of them on the wall; they look like art.
8. Henry eating the crane flies that the hub swats. (Actually that would be a pretty gross picture, so I'm kinda glad I didn't pursue that one.)
9. Grace's open house. This will be her last year at this school, and I have no picture of her classroom or teacher or desk, etc. Will be stalking later.
10. Henry grabbing the ShamWow and running all over the backyard while we're trying to dye eggs. That dog is fast! Would have been much easier to get a new towel, but I was invested at that point. Grace finally succeeded after employing bribing and trickery. Good girl.
11. Mosher Dance Party time -- There's something about The Black Eyed Peas . . .
12. Our backyard and how nice it looks when Jose has been here.
13. Kellen, our sweet little niece, running after Henry in the backyard saying, "Me too! Me too!" because it's fun to run around like the crazy dog.
14. Sean playing (and totally obsessed) with Uncle Mike's iPhone.
15. The cool Easter baskets and presents the Easter Bunny brought. That Easter Bunny is pretty clever. . . .

Happy Easter to all. Celebrate life and redemption and freedom. May your day be joyful and your camera at the ready . . .