Showing posts with label spring break. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring break. Show all posts
Thursday, April 12, 2012
It's Not Your Fault
Oh Prague, it snowed upon my arrival. I walked under the astronomical clock wondering why didn't I go to the beach like everyone else for Spring Break. But I didn't. I walked and walked, got overcharged by the mystery man at the lunch place, under-impressed a stranger, found the cozier bar for reading but then reunited with two men from my plane which lead to too much Becherovka, and for my last night, a party in my hostel as I slept.
All that, and the greyness aside, the skies cleared one afternoon. It was warm enough to explore and I discovered side streets and public art. A giant heart made of candle wax that looks like a wall you can enter from the side. I sat in cafes and drew pretty chandeliers and ate cake. I found the park that seemed to follow the sun, and ate dinner at the same wonderful vegetarian place two nights in a row.
If only my trip wasn't bookended with grey. But grey days are a good excuse to stay inside a museum, like the Museum of Communism, which, among other things featured a 30 minute video about the student protests from 1969-89, during the invasion of the Soviet Union and later, the fall of communism. My hostel was on the same square where the tanks rolled in, where a student burned himself in protest, where the police beat the crap out of peaceful protestors, where night after night thousands of people gathered calling for the resignation of their government. But that didn't stop the party where I stayed.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Go Brno!
This is a story told in reverse. Brno is the last city I visited on my one week vacation. It was going to be just the city I flew away from, but then I read a little about it and decided to stay the night. First, when you are in the Czech republic taking the train from Prague to Vienna, say, your train will probably stop here. You won't see too much of it but you will see, against the constantly grey Czech sky, a cathedral on a hill. This is the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul. The inside is impressive too, though I only saw a glimpse before realizing I was about to be crashing Good Friday services. But what is really amazing is its height on the hill.
If you are interested in architecture at all and maybe you are passing through Brno, you would like to know that they have just finished refurbishing the Villa Tugendhat. It reopened for visitor a month ago, as I read in the international New York Times I saw at school one day. I could not get a reservation, which is mandatory to go inside, though the grounds are free and open. I arrived a bit before the english tour, asked nicely, and luckily got myself a slot on the tour. It is ninety minutes and includes the boiler room so maybe that is too much for you. But for me, it was worth it to stand inside the famous, ever-photographed living room and experience what Mies van der Roh intended. When he was offered the commission, he was offered unlimited funding, so there is a wall that costs the same as building aa average 5 bedroom house. But after visiting multiple cities with palaces and having no desire to experience the opulence, the experience in this space was breathtaking. And they never tell you in an art history survey class that 2 of the giant glass windows retract into the floor. Who needs walls?
When I booked a hostel in Brno, I expected the institutional sleeping arrangement I needed. Just a place to stay on my way to the airport. But the Hostel Mitte is in a historical building downtown with high ceilings, tall bunk beds and themed rooms. I had the Austerlitz room, telling the story of a famous battle with Napoleon that occurred a few miles from where I slept. More impressive however were the floor-to-celing Napoleon themed tapestries. I sat at this little table, ate my bread and hummus and slept like a dream.
So it is grey, though I hear it is sunny sometimes, and the Czech Republic has a pretty rough history. And a language I can't even guess at. This is the list at the bar where I stopped to draw and have a beer on my way out of town. Kava means coffee, and I am pretty sure vina means wine but I stuck to vegetarian restaurants and pointing. People were very nice and I said "thank you" often, because it is the only phrase I could remember. At the chocolate shop, I didn't know how to explain that I only wanted one of each so I had to take 2 each of three truffles. Hard life.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Where to Start




Spring Break and I am spending long days in the studio trying to catch up. And I like it. Too bad I have two more weeks of classes. It's been quiet in the shop and I have been printing silk screens, zinc intaglio plates and woodcuts. And yes, I have started next months post card. So first, let's see the most recent postcard, a map themed card. I got my first response from Andy when I got home from school one day. I've been getting a fistful of responses every time I check the mail. Thanks everyone! It really makes my day.
Also on the good list: trips to the garden. I picked these lovely purple string beans yesterday and realized they looked so pretty with my shirt. The artichoke plant is doing overtime, this photo only shows three of six edibles growing the other day before I chopped one off and gave it to Sarah for being a great studio-friend.
Lastly, here is a detail of a large silkscreen and photo litho image I have been working on. I used to live in this house before the sculpture students turned it into art. My turn.
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