Friday, April 14, 2023

Maya Lin's 'One Life' closes Sunday


Maya Lin, age about 4, who said later that "play," despite advice from a professor, has always been an important part of her life and work. From a photograph at the National Portrait Gallery exhibition.


Maya Lin  (b. 1959) was only 21 years old and an undergraduate student when her submission for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial  was chosen as the winning design from approximately 1,420 entries.

When the winner was announced, her design met considerable opposition and resistance. Former U.S. Senator James Webb of Virginia, himself a Vietnam veteran, called it "a nihilistic slab of stone"; President Ronald Reagan's secretary of the interior delayed issuing a building permit. 

Since its dedication in 1982, the memorial has become "something of a shrine," according to the founder, Jan Scruggs. 

The U.S. Department of Defense says more than five million people visit the memorial annually, making it the most popular monument on the National Mall ...  and the first monument there to be designed by a woman.

On two pieces of black granite, the names of 58,320 persons (the number is debatable) who are missing in action or died as a result of the Vietnam War are carved in chronological order of their deaths.

Closing Sunday at the National Portrait Gallery is a short celebration of Ms. Lin's life in an excellent exhibition, One Life:  Maya Lin.  

In 2016 President Barack Obama awarded Maya Lin the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the U.S./by Chip Somodevilla (b. 1972)
In the Maya Lin gallery at the National Portrait Gallery/by Patricia Leslie
In the Maya Lin gallery at the National Portrait Gallery/by Patricia Leslie

Her life's story is shown in chronological order with family photos, personal items, three dimensional models, designs and pictures of other buildings she has accomplished since the memorial thrust her into the world's limelight which has never waned.

Dorothy Moss, the museum’s curator of painting and sculpture, curated the show.

Maya Lin's Langston Hughes Library in Clinton, Tennessee, from a photograph by Timothy Hursley (b. 1955), National Portrait Gallery
Maya Lin's Riggio-Lynch Interfaith Chapel, Clinton, Tennessee, from a photograph by Timothy Hursley (b. 1955), National Portrait Gallery
The introduction to Maya Lin at the National Portrait Gallery/by Patricia Leslie
The introduction to Maya Lin at the National Portrait Gallery/by Patricia Leslie


When Ms. Lin entered college, she wanted to be a zoologist. Part of her schooling took her to Denmark where she learned memorials could become community spaces. 

As a child she spent hours playing with her brother in the woods behind the family home in Ohio, nature's surroundings which continue to play a criticial role in her life and work as an environmentalist and climate change soldier.

This is the museum’s first One Life exhibition dedicated to an Asian American.

For photos from the memorial on Memorial Day 2014, go here. For a visit Ms. Lin made to the former Corcoran Gallery in 2009, go here.


What:  One Life:  Maya Lin

When: Closing April 16, 2023. The National Portrait Gallery is open daily from 11:30 a.m - 7 p.m. 

Where: Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, 8th and F streets, N. W., Washington, D.C. 20001

Admission: No fee

For more information: 202-633-8300 or visit the website

Closest Metro station: Gallery Place-Chinatown or walk 10 minutes from Metro Center

patricialesli@gmail.com

Sunday, April 9, 2023

Easter at the Washington National Cathedral

 

Easter Day at the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023.  Repairs continue at the Cathedral damaged by the 2011 earthquake. (See tower above.) Some $14 million still need to be raised to meet the total $38 million cost of restoration/By Patricia Leslie

Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie


Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

The War Memorial Chapel on Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023 in /By Patricia Leslie

Easter Day at the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023 in the War Memorial Chapel. British artist Steven Barry Sykes (1914-1999) sculpted the head of Jesus surrounded by a halo which hangs above the altar. British women, including the Queen Mother (1900-2002), mother of Queen Elizabeth (1926-2022), made the kneeling pads in the chapel in commemoration of sacrifices made by U.S. Armed Forces during World War II/By Patricia Leslie

A banner of Armed Forces in the War Memorial Chapel on Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

Detail of the 9 x 12 foot Tree of Life embroidery which hangs at the left of the altar in the War Memorial Chapter with seals of all 50 states. Some of the seals (Tennessee's, above) appear to be unfinished which matches Tennessee's unfinished chapter in granting justice for all its citizens. Pictured Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

The entrance to the Children's Chapel on Easter Day, the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

The altar in the Children's Chapel, Easter Day, the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

Flowers on the altar at the Children's Chapel, Easter Day, the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

The baptismal font in the Children's Chapel, Easter Day, the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

At the altar in the Children's Chapel, Easter Day, the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

A kneeling cushion at the altar in the Children's Chapel, Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie


The conclusion of Choral Evensong, Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

The conclusion of Choral Evensong, Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

A tower undergoing repair due to the 2011 earthquake, Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie
A tower undergoing repair due to the 2011 earthquake, Easter Day, Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

Easter Day at the Washington National Cathedral, April 9, 2023/By Patricia Leslie

patricialesli@gmail.com






























Saturday, April 8, 2023

See Hillwood's Russian glories and gardens

The entrance to Determined Women at the dacha at Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens/by Patricia Leslie


The Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens is a respite of soothing and enchanting glorious springtime colors where guests may wander lush grounds, and walk green pathways to admire endless flower gardens.

A sense of peace and serenity prevails; time is unhurried.

One pathway leads to a small Russian dacha*, built about 1969 and the setting of an exhibition of 100 pieces from the collection of Marjorie Merriweather Post (1887-1973) who lived and died at Hillwood and made it what it is today: luxurious galleries and a museum of incredible works of art.

The Grand Duchesses, the four daughters of Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia, Olga, Tatiana, Marie and Anastasia, 1916, two years before they were murdered.

 Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, 1906, whose daughters are pictured above.


Left:  Star of the Order of Saint Anna, 19th cent. St. Petersburg, silver, diamonds and enamel. Translated from the front:  To those who love justice, piety, and faith. In the center is the Russian imperial eagle.

Right:  Badge of the Order of Saint Anna, 19th cent. Russia, gold, diamonds, enamel/by Patricia Leslie


Ms. Post's inheritance as the only child of her parents no doubt made possible her philanthropic efforts and marshaled her business smarts (she founded General Foods with her second husband**).

At age 27 she was the richest woman in the U.S.

Her father had founded the Post cereal company.

Georgii Musikiiskii (miniaturist), after Johann Gottfried Tannauer, Abraham Heydrich (watchmaker), 1725, watch with miniature portrait of Catherine I, Peter the Great's second wife, gold, silver, diamonds, enamel, copper, St. Petersburg. The ceiling lights at the exhibition are reflected on the watch/by Patricia Leslie

Back of the watch above/By Patricia Leslie


Her admiration of influential women and their designs, works, and artistry form the basis of the exhibition, Determined Women: Collectors, Artists, and Designers at Hillwood which begins in the 1700s and continues to present day. (A curator has added recent pieces about, for example, Stacey Abrams.)

For any cultural and history Russophile like me, the dacha brimming with priceless, historical pieces is another magnificent "find" in Washington, D.C.
After Elisabeth Louise Vigee-Lebrun, Portrait of Marie Antoinette and Children, after 1787, at Versailles with the jewel cabinet of Marie Antoinette on the right.
Christina Sanders Robinson (1796-1854), Portrait of Nicholas I, 1840, Russia. His grandmother was Catherine the Great.
Two evening dresses of Ms. Post, the one on the left by Thum (1865-1954), 1920-1925, and the one on the right, by Hattie Carnegie (1886-1956), 1935-1940/by Patricia Leslie
Embroidery by Aunte Mollie Post, Marjorie Merriweather Post's baby bonnet, n.d./by Patricia Leslie

Viktor Mikhailovich Vasnetsov, designer, altar cloth, c. 1899, Russia/
by Patricia Leslie
 
 Needlework by Caroline Lathrop Post, 1854/by Patricia Leslie

Joseph E. Davies was Ms. Post's third husband who took her to Moscow when he was U.S. ambassador to Russia, 1937-1938. Those years coincided with the 20th anniversary of the Russian Revolution and Joseph Stalin's sale of Russian imperial and pre-revolutionary works, money he needed for his industrial agenda.

Carpe diem!

And Ms. Post did! Now, outside of Russia, her Russian collection is considered the best in the world. (What would Mr. Putin exchange for it? Or, some of it?)

Many more Russian artifacts are on display in the mansion.

From left: Maid of Honor Cypher Pin, 1796-1801.
 The cypher states for Empress Maria Feodorovna, wife of Emperor Paul I.  These pins were worn on the left side of the breast by Maids of Honor to the Empress. Gold, diamonds, Russia.

Center: Another Maid of Honor Cypher Pin, 1907. Attributed to the firm of Karl Karlovich Hahn.  The pin consists of the ciphers in Russian letters of the last two Empresses, Maria Feodorovna and Alexandra Feodorovna. It was given in 1907 to Irene Rimsky-Korsakoff (1883-1972) (Madame Mishtowt of D.C.). The ciphers are topped by the imperial cleft crown of Russia, all set in diamonds with gold and silver, St. Petersburg

Right: Attributed to Carl C. Blank, Lady of Honor Insignia with miniature portraits of Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, 1912. Gold, diamonds, silver, silver gilt, glass, St. Petersburg/by Patricia Leslie

Three busts of Empress Catherine II. 

From left, by Felix Chopin (1813-1892), made in Russia, c. 1867. 

In the center is a marble by an unknown sculptor, made in Russia, after 1771. 

On the right, by August Spiess, designer (1817-1904), the Imperial Porcelain Factory, St. Petersburg, after 1872 after a model by Jacques-Dominique Rachette (1744-1809) based on a marble original by Fedot Ivanovich Shubin (1740-1805)/by Patricia Leslie

Mather Brown (1761-1831), King Louis XVI Saying Farewell to his Family, 1793, U.S.A.



A pathway at Hillwood/by Patricia Leslie



At Hillwood/by Patricia Leslie

Determined Women at Hillwood/by Patricia Leslie



Despite its small size, the exhibition packs two rooms with photographs, paintings, sculpture, jewelry, embroidery and more, a "must see" for Russian cultural aficionados.

But you don't have to love Russian history, culture, and people to want to come since it's more than all things Russian. Artists and designers from other nations, especially France, are represented, along  with dress designers of her own whom Ms. Post admired.  And, I am guessing it was a relative who made Ms. Post's baby bonnet.

Pictures, descriptions and locations of all the objects in the exhibition may be found here

After she and Mr. Davies divorced in 1955, Ms. Post established Hillwood where she is buried on the grounds. (She reclaimed her maiden name after her fourth and last marriage.)

Of note: Ms. Post built and owned Mar-A-Lago in Florida, another of her "notable" five homes before Donald Trump, the present owner, bought it in 1985 for about $10 million. She had willed it to the National Park Service which deemed it too expensive to maintain. Forbes places the current value around $160 million.

The Hillwood exhibition accompanies a new publication, The Houses and Collections of Marjorie Merriweather Post ($60, hardcover; $30, paperback).

*A dacha is a small Russian country house or villa. In 2017, approximately 60 million Russians or more than 40 percent of the population of 145 million, were estimated to own one.

**Ms. Post's husbands were, in order:

Edward Bennett Close (married 1905; divorced 1919)

Edward Francis Hutton (m. 1920; d. 1935)

Joseph E. Davies (m. 1935; d. 1955)

Herbert A. May (m. 1958; d. 1964)

What: Determined Women: Collectors, Artists, and Designers at Hillwood

When: Now through Sunday, June 18, 2023, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Closed Mondays.

Where: Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens, 4155 Linnean Avenue, NW, Washington, D.C. 20008

Admission: Suggested donations are $18 (adults), $15 (seniors), $10 (college students), $5 (child, ages 6 -18) and free for members and those under age 6. $3 discounts are available for adults and seniors who make reservations online for weekdays, and $1 off, for weekends. For busy times (Mother's Day, anyone?), reservations are highly recommended.

Directions via bus, rail, car

Parking: Free and on-site

For more information: 202-686-5807

CafƩ onsite


patricialesli@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 29, 2023

'Vera Stark' stars in Manassas

Olivia Royster is Vera Stark and Adrian Alleyne has dual roles in By the Way, Meet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


Who is Vera Stark?  

She's the star of a play with her name, By the Way, Meet Vera Stark, the character whom Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage based loosely on the life of Theresa Harris (1906-1985), a black actor and singer.

Olivia Royster, left, is Vera Stark and Deb Hansen is Gloria in By the Way, Meet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


What I thought was going to be a drama at Rooftop Productions in Manassas turned out to be not so much a drama as a comedrama (with emphasis on the comedy), and a serious message more broadly understood in Act II.

The story revolves around a decades' long relationship between an aging movie star, Gloria (Deb Hansen), a white woman, and her maid, Vera (Olivia Royster), a black woman.

Olivia Royster is Vera Stark, left, and Terresita Edwards is Lottie in By the WayMeet Vera Stark at Rooftop Productions in Manassas/Photo by Kimberly Kemp


In Act II Vera magically transforms from a maid (Act I) into a vibrant star, confident in her style and luxuriating in newfound public appeal and celebrity.  

Along the way, the usual Hollywood suspects enter and claim the spotlight.

Late in life Vera and Gloria meet up and exchange places in a surprise appearance on a television show, 

Who do you think gets her comeuppance? 

That Vera is the same person in both acts is hard to grasp since the characters are extremely opposite, but Ms. Royster's metamorphosis convinces us. 

For community theatre the acting is outrageously terrific, several standout performances which almost outshine the star's.

Elijah Moshe Begab's histrionics as "Maximilian Van Oster," the director of an upcoming movie, are hysterical as he prances and dances, the target of several wannabe actors.  

(Just wait until you see him in Act II as a sideshow where his eyes seem to diverge as he stares up at the ceiling and throws his head back for a big puff from a cigarette propped straight up in his mouth and perpendicular to the floor.)

And, there is Lottie (Terresita Edwards) who's got a whole lottie shakin' goin' on with a lotta voice to match.  This girl belongs on the big stage!  

Lottie is Vera's roommate who knows savvy, especially when it comes to unsavory acquaintances.

Ms. Hansen superbly displays her snobbery and condescension as Gloria, the movie star, unwilling to recognize the talents of others but anxious about her competitors.

Karina Kasara Jimenez as the "fake" Brazilian is a hoot. She lashes out in more ways than one. 

Costumer Laura Mills's swinging 1970s men's suit for Steve Glenn as TV show host, Brad Donovan, with its light blue color and wide lapels fits right in with the comedy. In Act I, Mr. Glenn is the movie's studio head, Frederick Slasvick (rhymes with slapstick), another great rendition of an exaggerated stereotype.

Kudos to the remainder of the cast:  Adrian Alleyn (Curtis Lewis, from Mar. 31 - Apr. 2),  Suzette Farnun, Tia Milton, and Jay Tilley.

Melissa Jo York-Tilley's set design is realistic, from the oak furniture to the paintings on the walls.  (She's also assistant director, hair and makeup designer, and more!)

With a few prop changes by Lauren Hatmaker, scene transitions go smoothly with almost no interruption in the flow of the story. 

Combine this Women's History Month with last month's Black History Month, and Vera Stark makes a great take on both. 

Rooftop's stacked seating makes enjoyment of the production more personable. The theatre is located in the city's historic district, in the Artfactory which reminds me of Alexandria's Torpedo Factory.

But this is the former home of the Hopkins Candy Factory which began operations in 1908. 

Around 1916, it became a feed and flour mill store and by the 1980s, it was a tire warehouse.  

Merchants Tire gave the building to the city of Manassas in 1998 where its conversion as an art center was spearheaded by Carol Merchant Kirby.

Wikipedia quote Ms. Harris:

 I never had the chance to rise above the role of maid in Hollywood movies. My color was against me anyway you looked at it. The fact that I was not "hot" stamped me either as uppity or relegated me to the eternal role of stooge or servant. [...] My ambition is to be an actress. Hollywood had no parts for me.

In Vera Stark, Ms. Harris blossoms, producing ample boasting opportunities for director AnuRa Harrison.

Other members of the production staff are Kimberly Kemp, producer; Erin Decaprio, assistant stage manager; Jimmy Conroy, technicals; Kurt Gustafson and Rebecca Nicoletti, lighting;  Matthew Scarborough, Adriane Harrison, and Pam Mahone, sound; Ivy Elizabeth, dialects;  and Emily Dunn, videographer.  


When:  7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday nights, Mar. 31 - April 1, 2023 with a matinee at 2 p.m., Sunday, April 2, 2023.

Tickets:  $28.19 which includes fees for students and seniors, and $33.52 with fees, adults

Duration:  About 2.5 hrs. with one intermission

Audience:  For mature teens on up

Language:  X 

Where: The Artfactory, 9419 Battle St., Manassas, VA 20110 

For more information:  703-330-2787

patricialesli@gmail.com

Friday, March 24, 2023

Dr. Fauci was at St. John's, Lafayette Square


The Rev. Robert W. Fisher, right, interviews Dr. Anthony Fauci at St. John's Church, Mar. 19, 2023/By Patricia Leslie


The Reverend Robert W. Fisher called it a “fireside chat,” and that’s what it was when Dr. Anthony Fauci visited the Adult Forum at St. John’s Church, Lafayette Square to talk about his life and answer a few questions.

Dr. Fauci grew up in a mixed Italian, Puerto Rican, Jewish, African-American, Catholic Brooklyn neighborhood where his family’s mantra was to give back to the community and perform public service, a mission which has influenced him throughout life. 

It was a sense of "service for others and not for financial gain," Dr. Fauci said.

Neighbors, friends, and family members took care of each other, amidst a great sense of community, Dr. Fauci said.

Church vestry member Wendy J. Fibison introduced him at St. John's as our "our national treasure," similar to "hero" which candidate George H.W. Bush called him during a 1988 presidential debate.  

Appearing very much at ease before a friendly crowd of about 150, Dr. Fauci displays a “great bedside manner,“
Rev. Fisher said.

Beginning with Ronald Reagan, Dr. Fauci has served seven U.S. presidents as medical advisor, all good relationships, "with the exception of one," he said to audience laughter. No names were mentioned.

Before he visited the White House in his official role the first time, a mentor cautioned Dr. Fauci that the White House was a seductive place where invitations to return were always desirable, and sharing bad news was not something you wanted to present to the leader, but it was a requirement of the job and he did it, offering "inconvenient truths" when necessary.

Dr. Fauci said the many unknowns about Covid-19 produced the evolving treatments to fight the virus. 

Denying there was any "flip-flop," and terming the pandemic as a "gaslight," Dr. Fauci said it was "a rapidly evolving situation" and "we didn’t know that Covid was spread by breathing by persons without symptoms!" 

He likened fighting over Covid treatment to "the Army fighting with the Navy in a war."

"We had a common enemy, but we fought each other," he said.

He guaranteed another pandemic will come, perhaps not in the lifetimes of many present, but "it is going to happen again. We must use the lessons we’ve learned." 

(Before Covid, the last pandemic was the 1918 flu which killed about 50 million persons worldwide.)

Dr. Fauci said there is undisputed truth that persons who are vaccinated and boostered are better protected against Covid. "It's a slam dunk."

Those who disagree about vaccines should not be made to feel "stupid and dumb," but "we are evolving into an anti-vaccine era“ and taking “a gigantic step backwards."

As for "gain of function, generally when someone talks about it, they don’t know what they’re talking about.“

Many envy Dr. Fauci's good health at age 82 which he attributed to a combination of physical, emotional and spiritual well-being, noting that being perfectly balanced in all areas is unlikely, but you can try.

He's always been active physically, “running marathons, and half marathons." Plus, it's important to have a close association with someone to help you decompress, he said, acknowledging his wife sitting nearby. 

“If I had to do it alone, that would be very difficult," he said.

When a church member asked him about his book, Dr. Fauci said he has not written one, and although he's officially "retired," he's not retired because he forgot about retirement and scheduled events for three months out from retirement.

He advises his medical students to “expect the unexpected,“ the way his life has gone.

A valuable lesson he's learned in Washington, D.C., he said to laughter, is to be "very nice to everybody in Washington, D.C."

patricialesli@gmail.com