Mood: Monday

Yesterday marked the last day of Game & Puzzle Week. One thing we haven’t done in quite a while is play cards on holidays. It’s hard to get everyone together with enough time to play, and there are other things that make it challenging. Plus we usually just enjoy talking and catching up, since health issues and concerns keep us apart a lot.


Apparently, even the world’s earliest civilizations created games to play. I found this public domain photo of a Pompeiian mural that shows “an innkeeper throwing two brawling backgammon competitors out of his establishment.”

Some things never change. As Lynne and I well know, backgammon can definitely be a mood! Happy birthday to you, Lynne, and may you make lots more game memories to laugh about.

Mood: Monday


Rosalynn Carter
August 1927–November 2023

Robert Templeton, Iowa and Connecticut, USA
pastels, 1977
photo ©The National Gallery

The late Mrs. Carter lived a full and interesting life, and she had more influence and impact than some people may realize. I’ll always see her as a model of dignity, strength, and compassion. She was a true “steel magnolia,” and I love that her Secret Service tag was “Dancer.”

I’ve always had interest in the First Ladies of the United States. The photo below was taken by Barbara Kinney in 1994, shortly before First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died. It’s amazing to recall this many First Ladies were so alive and vibrant in the same time period.


First Ladies Nancy Reagan, Ladybird Johnson, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Rosalynn Carter, Betty Ford, and Barbara Bush.

Mood: Monday

Name that mood!

Deadline
Lucia Larner, Chicago, USA
Gouache on board, circa 1950s
illustration and text below ©Swann Auction Galleries

Larner was the only female artist at Stephens, Biondi, & Decicco, Chicago’s premier commercial art studio in the 1950s. For the city at the center of modern American consumerism, her background as a fashion artist set her visual style apart from her colleagues and she was one of the most in-demand artists for the agency. Lucia’s most iconic contribution to the commercial art world was the 1956 redesign of the Morton Salt girl.

Mood: Monday

I previously published a photo of an oil painting on canvas, titled Allées de peupliers à Moret-sur-Loing, painted in 1888 by French artist Alfred Sisley.

Alfred Sisley was born on this date, October 30, in Paris, France, in 1839.

Interesting fact from Wikipedia: This painting was rediscovered in a private house in Kölblöd, Bavaria, Germany, in 1949 after being bought on the black market or seized by Hermann Brandl. It was returned to France on 3 June that year and assigned to the Louvre two years later by the Office des Biens et Intérêts Privés.

It was then stolen from the Louvre in 1978 but recovered the following year, before being stolen again in 2007 from the store of the Musée des beaux-arts de Nice, then recovered again in 2008. It is now in the Musée d’Orsay in Paris. (ed note: We hope!)

Mood: Monday

I previously published a photo of an art print on wood, date unknown, by artist Rebecca Puig, and titled Choose Peace.

Featured quotes on this art print include:

Make love not war
All we are saying is give peace a chance. – John Lennon
What can you do to promote world peace? Go home and love your family. – Mother Teresa
Teach Peace
If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other. – Mother Teresa
Happiness is the new rich. Inner peace is the new success. Health is the new wealth. Kindness is the new cool.
Peace begins with a smile.
Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with me.
Smile, breathe, & go slowly. – Thich Nhat Hanh
Shalom
Imagine all the people living life in peace. – Lennon
Breathe out peace.
If there is to be peace in the world, there must be peace in the nations. If there is to be peace in the nations, there must be peace in the cities. If there is to be peace in the cities, there must be peace between neighbors. If there is to be peace between neighbors, there must be peace in the home. If there is to be peace in the home, there must be peace in the heart. –Lao-tse
Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair.
Peace is our gift to each other.
People for peace
Peace is always beautiful. – Walt Whitman
Come Together
Each moment is a chance for us to make peace with the world. – Thich Nhat Hanh
Sky above earth, below peace within
The planet does not need more successful people. The planet desperately needs more peacemakers, healers, restorers, storytellers, and lovers of all kinds. – Dalai Lama
Paz
May you be well. May you be happy. May you be peaceful. May you be loved.
Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. – Ralph Waldo Emerson
There is no path to peace. Peace is the path. – Gandhi

Mood: Monday

Previously posted here was a photo of the lithograph Honeymoon, 1969, by John Lennon.

Today is the anniversary of John Lennon’s birth in 1940.

Last week sometime, I was looking at a photo of Lennon and Yoko Ono on Instagram, and clicked on the comments to see if they were as usual. Yes, they were, falling generally into these categories: his time with the Beatles, the Beatles breakup and who was to blame, discussion of his music pro and con, the tendency to put him on or knock him off a pedestal, and judgments of his private life and behavior to encompass both wives and both sons as well as his bandmates. This must always include about ninety percent negativity toward Yoko Ono.

Around sixty years later and the narrative hasn’t changed. Nor has mine: lives are complex, art is subjective, most of us never personally knew Lennon or any Beatle or any Beatle wives, girlfriends, and children, and even accounts of their lives from people who did/do know them are offered through each person’s perspective and the motive for which and spirit in which that perspective is offered.

So nothing new there, but what did strike me for perhaps the first time is how for the past few years we’ve watched a similar story unfold with many of the same features: high profile man from a prominent group/family has a relationship with high profile woman; she comes from a different place and looks different from him; she is vilified by many and defended by some; the two seek to carve out a new life somewhere else, giving up some things but still trying to be true to the beliefs and interests that guide and motivate them; all discussed by an even more amplified cacophony of voices thanks to social media and its immediacy. And I’ll say again: WE DON’T KNOW THESE PEOPLE PERSONALLY and our opinions about their “story” have very little to do with the reality of their lives and a lot more to do with our own biases, experiences, and wishes.

This frenzy of attention and amount of misinformation and disinformation and the force that drives it sometimes has tragic consequences and makes me wish that as a species and a culture, we would dial it back and focus our energy on better managing our own lives, families, and careers while they go on with theirs. You don’t like the image or product or point of view they’re serving? Don’t buy it. No reason to replace the dish you’re refusing with heaping sides of hatred toward them or the people who are interested and supportive of them.