Roald Gundersen is designing wonderful spaces. His company, Whole Trees Architecture in Stoddard, WI, has a quiet and thoughtful approach to structure and form. He was just featured in a New York Times article but I don't think that will change his focus.
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OK ... I'm drinking albarino, reading Hemingway and jonesing for Le Sud. But here's a reprint from Bruce Weber at the NY Times:
A headline in The New York Sun on Sept. 4, 1940, captured accurately, albeit with amused condescension, the startling anomaly embodied by Conchita Cintrón: She’s a Timid Blue Eyed Girl But — She Kills Bulls Without Qualms.
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Lately, as all the land around where I grew up is being auctioned off to the lowest bidder, I have been rereading my great, great, great grandfather's diaries. He wrote almost every day from 1826 when he, his family, cattle and chickens boarded a rickety vessel in London bound for Tasmania till he died in Alameda, CA in 1882. And I thought I had something to complain about!
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In 1989 I met Steven McRedmond. He was fighting to refocus a family property which was once the 100,000 sf Neuhoff meat packing facility on the banks of the Cumberland River in downtown Nashville. Long shut down, his vision was to bring in architects and create an arts centered community. A little backstory ... Nashville is a huge US transportation hub, a major university center, the state capitol, the country music center, etc. In any other US city, this site (with a panoramic view of the downtown skyline 10 minutes away) would have been scooped up years ago for development. Some of us were excited.
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A dear friend, David Hart, who owns Nashville Wine and Spirits in said Tennessee city, called out of the blue last week and put me on a plane to "the Athens of the South". They actually do have their own full size replica of the Acropolis with manditory Athena statue. When David calls, its bound to be challenging but I will always dive in because I don't want to miss out on something interesting. But I digress...
Continue reading "Nashville G'tar Town 2009" »
We have demented friends, John Keller and Leslie Harrison, who live on a pristine Sierra ridgeback. Leslie is a renown, pastel artist specializing in unique portraits of animals. John, on the other hand, is harder to describe. I first met John when he was a talented marketing professional in Monterey, CA; his side passions were music and sculpting. He created the first and still successfull Dixieland Festival, played country music on the side and loved horses and fine wine.
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In the midst of all the lavaflow of current capitalist flameout, Nancy and I retreated for a walk up the hill to where the great blue herons have been nesting for years. The newborns now stand three feet tall in deep nests of thick dead branches. The elders come and go .
Next to our little 1897 cottage is a huge 150 year old Monterey cypress tree and these herons seem to use her as some sort of fulcrum. They fly on one side while going down to feed at the estero and back to their nest on the other side. As we sit on our backporch at dusk with a bottle of wine, we notice their neighborhood orbit.
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Buddhist teaching, as expressed through Japan, has formed a large part of my world view. I have written here about growing up under the influence of Tassajara Zen Center in Carmel Valley, CA. That's half true, as that special place served as a strong focal point in my teenage years. The other, earlier part is that I grew up on our family's ranch (my mother's side) in the house of my inspired uncle. Click on either photo above for a slideshow.
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It's been awhile since I recommended some new green products. With the emphasis on new technology in the current stimulus package from the Obama administration, we are about to be deluged with new products and widgets. Here is my first volley:
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