Last Sunday, meandering back from lunch with George, he and I took a short-cut through Meridian Hill Park. As we caught-up,......
Fieldtrips etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Fieldtrips etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
20 Kasım 2013 Çarşamba
29 Eylül 2013 Pazar
History Bitches Fieldtrip #5: Mary Surratt's Boardinghouse and Mount Olivet Cemetery
Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt, c. 1850This Saturday, my friend George (of Bricktop podcast and Eater DC fame)......
1 Ağustos 2013 Perşembe
History Bitches Fieldtrip #4: Hillwood Estate, Museum and Garden
Several weeks ago, I visited Hillwood, the sumptuous, sprawling estate of Marjorie Merriweather Post. Marjorie wasn't just......
21 Haziran 2013 Cuma
H.B. Fieldtrip #3-Leonardo da Vinci’s Ginevra de' Benci (National Gallery of Art)
This May, we brought our students to the National Gallery of Art to see Leonardo da Vinci’s portrait of Ginevra de' Benci; his only painting on display in the Americas. Though just as captivating as the Mona Lisa, scholars understand more about Ginevra than Leonardo’s most legendary subject. Born around 1457 or 1458, she was a member of the prosperous and cultured Benci family of Florence, Italy. Ginevra herself was a celebrated poet, though none of her work survives.
It’s a gorgeous piece of art (and you can actually see Leonardo’s fingerprint in the branches) celebrating a fascinating woman. Check it out if you're in DC!
Check out http://www.nga.gov/kids/ginevra.htm for a close-up of Leonardo’s fingerprint.
Leonardo painted Ginevra’s likeness in 1474, perhaps to commemorate her marriage to Luigi di Bernardo Niccolini; she was 16 years old, and Leonardo just 22! The front of the portrait shows her seated before a juniper (ginepro in Italian), supposedly a pun on her name. On the reverse (it’s double-sided!) is a second juniper twig encircled by a garland of laurel and palm and the Latin inscription VIRTVTEM FORMA DECORAT (Beauty Adorns Virtue). Watch the YouTube video below for some commentary on the symbols’ possible connotations and unlikely “scandal” regarding them.
It’s a gorgeous piece of art (and you can actually see Leonardo’s fingerprint in the branches) celebrating a fascinating woman. Check it out if you're in DC!
Check out http://www.nga.gov/kids/ginevra.htm for a close-up of Leonardo’s fingerprint.
29 Mayıs 2013 Çarşamba
H.B. Fieldtrip #2-Rock Creek Cemetery
I've meant to visit the Rock Creek Cemetery near the Petworth neighborhood in Washington, D.C. since last year; over Memorial Day weekend, I made the trek with a friend. Rock Creek’s boast illustrious “residents” like author Upton Sinclair, and Alice Warfield Allen, mother of Duchess of Windsor, Wallis Simpson. But I’d come to see Washington matriarch and podcast subject, Alice Roosevelt Longworth. She’s buried there beside her daughter Paulina Sturm. I was delighted to see that someone had left a flag and picture of Alice at her grave. It’s cool that despite dying over three decades ago, people continue to admire that sassy, old broad!
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H.B.Fieldtrip #1-Old St. Mary's Church & Cemetery
This Memorial Day weekend, a friend and I trekked out to Rockville, Maryland to Old St. Mary's Church and Cemetery to see Zelda and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s grave. They share a headstone inscribed with the words, "So we beat on, boats against the current borne back ceaselessly into the past," the last sentence of The Great Gatsby.
People who've visited have left tons of mementos-flowers, coins (mostly pennies), copies of his books, and movie ticket stubs. But what I thought was most…bizarre, confusing, f-ed up, was that so many people left booze!
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People who've visited have left tons of mementos-flowers, coins (mostly pennies), copies of his books, and movie ticket stubs. But what I thought was most…bizarre, confusing, f-ed up, was that so many people left booze!
Read more »