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Category Archives: Reflections

Red Umbrellas…

24 Sunday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Art, Reflections

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Art, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Red Umbrella, Yanko Tihov

© Yanko Tihov – Two Umbrellas

The Italians are fond of red clothes, peacock plumes, and embroidery; and I remember one rainy morning in the city of Palermo, the street was ablaze with scarlet umbrellas.  – Ralph Waldo Emerson

The rainy season has arrived in the San Francisco area. I love donning my rain slicker,
Wellingtons, and with red umbrella in hand, walking in the Stanford hills.

© Yanko Tikov – One Red Umbrella

A Morning with Julia Child…

17 Sunday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Food, Reflections, Writing

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Julia Child, Memoir

Voilà! My Daughter's First Bundt Cake

Some people like to paint pictures, or do gardening, or build a boat in the basement. Other people get a tremendous pleasure out of the kitchen, because cooking is just as creative and imaginative an activity as drawing, or wood carving, or music.

Julia Child

After the obligatory, monosyllabic babble, the first recognizable words out of my three daughters’ mouths were pâte brisé, flambé, and bon appetit! At a time when all the other neighborhood children identified with Big Bird and the rest of the delightful characters on Sesame Street, my progeny preferred the company of the middle-aged, wonderfully eccentric Julia Child. The girls would sit transfixed around the television set as she demonstrated how to whip up one fantastique meal after the other. They became devotees and insisted on watching every time Julia Child appeared on WGBH Boston.

After each show my daughters would pour over Julia Child cookbooks, even before the youngest could read. The eldest bookmarked the pages of interest using multi-colored recipe cards – yellow for appetizers, green for salads, blue for main dishes, and pink for desserts, while the youngest made her selections known in red crayons and fruity-scented purple markers. Here too, their early word recognition included more French and technical culinary terms than the mundane English vocabulary of their activities of daily living.

They became full-fledged connoisseurs and I enjoyed overhearing them discuss the subtleties of food preparation and ingredient selection, such as whether one or two teaspoons of cinnamon improved the flavor of homemade applesauce, was our gingerbread recipe better than the one served at Sturbridge Village, and were farmers’ market eggs superior to store-bought ones when making a mile-high lemon meringue pie?

When I learned that Julia Child was promoting her new book, The Way to Cook, one Saturday morning at a mall in Cambridge, it was out of the question not to go. We found her sitting alone at a table in the mezzanine, with her cookbooks stacked off to the side. The girls rushed over and began peppering her with questions about her shows and the reasons she did this or that. She was terribly amused by their enthusiasm, made them feel completely at ease, and generously spent the entire morning talking to them about French cooking and baking as no one else appeared at the table during that time.

We purchased several books that she graciously signed along with an older paperback copy of Mastering the Art of French Cooking, which my youngest carried around with her in lieu of a baby blanket. To this day, all three still have a penchant for Julia Child’s legacy that was her cooking, but especially her panache and joie de vivre. They have indeed mastered the art of French cooking – surtout the youngest!

October…

15 Friday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Fashion, Nova Bair, October, Photography, Reflections, Vanessa

© Vanessa

October’s poplars are flaming torches lighting the way to winter.
Nova Bair

I realized today that we are quickly nearing the end of the year and my 2010 list of resolutions is only partially completed. At first I filled with remorse that I did not have the discipline and drive to finish all my action items in a timely fashion. But as I began to reflect on all the wonderful things that I have accomplished this year, I felt much better. Surely I can attend to one more project in the remaining ten weeks before year-end!

Rectus Abdominis…

08 Friday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Art, Design, Photography, Reflections

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Bartolomeo Passarotti, Juan Zambrano, Michelangelo Buonarroti, Oleg Galagan, Rectus Abdominis

© Juan Zambrano

The function of art is to represent ideal beauty.
Michelangelo
 
The classical male torso has been portrayed for centuries in various forms and in different mediums. What captures the beauty aesthetic for me is when the image includes a clearly defined rectus abdominis muscle, that runs vertically on either side of the center of the abdomen.

Sketch – Torso by Passarotti
Model – Oleg Galagan

Aquariva…

05 Tuesday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Design, Reflections

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Aquariva, Cobra, Marc Newsom, Muskoka

© Jerome Kelagopian

If you ask old Riva aficionados, ‘Which part of the boat says the most to you?’ it would be the transom, so it was a slightly dangerous element to take on – akin to a plastic surgeon changing the eyes or nose of a famous beauty.   Marc Newson, Industrial Designer

Marc Newson’s redesigned, 33-foot Aquariva is the sexiest speedboat on the planet! It is on display as part of Newson’s Transport exhibit at the Gagosian Gallery in New York until October 16, 2010.

The boat has a special attraction for me in that it is reminiscent of the antique Greavette Ditchburn, Duke, and Chris Craft mahogany boats that toured the Muskoka Lakes in Ontario, Canada where my family owned a cottage for over thirty-five years. A limited edition of 22 Aquarivas will be built in the original Italian Riva boatyards in Sarnico on Iseo Lake at a price of $1.28 million each. The first action item on my Top Ten List is now to drive one!

Cobra

www.portcarlingboats.com

Birthday Cakes…

01 Friday Oct 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Food, Photography, Reflections, Writing

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beautiful, Beauty, Birthday Cake, Fashion, Kristin Gerbert, Photography, Robert Browning

© Kristin Gerbert - http://www.kg.photography.com

Grow old along with me!
The best is yet to be…
Robert Browning

I love transforming a simple cake into something spectacular, worthy of a birthday. My favorite cake was one I created for my daughter’s third birthday. It was a white four-layer cake, frosted with a buttercream basketweave design, and dotted with pink sweetheart rosebuds. Candied flowers and swirling candles were the final touches. She was utterly delighted, and it remains the gold standard by which she has judged all her birthday cakes since.

You could let a birthday pass like any other day, and not bother with a cake; you could perhaps buy a cake; or, to really make an occasion of it, you could create a cake that is extraordinary, a work of art – embellished with all that represents the life of the recipient, whether it would be a loved one, or even yourself! After all, a birthday is only once a year, and despite protestations to the contrary, most people would love a cake that was created especially for them. Who knows what may befall us, and how many birthday cakes we have left to enjoy. Why not honor every year with a glorious cake?

Millinery Haunting…

29 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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beautiful, Beauty, Hats, Mannequins, Photography, Street Haunting, Virginia Woolf

© Joan Currie

Passing, glimpsing, everything seems accidentally but miraculously sprinkled with beauty, as if the tide of trade…had this night cast up nothing but treasure.
Virginia Woolf

As I peered in the windows of a millinery shop last night, Virginia Woolf’s voyeuristic essay, Street Haunting: A London Adventure came to mind. My imagination conjured up fantasies about who might buy these hats and to what occasions they would be worn. The mannequins appeared eerily lifelike.

Photos – Joan Currie

Sense of Smell…

25 Saturday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections, Relationships

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beautiful, Beauty, Eleven Orchids Photography, Fashion, Lauren DiMarco, Memoir, Photography

© Eleven Orchids Photography

The sense of smell can be extraordinarily evocative, bringing back pictures as sharp as photographs of scenes that had left the conscious mind.

I visited my maternal grandfather only a couple of times, but during each stay he smoked White Owl cigars. Since his passing over thirty years ago, every time I smell a cigar I am instantly transported back to those few, special moments I had alone with him. The most memorable one was when he taught me how to draw a five-pointed star. I traced his pencil lines following his simple directions: across town, downtown, uptown, downtown, and back home again.

Autumn…

23 Thursday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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Autumn, beautiful, Fall, Harvest Moon, James Whitcomb Riley, Photography, Pumpkins

© Joan Currie

When the frost is on the pumpkin and the fodder’s in the shock.
James Whitcomb Riley

Autumn arrived last night as I took an evening stroll under the light of the full harvest moon. The moon was extraordinarily bright and I was sure to make a wish as the autumnal equinox will not coincide with a harvest moon again until 2029 in the northern hemisphere.

Boots…

17 Friday Sep 2010

Posted by stanfordblog in Art, Design, Fashion, Photography, Reflections

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Boots, Catherine Lee, Christian Louboutin, graffiti, Lauren DiMarco, Photography, San Francisco

© Catherine Lee

My boots weren’t made for walking, they are works of contemporary art.
Lauren DiMarco

My daughter considered urban graffiti a legitimate art form even before she lived in São Paulo, Brazil, “the current worldwide mecca of graffiti.” When Christian Louboutin designed these radical red calf boots she had to have them – not to wear, but to display.

© Joan Currie - Christian Louboutin Boots

© Joan Currie - San Francisco Graffiti

Model – Lauren DiMarco

 

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