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The Write Side of 59

~ This is What Happens When You Begin to Age Out of Middle Age

The Write Side of 59

Tag Archives: Art

The Saturday Blog: Clouds

23 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by WS50 in Art

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Art, Clouds, The Saturday Blog, The Write Side of 50

Above the clouds

Above the clouds. Photo by Julie Seyler.

These days, flying in an airplane, unless you can go Business or First Class, can be a deadening experience. Jam-packed planes, airport security, boxed meals, and tight seats, are just a sampling of why flying can be a chore. So, the trick is to find a silver lining. There’s one outside the window: the landscape of clouds. Always mesmerizing.

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Me, My Camera, and Some Favorite Photos

18 Monday Mar 2013

Posted by WS50 in Art

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Art, Cameras, Digital Cameras, Julie Seyler, Kodak, The Write Side of 50

Julie takes a photo. Palace Hotel. Madrid, 2012.

Julie takes a photo. Palace Hotel. Madrid, 2012.

BY JULIE SEYLER

I have always embraced a camera. Out of all my high school friends, I think I am the one with the most captured memories on film. It could be true for my college years, law school years, my Washington D.C years, and the last 24 years in Manhattan.

In the beginning, I used film because we only knew film. We built our camera knowledge on trademarks like Kodak, and the instant snapshot of the Polaroid. Remember Bob’s family had a Kodak Duaflex.

Then digital cameras began infiltrating. I railed against them. I swore my loyalty to film, and I managed to remain a hold-out until the near end, when it was impossible for an amateur to find film, let alone find anyone who could develop it, or would develop it at a reasonable price. Now I cop to the fact that I became a convert.  Nothing beats the ease of digital and its mechanics that allows for thousands of images with a click.

And not only did technology change, I changed. Where I used to only take photos of friends, anywhere at anytime, I have moved towards nature and buildings; city streets and sunflowers. I am mad about light and color and composition and beauty and ugliness. Here are three of my favorite photos:

This was taken from the (now battered) deck at Allenhurst Beach Club, about two or three years ago. It was early in the day, and I knew it was going to be a gorgeous one. The sky told the story. Every time I revisit this photo, I see space, freedom, tranquility, and the anticipation of a perfect day at the beach.

allenhurst beach-50?

In the middle of February, I was waiting for a downtown bus in front of McSwiggans, a bar on 2nd Avenue. I was staring into the front bay window, and was struck by the antic energy created by the competing beer advertisements. Out came the camera. I had to try to nail it.

at McSwiggan's

I do not know why, but I have always been fascinated by old cemeteries – those where the tombstones are dated anywhere between 1600 and 1900. There is sculpture in the alleys lined with mausoleums – mansions to hold the dead. This was taken at Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris where Jim Morrison is buried. It was around 10 or so on a Sunday morning. I never did find Jim Morrison.Pere Lachaise Cemetery

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The Saturday Blog: Bowling Green Subway Station

16 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Art, Bowling Green Subway Station, Lower Manahattan, The Saturday Blog, The Write Side of 50

Bowling Green subway station 2.18.13

Bowling Green Subway Station in Lower Manhattan. Photo by Julie Seyler.

There is a magnificent piece of architecture in Lower Manhattan, quite close to the ferry terminal to Staten Island, that harks back to the turn of the century. The entrance to the Bowling Green subway, which takes you in and out of Brooklyn, opened in 1905, and is worth looking up to.

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The Saturday Blog: Papyrus

09 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Art, Papyrus, The Saturday Blog, The Write Side of 50

Papyrus. Kwetsani Camp. Botswana. May, 2011.

Papyrus. Kwetsani Camp. Botswana. May, 2011. Photo by Julie Seyler.

The beauty of aging papyrus.

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The Saturday Blog: The Haircut

02 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Art, Belize, Haircut, The Saturday Blog, The Write Side of 50

Forever Young Barber Shop. Placencia, Belize.

Forever Young Barber Shop. Placencia, Belize. Photo by Julie Seyler

We believe the right haircut can help keep us young – forever.

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The Saturday Blog: The New Jersey Turnpike

23 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by WS50 in Art

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Art, NJ Turnpike, The Saturday Blog, The Write Side of 50

NJ Turnpike 1.19.13

Photos by Julie Seyler.

Mentioning the state of New Jersey to most people elicits either a groan or an eye-roll of of pity. Visions of endless traffic jams on the Garden State Parkway, coupled with memories of the redolence of sulfur around the Amboys, simply do not trigger fond memories of a great road trip. But we are here to proclaim that with the right eye, and mind, the scenery that dots the Turnpike has a poignant beauty. Perhaps you have to have a certain affection for the exoticism of the urban landscape. We do. So here’s to the industrial towers, telephone lines, train switches and smoke stacks that caress the New Jersey Turnpike.

turnpike 2

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My “Torch Song” to Sondheim

21 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art, Men

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Art, Frank Terranella, Men, Stephen Sondheim, The Write Side of 50

Sondhein with group

There’s Frank – second from right. Photo courtesy Frank Terranella.

BY FRANK TERRANELLA

Recently I attended one of those cultural events that only happen in New York. The New York Philharmonic played an entire evening of the music of Stephen Sondheim with the composer in attendance. We reveled to an orchestral music-only evening of selections from “Sweeney Todd,” “Sunday in the Park with George,” “Into the Woods,” and other less, well-known masterpieces like, “Pacific Overtures,” and “Stavisky.”

As I sat there listening to the concert, it occurred to me that I have been enjoying the music of Stephen Sondheim on New York stages my entire adult life. I saw the original productions of,” A Little Night Music,” “Pacific Overtures,” “Sweeney Todd,” “Merrily We Roll Along,” “Sunday in the Park With George,” and “Into the Woods.” This was as a result of being turned on to Sondheim by a college professor whose History of the American Musical course that I took in 1973 named Sondheim as the current torch carrier for the art form.

In the late 1970s, I started to correspond with Sondheim. I found him to be a most diligent correspondent. He never failed to answer every letter I sent him. I treasure those today. We conversed about his work on, “Do I Hear a Waltz?,” with Richard Rodgers, and his adaptation of George Kaufman and Moss Hart’s play, “Merrily We Roll Along.” He shared his feelings about collaborating with Leonard Bernstein on “West Side Story,” and about “Sweeney Todd” being performed by opera companies.

Over the course of the next 20 years I sometimes spied Sondheim on the streets of New York. I saw him outside the theater where a revival of “Follies” was being staged, and he sat behind me at a revival of “West Side Story.” Abiding by the unwritten code that New Yorkers have regarding celebrities in their midst, I did not try to engage with the musical master. Then, in 2007, I had a chance to meet Stephen Sondheim, and spend some time with him discussing his work. A good friend of mine, who teaches theater at a Midwest college, was leading a theater tour of students through New York and London.

Knowing what a big fan I am, he and his wife graciously invited me to join a small get-together they had arranged where the students would meet with Sondheim and get to ask him questions. And so on a spring day in 2007, I found myself shaking hands with Stephen Sondheim and sitting around a table asking the master questions. It was a delightful hour. It’s not often you get to meet someone who has given you so much cultural enjoyment over so many years. From the movie versions I saw of “West Side Story,” “Gypsy,” and “A Funny thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” in the early 1960s, through “Assassins and Passion” in the 1990s, it has been a wonderful ride.

Unfortunately, with ticket prices now routinely more than $100, and nearing $150, Broadway has turned away from the Sondheim type of show in favor of spectacles like, “The Lion King,” and “Wicked.” These days, the master can only get revivals of his earlier work produced on Broadway. Sondheim ’s latest musical, “Road Show,” was seen only off-Broadway, and out of town. There has not been a new Sondheim show on Broadway in nearly 20 years.

However, the change in Broadway fashions has not reduced the respect that the New York theater community has for Stephen Sondheim. We know that we are not likely to ever again see such a talent writing for the musical theater. But we will always have his great works. And perhaps the master, who will be 83 on March 22, will give us a few more masterpieces in the years when most men are long-retired. After all, he’s been through “Phantom,” and he’s been though “Spiderman” too, and he’s here. He’s still here. And aren’t we lucky.

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We’re Three Months Old: Bring Out the Bling

19 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Art, Christmas, Manhattan, Rolf's German Restaurant, The Write Side of 50, Third anniversary

Sparkling jewels

Heads were up, and a big hand was extended, at Rolf’s at Christmastime. Photo by Julie Seyler.

Among our favorite places to sip martinis is Rolf’s German Restaurant on the corner of East 22nd and 3rd Avenues in Manhattan. Aside from the super-sized drinks, what we really love: they “change decor of the restaurant for different seasons.” Their Christmas interior is so garishly, yet gloriously, over-the-top, you can’t look down.

And since there is no such thing as an overdo of sparkle, glitter, and bling, we’re blinging it blue (and big), in celebration of the blog’s third anniversary, by raising a hand to Rolf’s, and to all our contributors, readers, and fans. Thank you, everyone.

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The Saturday Blog: Reflecting

16 Saturday Feb 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Art, Julie Seyler, Madrid, The Write Side of 50

Prismatic light. Madrid, Spain.

Prismatic light. Madrid, Spain.

This photo reminds us of our four-day jaunt to Madrid, Spain in December 2011. It was taken inside one of the many cathedrals throughout the city that we would wander in to. Here, Julie caught and snapped the prismatic light that streamed through the stained glass windows to create patterns of abstract art.

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Happy Valentine’s Day

14 Thursday Feb 2013

Posted by Lois DeSocio in Art

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Tags

Art, Julie Seyler, The Write Side of 50, Valentines Day

Card designed by Julie Seyler ...

so gorged on love for you copy i burst for us

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