“Chuck’s” Bavarian Castle

Bayernhof Museum, built on a hilltop overlooking the Allegheny River and much of Pittsburgh’s East End, was originally the home of Charles Brown III. Chuck loved all things Bavarian, and German, and  inspired by Mad King Ludwig, built his own Neuschwanstein. Linda, Sonsee and I went there for a tour.

Chuck was a collector, most interestingly of automated musical instruments: player pianos, music boxes, band organs, bird boxes… He also collected Hummel figurines, kitchen equipment (mostly professional and expensive), liquor, the RCA dog Nipper, and lots of German kitsch. The entrance hall overwhelms you with German kitsch and every room seems to have it’s share.

Chuck also loved his great grandfather, who founded a bank in Pittsburgh in the nineteenth century. He commissioned this sculpture, Dsc03504
the body taken from a Bavarian miniature, the face from a portrait of great granddaddy. Our tour guide doubted whether gg ever wore lederhosen, probably wouldn’t have been caught dead in them.

Unlike many museums I’ve visited, I was invited to take pictures as soon as I walked in the door. So I snapped away using the flash, which I normally try to do without. However, there was no way to do justice to the overwhelming amount of stuff. It was hard to focus (my mind, not the camera) on single objects, even the big ones. And I was with a very small tour group, only five of us, and I didn’t want to delay the tour or make any kind of fuss. It wasn’t that important; I didn’t love it enough.

I’ve put together a new photo album with comments about some of the objects and some of my feelings about Chuck, based solely on the things he collected and what the tour guide said about him. There is surprisingly little to be found in print. Read an article about the museum here, and Chuck’s company with great grandfather on the logo, here.

Mysteries of the computer (geek talk)

This is the business card I designed for the Silver Streakers World blog. Businesscrd1
I tried to put it into my previous post and it wouldn’t show up. Before I created it I consulted with the copy/print lady at Staples to make sure I brought in a file she could use. Her only instructions were about size and to make it a jpeg. She had no trouble with my file.

Because of the logo, I used Photoshop® to create the file. Since it was 300 pixels/inch I thought maybe it was too large for the blog. Went back into Photoshop® and reduced it to 100 pixels/inch. Still no luck. I tried to import it into iPhoto® thinking I could export it from there. iPhoto® refused to recognize the file format. Evidently not all jpegs are created equal.

Went back to Photoshop® and used "Save for Web." This did the trick. I’ve been thinking about it all weekend (not constantly), and was going to end the post leaving it as a mystery. But it occurred to me that Photoshop® now uses vector data for type. Evidently flattening the file and saving as jpeg doesn’t make the vector into bitmap data. The more I know, the more I don’t know.

Odds and ends

A cold front is supposed to come in over the weekend. I will be very grateful. I find this heat so debilitating, it saps my energy and I don’t feel like doing anything. I do have room air conditioners so I spend most of my time at the computer in front of the air.

I actually had a fairly active day. First I took Darcy to the groomer. When I came back, I did some work around the apartment, then met Robin at the Fair in the Park, where I walked around with her for about 45 minutes. I had an appointment with Comcast, again, and didn’t want to miss them so I headed home. As I pulled in the drive the groomer called and said Darcy was ready for pickup, so I turned around and drove to Regent Square. I brought Darcy back to the apartment, because of Comcast, who showed up as soon as I walked in.

So they fixed my internet and phone connection again. I never mentioned they were out here last week. When I returned from New York my internet and phone were out. This time two technicians came out. If it doesn’t keep working, I guess I’ll go back to Verizon.

In the meantime Darcy kept nipping at me; she wanted to go home. Darcy has fallen in love with Shalmit, my grad student friend, who took care of her while I was in New York and the family was in Chile visiting Eli. This weekend my family has gone to North Carolina for a bat mitzvah. Shalmit was supposed to go to Toronto and I was supposed to take care of Darcy. I’ve been dreading the weekend. Darcy is bad enough under normal circumstances, but this love affair with Shalmit is a killer. She’s like a teenager with a bad crush. At the last minute I got a reprieve; Shalmit postponed her trip until next weekend. I’ve been having a peaceful evening.

Last spring I set up a new blog with one of my fellow Osher students. He wanted to start an unofficial blog for the Pitt Osher program, and he needed me to set it up. We’ve been nursing it along all summer. Now we want to get it off the ground. I spent much of the week working on a presentation we will give for a lunchtime meeting, and a flier to distribute at an Osher event on the 17th. Fortuitously, Staples sent me a coupon for 100 free businesscards, no strings attached. I designed a card and they printed it for me. We’ll give these out, also, and hope we can get other people to post to the blog. I don’t want to write for another blog. I have all I can do to keep this one going and prepare for my upcoming Japan trip. Visit the new blog. If you have some thoughts about the Osher program, by all means contribute a comment or a new post.

It’s been a quiet week…

As I get older I find myself noticing the world around me in ways I had not done before. My backyard remains constantly fascinating as I note how the light changes as the sun changes position. This caught my eye the other morning, with the sun lighting the tree from an entirely different angle.
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On Saturday, LInda and I went to the Mattress Factory. Their current exhibits left us somewhat mystified, but we enjoyed the Tom Museum and spent a fair amount of time in the exhibit by Yayoi Kusama. Although I don’t particularly enjoy looking at myself in a mirror, I find these images continually fascinating.
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It’s easier looking at myself upside down.

I love the way the space opens out to infinity. That’s the best part about mirrors.
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I’ve been diligent about walking in Frick Park, every morning since Friday. I think it’s the best exercise I can get, and the park is beautiful, truly one of the jewels of Pittsburgh. Library_1640_2
This morning was very foggy, and I was able to get more of those rays of sun shots.  Library_1642_2










We noticed a lot of these white flowers. I don’t knowwhat they are. Library_1637_2
Perhaps some day I will be able to Google an object instead of a word or description. That would be really amazing!Library_1639_2


Back to the routine

While I was in New York I realized I don’t like being in Pittsburgh unless my family is here. It’s not about Pittsburgh. I just haven’t made many attachments here, although Mary picked me up from the airport bus, so that’s one attachment I’ve made. I returned on Monday; Robin, Steve and Charna didn’t get back until Tuesday afternoon. They had a wonderful time in Chile. Charna said she wanted to chain herself to a palm tree and stay there.

School began yesterday morning with Art of China, the class I am auditing. Next week my Osher classes begin. I’m continuing with Tai Chi and taking another writing class and something called Caravaggio (about the artist).

My biggest problem on returning was retrieving my mail. I always ask the post office to hold it if I will be gone more than a few days. Usually that works well and they deliver it on the requested date. This time the system, if there is one, failed. My regular carrier is on vacation, obviously the cause of the failure. I finally went and picked it up, after some difficulty finding where to go. It wasn’t the nearest post office.

This morning I was back to walking, this time with Mary, Mary’s sister Nancy, and Phyllis. The position of the sunlight was different,  and I got some neat photos.
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Phyllis and Nancy

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Mary stops to talk to every dog we meet.

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Sixteen: Last Day

As I sat and watched Curtains, I realized Carol thinks of New York as a theater town, as probably most people do. I think of New York as an art town, and spend my days so busily looking at art I am too tired to think about theater by evening. There was certainly a time I saw a lot of theater. On one trip from Chicago I must have seen six plays in 5 days. I’m not sure why I don’t love it as much now.

For our last day in town we went back to the TKTS booth, this time getting half-price tickets for The Drowsy Chaperone. It was a cute story, better costumes and music than Curtains, although very similar. Both are plays within plays and probably owe a lot to the Producers. After the play we walked around Ninth Avenue looking at people and architecture, met a friend for dinner back at Sala Thai. Next: home, school and more Japan planning.

Hot and humid fifteenth day

Carol spent four or five hours traveling to Ridgewood on Friday, and unfortunately, I gave her another five hours of transit riding on Saturday. She also got a taste of the real New York on Friday: there was a bomb scare at the Port Authority Friday morning, all of New York’s finest keeping people out of the building and adding more anxiety to her trip. She’s a good sport.

We began our day at the National Museum of the American Indian in Battery Park. The exhibits were filled with wonderful objects, mostly from Northwest Coast Indians. The building, the Alexander Hamilton U.S. Custom House, is also worth seeing. This is the centennial of the building commemorated with an exhibit in the rotund.

We boarded the Staten Island Ferry, just a short walk from the museum. Although New York is largely empty in August, all of the tourists seemed to be on the ferry. It can be a wonderful ride; next time will be better.

I had a goal in mind this trip; it wasn’t just to ride on the ferry. I always wanted to visit the Jacques Marchais Tibetan Museum, not realizing what the trip entailed. We got on a bus, conveniently waiting for us outside of the ferry terminal. Unfortunately air conditioning on the bus was only marginal and the trip was long. Then there was a long walk up a steep hill to get to the museum. It was interesting, particularly learning about Jacques Marchais, but I would not return unless I was driving. By the time we got back to the ferry we both felt like we had become a sodden mess.

Carol wanted to see a play. We went to the TKTS booth and got half-price tickets to Curtains. After dinner at a charming Japanese restaurant we settled in and enjoyed the play. It was cute. The best person was Debra Monk, a wonderful, talented, older woman with a great voice. It’s a great joy to see an older actor doing a great job.

Friday, fourteen days and thinking about home

It was hot again–it really saps my energy. First I went to the library and returned those books. I walked down 41st Street from Grand Central, following bronze plaques with quotations from famous authors, set into the pavement. This is called "Library Way." Amongst the joys of New York are these quixotic touches: funky bronze sculptures in the 14th Street subway stations, streets named after famous, or not so famous residents, a list of ticker tape honorees and dates of their parades embedded in the pavement on Broadway near Wall Street, the reservoir in Central Park named for Jackie Kennedy Onassis. One of the streets is named George and Annette Murphy Street. I wonder how many people remember George Murphy, and was Annette famous?

Walking from the library to Seventh Avenue for a bus, I found several shops selling millinery supplies and beads and stones for making jewelry. If I ever use all the beads and stones I’ve already collected, I’ll come back to 38th Street for more.

My destination was the Rubin Museum, one of my favorite places even though I abhor the way Donald Rubin made his money–healthcare management. I spent most of my time in front of three huge textiles, giant appliqués of padmasambhava. I wish someone would write a book about them, with great photos of details of the appliqué work. My interests in art always seem to be on the edges of the art world–nothing is ever depicted on a postcard.

After a tour of the green market in Union Square and a coffee break at Barnes & Noble across the street, I returned to the apartment, totally wiped out. Finally revived enough to have dinner with Barbara.



Carol’s Birthday Weekend

Day thirteen. Only a few days before I return to Pittsburgh. I decided to begin the packing and cleaning up process by returning the two books I borrowed from the public library last week. I walked up Carnegie Hill, and arrived at the library just as a light drizzle began. Alas! the library was closed until noon. Worse–there is no book drop. I had to return to the apartment before noon as Carol was scheduled to arrive then. I continued walking in the misty rain with the books, ran a couple of other errands and got back to the apartment about 11.

Although I dearly love New York there are some unbelievable inconveniences here. Why can’t the library have a book drop? Every suburban library understands the need for book drops. Pittsburgh even has drive-up book drops. I guess it wouldn’t be New York if it was easy.

After a Japanese bento box lunch, Carol and I went over to the Met and spent most of our time in Egypt. That’s one area I usually neglect, so it was pretty interesting going through it.

Carol had never been to Central Park. We walked across more or less from Fifth Avenue and 84th Street to 81st and Central Park West where we took the subway downtown to meet Julia for dinner. In the past I had often met Julia at a restaurant on 23 rd Street called East of Eighth. We did it again, having a lovely dinner with too much food.

Carol will go to New Jersey tomorrow to visit a friend, then we will spend the weekend together and go to the airport for planes leaving about 5 minutes apart.

Day Twelve: Shirley Sun, again

I couldn’t fall asleep last night, or I should say, this morning. I was reading until 12:30, my eyes were tired but the brain kept going. At 1:30 am, I got out of bed, went to the computer, and paid a couple of bills I had been trying to forget about: out of sight, out of mind. I don’t know when I finally fell asleep, but I had a hard time getting started this morning.

Shirley Sun was waiting for me under the gaze of Confucius, and we went to 27 Seafood, down the street. We had a fairly good conversation this time, better than last week. She told me about her business, showed me some of the advertising she sold, and spent a lot of time talking about different kinds of tea. I wish I could spend more time with her and help her improve her English.

My second stop was the Japan Tourist Bureau to buy my Japan Railpass. I now have all of my frequent flier miles and $525 invested in my upcoming trip. I still don’t know where I will be staying, and I’m becoming uncomfortable about it.

After all that I came back to the apartment. My lack of sleep is catching up with me, so I will beg off going out to dinner tonight.