Month: August 2015
Opening Hidden Doors: The Unifying Power of Art
Third Tuesdays Program Reconnects Older Adults to Art and Their Community
The Cape Ann Museum announces the beginning of a unique new program, CAM Connections Third Tuesdays, which brings Cape Ann art, culture and history to older adults in the local community, and invites individuals with memory challenges and their care partners to be part of the experience. The program offers meaningful engagement with the Museum collection through small group conversation in the galleries on the third Tuesday of each month from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon.
The heart of the Third Tuesdays program is to create a welcoming space for open-ended discussion, art appreciation and reflection. Art is for everyone. The Third Tuesdays museum experience of slowing down to explore the world of a painting, object or artifact stimulates wonder, and ignites new ideas and discoveries for participants. Looking at art can open the door to express an idea or feeling, find a personal vision, or unlock an instinct. After a recent CAM Connections tour, Pippy Guiliano, museum guide expressed the many ways the experience stimulated ideas and was unifying, “We had another wonder-filled visit. The level of engagement was palpable. Conversation was off and running … progressed easily covering painting techniques and composition, technology, poetry, color effects, people mellowing with age, inner and outer light.… Our souls were soothed and our minds tuned up in the warmth of camaraderie.”
Third Tuesdays promotes active engagement with the arts as a bridge to reduce isolation and offer an enriching art and culture experience. The Cape Ann Museum, a regional center of art, history and culture with a treasured collection, invites the personal and collective history of older adults with ties to the region, past or present, to be part of the Third Tuesdays experience. The role of the Museum as a community center, bringing people back into connection with their own essential history and with others, helps to form new connections in an atmosphere of mutual fun, growth and learning.
If you are interested in learning more about CAM Connections Third Tuesdays tour program, or would like to make a reservation, please call Cara White at (978)283-0455 x24 or emailcarawhite@capeannmuseum.org.
Cape Ann World War II Veterans Project
Cape Ann World War II Veterans Project
I just wanted to put this out there again for folks in Gloucester, Rockport, Essex, and Manchester… I’ve photographed 25 vets so far but I know there are many more I would like to include in the project. Time is getting short to finish this in time for a Veterans’ Day show, so if you know a World War II veteran on Cape Ann who would like to be part of this project, please get in touch. And PLEASE don’t overlook the brave women who served – the nurses, pilots, WAVES, WACs etc. 978.884.7964 or jason@jasongrow.com. Please feel free to share this to help get the word out.
WHAT’S THE ART DISPLAYED BEHIND GOVERNOR BAKER? Here’s a tip for all those political handshake photographs: please add the artist and art to the list of names
Cat Ryan submits-
Joey, Good Morning Gloucester is really something! After my post about local artists and art displayed in City Hall and the White House Collection, the artist, proprietor, FOB, and fun Pauline Bresnahan sent me a picture with a note. She was thinking about art at the State House:
“Yesterday the Mayor was sworn in at the State House (for the Seaport Economic Advisory Council) and she put some photos on FB and I was wondering who did the painting over the Governor’s shoulder in the photo that I attached and am sending to you?”
Here’s Pauline’s attachment
The dramatic harbor scene is on loan from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and was created by JONAS LIE (1880-1940), The Fisherman’s Return, ca.1919, John Pickering Lyman Collection, Gift of Miss Theodora Lyman.
You read that correctly. His name is ‘Lie’. I know, located in the State House—the state capitol and house of government—the symbol of the Commonwealth of MA, politics and its people—it may seem at first an unfortunate selection when you read the surname.
Not to worry, his painting skills and life story are a great fit for the State House.
Lie was a well-known early 20th century painter and his peers considered him a master. One example of his stature and connections: Lie, Stuart Davis and Eugene Speicher were charged with the selection of paintings as members of the Central Arts Committee for the legendary exhibit, American Art Today at the 1939 New York World’s Fair. Holger Cahill was their Director. Artists John Gregory, Paul Manship and William Zorach selected sculpture. John Taylor Arms, Anne Goldthwaite and Hugo Gellert selected the prints and drawings.
Is there a Gloucester, MA, connection? You bet –and one you can see in many of Lie’s works. He was a summer traveler to Cape Ann before WW1 along with other New England locales through the 1930s because he was a mainstream American artist of his time. He had a studio on Bearskin Neck and lived on Mt. Pleasant in Rockport. Later the studio was Max Kuehne’s.
Lie was born in Norway to an American mother, Helen Augusta Steele of Hartford, Ct. His Norwegian father, Sverre Lie, was a civil engineer. One of his aunts was the pianist Erika Lie Nieesn and he was named after an uncle, the major Norwegian writer Jonas Lie. After his father died in 1892 he went to live in Paris with family, before joining his American mother and sister in New York City the following year. They settled in Plainfield, NJ. After art studies, Lie found work as a shirt designer, took more classes, exhibited and received prizes. William Merritt Chase bought two works in 1905. In 1906, he traveled back to Norway to visit family and again to Paris. He was deeply inspired by Monet. When he returned he resumed his art career. He admired the Ashcan artists and their American style. Another trip in 1909 to Paris, Fauvism and Matisse.
Lie painted the engineering project of his time, the building of the Panama Canal. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Detroit Institutes of Art acquired a work from this series. The rest were eventually gifted to West Point in 1929 as a memorial to US Army Corps of Engineers Colonel George Washington Goethals, Chief Engineer of the building of the Canal. Goethals was credited with having the forethought to ensure that a record of the project was preserved in art. Art form(s) actually. Leave it to the engineer to appreciate the art and beauty in industry. Right?
Lie was invited as a guest of General Goethals along with Joseph Pennell who created the gorgeous etching portfolio The Building of the Canal, 1912. Goethals also selected artist William B Van Ingen to paint 4 large murals, mounted on site in the rotunda in 1915. The Panama Canal opened softly the preceding year, on August 15, 1914 as World War 1 eclipsed any coverage.
Lie was involved with the installation of the famous Armory show of 1913, and 4 of his works were exhibited. In the printed matter, his name shows up alphabetically between Fernand Leger and George Luks. See the 1914 journal advert. Charles Hawthorne urged summer students to Provincetown while the New York School of Fine and Applied Art hoped that students would paint with ‘Jonas Lee, one of America’s foremost painters’. He was quite active in the arts community. He organized the Society of American Painters in 1919. He purchased a home in the Adirondacks to be near the hospital where his wife sought treatment for and eventually succumbed to TB. In 1933 he gave Amber Light, a painting of FDR’s yacht to the President, his friend.
Lie is known for his vivid color and impressions of New England harbors, boats and coves, painted during summer visits, his New York City scenes, landscapes, seasons, Utah copper mines, and the Panama series.
What about the Governor’s suite, the historic restoration, the Governor’s portrait, protocol and tradition?
The Massachusetts State House includes the state legislature and the offices of the Governor. The 1798 building was designed by Charles Bulfinch and was designated as a National Historic Landmark* in 1960. This magnificent landmark needed an overhaul and major renovations. Restoration has been happening throughout the structure, mostly for the first time in a century. It’s difficult to invest in heritage and modernize facilities without public criticism. Years of research span terms. The Governor suite in particular came under fire for its historic restoration. It was expensive.
“The executive office now looks like it did in 1798, Petersen said. It cost $11.3 million to renovate and restore these 19,000 square feet of the State House, including the lieutenant governor’s office, constituent services on the second floor, and what will soon be an emergency response room on the fourth floor. The executive offices now have temperature control, wireless Internet capability, sprinklers, blast-resistant storm windows, security cameras, including some with facial recognition, and sensors that can detect if a room is occupied.”
Daunting! I can understand why Governor Baker selected the former Chief Of Staff’s office for his everyday office. “I want a regular office where I can spill a cup of coffee and not worry about it,” the governor said.
The Jonas Lie painting is prominent in nearly every ceremonial signing and photograph because it’s hung directly behind the Governor’s desk. It is difficult to find any mention of the artist and painting. When staging formal photographs if there is a featured artwork in the frame, it is my recommendation and hope that credit to the artist and artwork are listed along with people featured in the photograph.
The State House is working on their website and there’s a great virtual tour. Visit https://malegislature.gov/VirtualTour
So what does the Governor see from his vantage of the signing seat during ceremonies and meetings? More tradition, history, and art. Each incoming Governor selects a portrait of a former Governor which is installed above the mantel and across from the desk. Former Governor Patrick’s choice was John Albion Andrew, Massachusetts 25th Governor. Governor Baker selected former Governor John A. Volpe, a North Shore Wakefield native, who served 1961-63 and again 1965-69, the first 4-year term in MA. He resigned midterm in his final year to accept President Nixon’s appointment to head the Department of Transportation. You can read more about it here http://www.nga.org/cms/home/governors/past-governors-bios/page_massachusetts/col2-content/main-content-list/title_volpe_john.html
The incoming Governor selects this portrait fairly quickly. Volpe’s national policy led to Amtrak. With the winter and MBTA crises at hand, comparisons can be drawn…I will ask! I haven’t been in the Governor offices. But Fred Bodin and I had a great look around earlier this year and Senator Tarr gave us a brief impromptu tour. Ask him about the Cod. There was an installation of local artists in the hall outside the Senate Chamber.
*Boston has 58 properties with National Historic Landmark designation. Gloucester has 2: Schooner Adventure and Beauport. City Hall should/will have this designation.
Link to yesterday’s post https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/2015/08/11/this-is-what-gloucester-looks-like-at-the-white-house-and-city-hall-its-all-local/
Also find it at Joey_C’s twitter http://t.co/upEgxcTajq
Nichole’s Picks 8/15 and 8/16
Pick #1 Another Block Party!
If you haven’t done a block party yet this summer, you’d better not miss this one!
Pick #2 Gloucester’s Annual Waterfront Festival
Saturday, August 15, 2015 ~ Sunday, August 16, 2015Stage Fort ParkA collection of over 175 juried Artists and Craftsmen from throughout the U.S. will display their unique creations, live music, plus delicious ethnic foods including a pancake breakfast (sponsored by the Rotary Club of Gloucester) on Saturday to help kick off this picture perfect seaport event!
Free live “family style” entertainment includes Celtic, Ragtime Bands, Country and Folk Music and Just Like Newman from 1:00 to 5:00 pm on Sunday. Additionally, North Shore Old Car Club will display over 75 Antique Autos on Sunday.
The Gloucester Waterfront Festival runs from 9:00 am to 6:00 pm each day. Handicap Accessible and friendly pets, on a leash, are welcome. Admission is FREE and the event will be rain or shine!
Pick #3 Peach Festival at Connors Farm
Saturday, August 15, 2015 – 9am to 6pm (Rain date Sunday, August 16, 2015)
$7.95 Admission per Person (A Portion of the Proceeds Benefit The Breast Cancer Foundation)
Activities Included with $7.95 admission: Hayrides, Barnyard Animals, Black Mamba, Cow Train, Duck Races, Giant Rocking Chair, Giant Tires, Grain Train, Hayrides, Horse Swings, Jumping Pillows, Lincoln Logs, Music, Mechanical Bull, Pedal Carts, Hop Along Rodeo, Sandbox, Spider Web, Trikes.
Additional charge for: Food, Face Painting, Gemstone Mining, Peach Picking. Pony rides
For a more comprehensive list of family activities visit our friends at North Shore Kid
Cape Ann TV Airings and Online Information for the Mayoral Debate at Rocky Neck Cultural Center on August 13, 2015
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Publication
Contact: Lisa Smith- Supervising Producer
(978) 281-2443
Cape Ann TV Gloucester’s Debates Coverage: Mayor Debate 8/13/13
Cape Ann TV will be covering all the Gloucester Debates for the 2015 Elections, beginning with The Mayoral Debate at the Rocky Neck Cultural Center on Thursday, August 13. This is the first debate for the Mayoral Preliminary Election and is centered on arts and culture.
On Friday, August 14 Cape Ann TV Channel 12 will air the Debate at 9:00 pm. The debate will be available to watch online on Saturday, August 15, on Cape Ann TV’s website video page: http://capeanntv.org/video/ (select: Gloucester Election 2015 on playlist and click on: Gloucester Mayoral Debate- August 13, 2015.)
Airing times of the Mayoral Debate on Cape Ann TV Channel 12 are:
Friday, August 14 at 9:00 pm
Saturday, August 15 at 9:00 am, 4:30 pm and 10:00 pm;
Sunday, August 16 at 12:00 pm and 11:00 pm;
Monday, August 17 at 4:30 am, 3:30 pm and 8:00 pm;
Tuesday, August 18 at 9:00 am;
Wednesday, August 18 at 6:00 am and 11:00 pm;
Friday, August 22 at 6:00 am;
Saturday August 22 at 12:00 am, 10:30 am 3:00 pm and 10:30 pm;
Sunday, August 23 at 9:00 pm.
This debate is the first of series of debates that Cape Ann TV plans to cover with multiple cameras. Cape Ann TV will also cover all the debates for the Preliminary Election and the Municipal Election. For more information and schedule information please go to: http://www.capeanntv.org.
Community Stuff 8/13/15
“Gloucester Block Party event coordinator is seeking a good-humored volunteer to represent the Gloucester Fisherman at this Saturday’s block party. We are also looking to borrow a sou’wester and the whole fisherman’s outfit for that volunteer. Please contact Ashley Gullett at 978-325-0956 if you know someone who is willing and available August 15th from about 5:30-7:00pm.”
Ashley Gullett
Event Coordinator
Gloucester Block Parties
The Fishermen’s Wives Would Like A Decent Turn Out To Greet Governor Baker When He Comes To Town To Drop Off Some Cheddar
The Thomas Lannon Sista Felicia Appetizer and Wine Sail August 18th Menu-
Here’s the Thomas E. Lannon 8/18/15 Wine Cruise Appetizer Menu From Sista Felicia, book now!!!
Sailing from Seven Seas Wharf at the Gloucester House Restaurant (978) 281-6634 or book online at www.schooner.org/book-online
Petite Toast with Carrot Cake Marmalade & Goat Brie
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Thinly Sliced Fresh Baguette Rounds with Manchego Cheese & Rose Petal Jelly
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Grilled Peppered Flank Steak Baguette Sliders with Fresh Baby Arugula, Red Roasted Pepper, & Daffinos Fromage Garlic & Herb Cheese
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Captain Joe’s Lobster Mac & Cheese
Sicilian Style Ricotta Nachos
The wine pairings by Nick DeFazio-
Purato Catarato Pinot Grigio
App 1 and 3B
Cambria Katherine’s Vineyard Chardonnay
App 2 and 4
Byron Santa Barbara Pinot Noir
3A
Bisol Prosecco Jeio
App 5
The Green Dragon Says it All “Free BRADY”
SCHOONER ADVENTURE VIDEO BY MIKE BERGMANN- SEE HOW SHE SCOONS!
LOVE this cool view of the Schooner Adventure shot by crew member Michael Bergmann outside the breakwater on Wednesday’s member sail. Mike has worked on the Adventure since he was 14 years old, more than half his life!
Become a member of team Schooner Adventure; included in your membership you will get two tickets to sail. Book your first sail today–the next member sail is Wednesday, August 19th, from 3pm to 7pm. For more information on the Schooner Adventure, a National Historic Landmark, visit the Adventure’s website here.
Mike Bergmann (foreground) and crew hoisting the fenders.
Captain Stefan Edick, left, and Mike Bergmann, right.
Gloucester Harbor view from the bow of the Adventure
Adventure photo taken by Mark Krasnow at the Panerai Corinthian Classic in Marblehead.
Discover John Sloan’s Gloucester: A gallery tour with curator Martha Oaks
The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present a special gallery tour with Cape Ann Museum curator Martha Oaks on Friday, August 21 at 9:30 a.m. Cost is $10 for Museum members; $15 nonmembers (includes admission). Space is limited; reservations required. For reservations and tickets please call (978)283-0455 x10 or emailinfo@capeannmuseum.org.
One of this country’s most important artists of the early 20th century and a highly respected teacher, John Sloan (1871-1951) spent five summers—1914 through 1918—living and working on Cape Ann. During that time he created nearly 300 finished oil paintings, using Gloucester’s rugged landscape as a backdrop to experiment with color and explore ideas about form, texture and light. Arguably the most productive period of his career, the body of work that Sloan created during this time continues to astonish and delight viewers a century after it was completed.
The Cape Ann Museum is proud to have five major works by John Sloan in its permanent collection: Sunflowers, Rocky Neck, 1914; Old Cone (Uncle Sam), 1914; Glare on the Bay, c.1914; Red Warehouses at Gloucester, 1914; and Dogtown, Ruined Blue Fences, 1916. Approximately 30 additional works, drawn from public and private collections across the country, will also be on display.
![Image: John Sloan (1871-1951), Sunflowers, Rocky Neck, 1914. Oil on canvas. Gift of Alfred Mayor and Martha M. Smith, 2008. [2008.14]](https://goodmorninggloucester.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/unnamed-21.jpg?w=700)
Look Out, Kim! Here Comes the Competition.
Gloucester’s City Hall
Foreign Affairs Brunch
Honestly, if you have not been to Foreign Affairs for Brunch then you are definitely missing out.
Chris and I went this past Sunday and it was absolutely delicious!
I got the Lobster Quiche and Chris got the Scratch Hash. AMAZING!
Of course we started out with the $1 oysters and Chris made his drink at the Bloody Mary Bar!
They also have music every Sunday 12 to 3
Don’t forget to use your Dinner Dealer!
Reservations recommended so call!
26 Central Street
Manchester-By-The-Sea, MA
(978) 704-9568
Imagine Gallery New Works Exhibit Opening
Make a Wish Anyone?
This Week in the Arts
MAYORAL DEBATE on the future
of Gloucester’s Arts & Culture
August 13, 2015, 7:30 – 9:00 pm
The Cultural Center at Rocky Neck, 6 Wonson Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
The Rocky Neck Art Colony, Gloucester’s Committee for the Arts, ArtsGloucester and seARTS are pleased to co-sponsor a debate among Gloucester’s mayoral candidates on August 13, 2015, 7:30-9:00pm at the Cultural Center at Rocky Neck. The debate will focus on issues affecting the city’s arts and cultural sector including planning and development, cultural tourism, affordable live/work space, and the city’s policies regarding public art. A second debate focusing on Gloucester’s cultural landscape will take place on October 5 at Gloucester Stage Co. The Cultural Center at Rocky Neck is air conditioned and wheelchair accessible.
John Sloan Lecture Series
John Sloan, Robert Henri, and John Butler Yeats: A Portrait of Friendship
The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present John Sloan, Robert Henri, and John Butler Yeats: A Portrait of Friendship on Thursday, August 13 at 7:00 p.m. This is the second of three lectures offered in conjunction with the John Sloan Gloucester Days exhibition on view at the Museum through November 29, 2015. The exhibition will be open for viewing prior to the lecture from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m.
Presented by Avis Berman, an independent writer, art historian, and author of Rebels on Eighth Street: Juliana Force and the Whitney Museum of American Art; James McNeill Whistler; and Edward Hopper’s New York.

When we consider the subject of portraits of artists, our first thoughts tend to be of likenesses painted on canvas, etched on a plate, or exposed on a negative. But equally compelling in the study of artists and why they make the images they do are those portraits deduced and composed from the examination of psychological and social motivations. This sort of portrayal based on deeper emotional currents is especially revealing in the case of the American painter and printmaker, John Sloan. Sloan could not have matured into the artist he was without the catalytic interlocking relationships he sustained with two other forceful personalities—the painters Robert Henri and John Butler Yeats. The power of these artists’ intense, transformative personal and intellectual friendships—friendships that became central experiences, opened doors to new worlds, and were precious founts of support and inspiration—does much to explain many facets of Sloan’s life and work. The three men’s association also had more general consequences for American art—it was a great influence on drawings, paintings, and prints produced by a number of outstanding artists in Sloan and Henri’s orbit.
Tickets are $10 for members and $15 for non-members. For more information, please call (978)283-0455 x10 or email info@capeannmuseum.org.
The third lecture in the series, presented by Michael Lobel on October 30, will be Passing through Gloucester: John Sloan Between City and Country.
About the exhibition:
One of this country’s most important artists of the early 20th century and a highly respected teacher, John Sloan (1871-1951) spent five summers—1914 through 1918—living and working on Cape Ann. During that time he created nearly 300 finished oil paintings, using Gloucester’s rugged landscape as a backdrop to experiment with color and explore ideas about form, texture and light. Arguably the most productive period of his career, the body of work that Sloan created during this time continues to astonish and delight viewers a century after it was completed.
The Cape Ann Museum is proud to have five major works by John Sloan in its permanent collection: Sunflowers, Rocky Neck, 1914; Old Cone (Uncle Sam), 1914; Glare on the Bay, c.1914; Red Warehouses at Gloucester, 1914; and Dogtown, Ruined Blue Fences, 1916. Approximately 30 additional works, drawn from public and private collections across the country, will also be on display.
Exhibition Sponsors:
John Sloan Gloucester Days is sponsored by Carpenter & MacNeille Architects and Builders, Inc. and by Cape Ann Savings Trust & Financial Services.
@holycowtweets serving up the Free Brady Ice Cream Sandwich and It Sounds Like A Dandy!
Cape Ann Dining News
http://www.capeanneats.com
Wednesdays with Fly Amero~ Tonight’s guest Chick & Ellen 7pm @ The Rhumb Line 8.13.2015
This week only…
London Broil w/mushroom gravy
Choice of potato & veggie – $12.95
Wednesday, August 12th – 7pm
Special Guests: CHICK & ELLEN!
Might just be another wild and crazy night at the Rhumb Line.
Why? Well… Chick Marston and Ellen ford are the musical
guests, for one thing. Add on the fact that the Marston clan
is in from the west coast and will be stopping by to (as always)
turn the joint into one big frickin’ party! An utterly hilarious
and great-music time will be had by all! 7pm! ~ Fly
Dinner with great music!
*Each week features a special, invited musical guest
Dave Trooper’s Kitchen…
Prepared fresh weekly by “Troop”… always good!
Plus a fine, affordable wine menu!
Visit: http://www.therhumbline.com/
Looking forward……to seeing you there 🙂











