Part 1 ….. picking and cleaning 540 lbs. Chilean Carmenere Grapes Sent from Xfinity Mobile App
Scenes Of Cape Ann Show Just About To Go Live At Seacoast
SAFETYSafety 80s Spring Fling at Mile Marker One
Saturday May 17th , 2014 And Beyond Cape Ann Weather…
Purple Haze

Lately things they don’t seem the same
Actin’ funny, but I don’t know why
Excuse me while I kiss the sky
Purple haze, all around
Don’t know if I’m comin’ up or down
Am I happy or in misery?
What ever it is, that girl put a spell on me
Sign on the Rehab campus. No, it’s not about drugs, is it?
Jimi Hendrix 1967
Chickity Check It!- The Clam
http://gloucesterclam.wordpress.com/
James Dowd’s writing should really be all you need to know to make this an instant bookmark and follow.
(Plus he’ll get into all that icky politics stuff that I can’t stand)
Look what you made us do
Posted by jamesdowd
We have resisted blogging about Gloucester for a couple of reasons. First, Gloucester was previously covered by an actual newspaper, the Gloucester Daily Times [paywall. Seriously!] Sadly, the GDT has suffered in quality of late. Oh, let’s not sugar coat it, they are awful. Like ‘painful groin rash’ wretched. In our opinion Gloucester essentially has no functioning newspaper now, and certainly not one with a useful online presence. This means a lot of Gloucester viewpoints are not being heard.
It stinks from the head
Cape Ann Online has great discussions along with a bunch of trolling. It’s a great forum for short-form stuff. But it’s forum-style.
Of course Joey Ciaramitaro runs a pretty boss blog Good Morning Gloucester. He covers events, food, art, the highly clickworthy winter bikini volleyball beat and now even weather and waterfront. The man has heat, but he’s crystal clear about one thing: He does not want to cover anything that could remotely be considered “political”. This is his right and his is blog is just that. It’s great the way it is and he wants to keep it that way.
Bookmark and follow it here- http://gloucesterclam.wordpress.com/
Here is some of the greatness James dropped on GMG in years past-
James Dowd Breaks Down Our “unoffical” just-for-fun completely non-scientific poll (Surprise Our Margin Of Error Was Better Than Gallup)
Bike Lane Parking From Jim Dowd
Jim Dowd on the new bike lanes:
Jim Dowd and The Why Gloucester Is Hipster (and that’s not a bad thing) Rant
Jim Dowd’s Post On Good Morning Gloucester Makes The Washington Post
Jim Dowd responds to the attack on the Boston Marathon
“Make it look shitty.” James Dowd latest screed on cycling in Gloucester
An Open Letter to My Bike Wheel Thief from Jim Dowd
Community Stuff 5/17/14
“Schooner Adventure at Maritime Gloucester” for 2014 Season
Gloucester’s iconic fishing schooner Adventure will partner with Maritime Gloucester starting June 1 when it moves to Maritime Gloucester’s waterfront campus on Harbor Loop.
According to Maritime Gloucester’s Executive director Tom Balf, “The Schooner Adventure will be an important addition to our educational and visitor programs. As a dockside attraction with guided tours, charter and periodic public sails, Adventure will complement educational experiences and the daily public sails now offered by the Schooner Ardelle. Its presence on the Harriet Webster Pier will help further establish Maritime Gloucester as a preeminent maritime destination north of Boston. We know many in the community welcome this partnership.”
Everett James in Essex, MA built Adventure in 1926 to designs by the renowned marine architect Thomas McManus. Shipwrights are currently working on restoration of the fo’c’sle and galley at the Gloucester Marine Railways, and uprigging should occur in early June at the docks at Maritime Gloucester.
John Fuller, Executive Director of Gloucester Adventure, Inc. said “docking Adventure at Maritime Gloucester will help us re-launch Adventure into the next leg of her long and storied journey. As an integral part of Maritime Gloucester’s historic waterfront campus, including their highly regarded educational programming, Adventure will support Maritime Gloucester’s mission to inspire their visitors and students through hands-on education and experiences that can now occur on board the vessel. Our being on the Harriet Webster Pier is a win for Maritime Gloucester, Schooner Adventure, and the City of Gloucester.”
“The combination of Adventure and the Ardelle creates a destination with a truly memorable dockside, museum or sailing experience. Students and visitors this summer will be able to tour the historic Adventure, take a sail on the Ardelle, visit our aquarium with its local and Gulf of Maine species, or discover our new fisheries exhibit in our Gorton’s Gallery or the variety of outside exhibits that describe Gloucester’s past, present and future” said Maritime Gloucester’s Balf.
Fuller added that The Adventure hopes to revive its popular Sunday pancake breakfast aboard the vessel that once attracted visitors from throughout the region.
US Eliminations only 2 weeks away!
Thanks to some generous volunteers, the race boats are restored and in the water ready for US eliminations on May 31st. There has been some activity down at the boats lately, but there is still time to find a partner, get some rows in and compete. We have a new category this year in the Men’s Division moving from over 40 years to over 50 years in conjunction with our Canadian counterparts. I would hope this new category would bring out some new faces or veteran teams to compete again this year. It’s also hard to believe that with boats full of women rowers at Fiesta, that we have a hard time finding a women’s dory team each year. I urgently encourage any women rowers to find a partner, get into the dories and extend your rowing season. This is another opportunity to compete with 5 weeks to train before we face the Canadians.
Best wishes to all.
Erik
Hi Joey,
I’m on the board of the Annisquam Village Players and we hope you can run the announcement below about our upcoming auditions on May 25.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks,
Anne Williams
Audition for the musical Peter Pan
The Annisquam Village Players will hold auditions for the musical Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie on Sunday, May 25 at the Annisquam Village Hall, 36 Leonard Street, Gloucester. Auditions will begin at 6 p.m. for children ages 6 – 10 and 7 p.m. for adults or anyone trying out for a lead role. Children should be prepared to sing the song, “I won’t grow up” while teens and adults can prepare any song from the show. There will be a dance audition as well for both men and women. The show will run from Tuesday, August 5 through Sunday, August 10, with rehearsals starting in mid June. For more information visit www.annisquamvillageplayers.org
Joey, my name is Andrew Weiner. I was born and raised in Gloucester. I am just starting (1 chapter done) a book called “The Bounty of the sea and her dangers” which is gonna be loosely based on real life events, albeit fiction. I have several local contributors already, including;
Pamela Dalzell – Gloucester MA
Joe Moceri (Joe Moe) Guilford NH
Nick Rodolosi
Kory Curcuru – Gloucester MA (Author of the critically acclaimed “St. Peters Fiasco”
Carlo Lovasco – Clearwater FL
Larry Marcantonio – Tarpon Springs FL
I am wondering if you might put a link to it on Good Morning Gloucester. It is www.facebook.com/bountyofthesea
Also, if you want to be listed as a contributor, please feel free to read the posts and add.
Thanks either way for reading this.
Andrew
THEATRE IN THE PINES – MAY PERFORMANCE – THE HEIRESS
Nan Webber, Artistic Director, Theatre in the Pines, announced the spring production will be, THE HEIRESS by Ruth and Augustus Goetz adapted from the novel Washington Squareby Henry James. Performances will take place at Spiran Hall, located at 18 Broadway on the corner of Broadway and School Street in Rockport. Performance will be held at 7:30 p.m. on May 15, 16, 17 and May 18th at 3 p.m.
The background of the play is Washington Square, New York City, during the latter part of the 19th Century.
A shy, plain young woman Catherine Sloper, falls desperately in love with a delightful young man named Morris Townsend.Larry Cook and Heidi Pulkkinen are the two leading actors in this production. Audiences loved them in “Summer and Smoke, ” and they are electric in this stunning production of THE HEIRESS.
Tickets are now available at Toad Hall Bookstore, 47 Main Street, Rockport; The Gloucester Book Store, 61 Main Street, Gloucester and at all performances.
Performed many years ago by Theatre in the Pines, “Arsenic and Old Lace,” has been requested many, many times to return. The September production, “Arsenic and Old Lace,” will take place at the Shalin Liu Performance Center 37 Main Street, Rockport on September 12 at 7:30 p.m., September 13 at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. and September 14 at 2:30 p.m.
In spring of 2015 the Theatre in the Pines, will produce a gala production of Romeo and Juliet.
Hi Joey,
After the long, cold winter, it is time to get outside and celebrate the spring! Folk Life Studio will present a free, participatory May Celebration – complete with live music, a maypole and morris dancers – on Sunday, May 18 at 1:00 PM on the green of the Gloucester UU Church, corner of Middle and Church Streets in Gloucester. This family friendly event will run for about an hour or so and feature songs and dances for all, including maypole dancing. Participants are encouraged to wear festive clothing and flowers. For additional information, contact folklifestudio@gmail.com.
This event was originally planned for Saturday, but due to the expected rain has been moved to Sunday.
Thanks!
Join us on Sunday, May 18th from 2:00 to 4:00 pm when we take the vintage Mark 5 Navy diving suit out of Paul Harling’s Diving Locker and give it a test run off the end of our pier. Commercial diver John Harvey (pictured) will wear the brass diving helmet and the durable rubberized canvas suit in this working equipment demonstration. Experts will be on-hand to answer questions. Come join in the fun! This is a free family event, and no registration is required.
A good show for a good cause.
Join us for Shakespeare’s first of the sitcoms, four
hundred years before I Love Lucy. Thursday, May 15
is pay what you will to benefit the CAST Scholarship
Fund, which has given three $500 awards since 2012.
Cevicos Medical Mission
Dear Friends:
I am writing to you on behalf of a medical mission group that I am involved with. For the past three years, I have traveled with the Holy Family Parish Medical Mission in an effort to assist the poor in the Dominican Republic.
We are preparing for our next upcoming trip in May. This will be my third mission trip, and each trip with these people has changed my life in a most positive way.
The care and love that we bring down to the Dominican citizens that we visit is a gift, not only to them, but also to those of us who are fortunate enough to share it with them. And although only a handful of our team actually boards the plane and works with the people, the thoughts, prayers and gifts of so many of you come with us. We could not do this alone. Without the support of our friends and neighbors, it would not be possible.
During the trip we offer three medical clinics. Members of our team include doctors and nurses, and we bring with us a vast supply of medicine and treatment supplies. We treat people for heart disease, diabetes, infections, and parasites (due to lack of clean drinking water). We offer each person that comes to us fluoride treatments, along with other treatments and supplies, so that they may live their lives in a healthier and more sustainable manner.
For the majority of the people that visit our clinics, this is their only chance to be seen by a professional doctor. Each person sits with a doctor, who gives them a thorough exam. Approximately 800 people will be seen by our team in one weeks’ time. These exams can identify issues that otherwise would have been ignored. Our doctors can both save lives and help to extend others.
As you know, I usually like to bring shoes with me, which I hand out to barefoot children when we go out into the campos, which is where the poorest of the poor live. Many of you have helped me with this by donating money or dropping shoes off at my door. Your generosity overwhelms me. However, on our last trip, it was apparent to the whole team that there was another branch of service that was greatly needed. During our home visits, we identified a group of people who could get not get to the clinics, because they were bedridden. These are the elderly, many of whom if they were here in the states would be in hospice care or nursing homes. They are just like our elderly. They are parents and grandparents, and favorite aunts and uncles. Loved by their families, just like we love ours.
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But with limited resources, the ability to care for them is at best challenging. This May, we want to bring these people packages, which would include items to assist with their homebound issues, such as incontinence: bedpans, urinals, clean bedding, ointments for bedsores or pressure ulcers, ointments for skin rash, etc. We can’t fix these poor people’s worst issues, but we can absolutely show them, with a few moments of our time, that they are loved, and that someone cares. Just by reaching out to them and trying. We just want to make their lives more comfortable. Sometimes, they just need a hug. J
One of my favorite sayings, which was used many times by Mother Teresa: “Do no great things, Do only small things with great love.” I believe in these words. And I think that if a lot of the people that I love can share some small things, we can make a tremendous difference in these people’s lives.
We don’t have funding for this project yet, since it is a new part of the mission trip, but today I am asking you for help. If anything I have said here speaks to you, please send a donation to this very worthy cause.
It can be mailed to:
“Holy Family Parish, Cevicos Mission”
C/O Nina Goodick
24 Thurston Point Road
Gloucester, MA 01930
Thank you.
Very Sincerely,
Nina J. Goodick
EVENTS – EEL MIGRATIONS IN MILLBROOK – PASSAGE FROM SARGASSO SEA TO BRIAR SWAMP, ROCKPORT MASSACHUSETTS
TIME
May 24, 9.00 -11.00
ORGANIZATION
NOAA Fisheries
WEBSITE
www.nero.noaa.gov/, and http://www.habitat.noaa.gov/restoration/regional/northeast
The public will be introduced to the eels of Millbrook, the site of Rockport’s first European-American residents and the center of their early industry.
With the help of the Millbrook Meadow Conservancy and Rockport High School students, Eric Hutchins, of the NOAA Fisheries Restoration Center, will provide a tour of Rockport, Massachusett’s historic Millbrook. Members of the public will be introduced to elvers at the beach, as they enter the brook after traveling over 1,000 miles from the Sargasso Sea. Eels will be located and displayed temporarily in tanks within the Millbrook Meadow. Human impacts on the brook, first settled by European-Americans in 1699, will be discussed, highlighting the importance of rivers in early settlements for drinking, watering gardens, energy production and waste disposal. Ongoing efforts to restore the brook will be discussed, with a show-and-tell of the new fish ladder on a rebuilt dam. Attendees will learn about the many challenges to resident and visiting eels, rainbow smelt, and other migratory diadroumous fish populations trying to make their way between fresh and saltwater habitats.
Kim Alemian Drawing/Painting as Process
May 21 – 22
· « OIL PAINTING FOR ALL LEVELS with Ron Straka Spring Session II
· WATERCOLOR FOR ALL LEVELS with Caleb Stone Spring Session II »
12 Main Street – Rockport Ma 01966
978-546-6604
Members: $175 Non-Members: $200
We will explore the process of drawing moving into painting, as an open ended activity. Through the investigation of layering, scraping, and mark making, we will question how much information is needed to describe the motif. The importance of proportion and other formal elements will be emphasized. Students will use a variety of materials. The importance of the relationship of drawing to painting will be talked about throughout the class. We will refer to master paintings with discussion and examples of how various processes were employed in creating works of art in recent history. Subject matter will include still-life & interior.
WE’RE HAVING A CELEBRATION: THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FISK ORGAN AT ST. JOHN’S CHURCH
This Sunday, May 18, at 4 pm we’re celebrating the 25th anniversary of our C. B. Fisk organ, “Opus 97“. Thomas Baugh from Roanoke, Virginia will be playing works of Mendelssohn, Gibbons, Bach, Pinkham, Hancock and Franck. The program is free and open to the public, followed by a reception. St. John’s Church is located at 48 Middle Street in Gloucester. The entrance to the church parking lot is at 33 Washington Street. The church is handicap accessible, with a ramped entrance to the right of the Middle Street door.
Thomas Baugh became Director of Music of Christ Episcopal Church in Roanoke in 1986. There, he directs adult and young people’s choirs, parish instrumentalists, and a Flemish handbell group. He received a Master of Music degree with distinction from Westminster Choir College in Princeton, NJ. He studied organ in the United States with John Mueller, Bruce Stevens, Eugene Roan, and in Lyon, France, with Louis Robilliard. Christ Church is the proud owner of Fisk organ, “Opus 124.”
J. S. Bach
Tom’s program includes music by the King of organ composers, Johann Sebastian Bach, in the “Trio Sonata number 4 in E minor.” Bach wrote the most challenging music of his time and this piece has one voice in each hand, with an equal voice to be played by the feet. Tom will also play an engaging piece by the legendary Boston composer Daniel Pinkham, who was organist at King’s Chapel, Boston, from 1958-2000. Tom will feature a favorite composer of Episcopal musicians, Gerre Hancock, with his “Meditation” on the legendary anthem (sung at the 10:30 am service) “Draw us in the Spirits’ Tether.” The program concludes with the monumental symphonic style “Choral No. 1 in E minor,” by Cesar Franck.
The Fisk Opus 97 at St. John’s is the church’s third pipe organ. As such, it is part of a distinguished legacy of organs and music in this church, which recently celebrated the 150th anniversary of it’s founding.
Last year we discovered in the Boston Evening Transcript of September 9, 1864 an article with a photo of the organ that was built when the church was new in 1864. The article says that the organ cost $1,000 and was created in Boston. From the photo, the organ appears to have a wooden screen with no pipes visible, clearly one manual, with 5-6 stops.
The second organ was made by the Estey Organ Company in 1907, Opus 434. Based in Brattleboro, VT, Estey made over 3,000 pipe organs between 1901 and 1950.
On January 25, 1984, Senior Warden Susan Richardson, Frances Fitch (then music director), Joan Hunter, organ committee chair and the Rev. Robert Bela, interim priest, gathered at the workshop of C. B. Fisk, Inc. to sign the contract for Opus 97.
Charles Fisk
Charles Fisk had met with the committee the previous year to make plans for the instrument. It was one of his fondest wishes to build a new organ for his own community. He died only five weeks before the signing. Mark Nelson, St. John’s current director of music, was a member of the Fisk workshop at the time the contract for the Opus 97 was signed. He remembers what a significant event this was, as it proved that the Fisk workshop would continue to flourish, even without its founder.
OPUS 97 was built in 1989, with additions completed in 1997. It consists of 18 voices, 23 ranks, and 1,044 pipes. Of that number, 398 have been retained, rebuilt and revoiced from the Estey organ installed at the turn of the previous century. Opus 97 is not considered a large organ. It was built on the same site as the previous two pipe organs, in the space laid out for it when the church was built.
More than half of the pipework is contained in the Swell division at floor level, with wooden vertical shades that open and close to allow for gradations in volume. This makes the organ especially adept at accompanying voices and playing the Anglian service. Opus 97 has been featured in a number of programs over the years, from Evensong to concerts to accompanying silent movies!
Visit our website for more information: St.JohnsGloucester.org
Date: May 20, 2014
Location: Essex Historical Society and Shipbuilding Museum
66 Main Street, Essex, MA 01929
Join us in Observance of the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War –for a Discussion led by James Witham
Hear about the remarkable story of the Union Gunboats during the Civil War. Gunboats were built to keep the Ohio, Missouri and Mississippi Rivers open to Union Traffic only. The Iron-Clad U.S.S. Essex.was built to guard the shipyards during the construction of these gunboats.
Photos, Discussion, Audience Participation
1. Newly launched “City Class” Gunboats at Cairo, Illinois. These are just three of eight gunboats purposely built to keep the Ohio, Missouri, and Mississippi rivers open to Union traffic only. The USS Essex was built to guard the shipyards during their construction.
Rockport’s Motif No.1 Day, Today!

The festival goes on, rain or shine. Motif No.1 Day activities will take place as scheduled, so we will see you downtown!
The Motif No.1 Day Festival celebrates the arts in Rockport. And all of it centers around the fishing shack-artist’s studio-tourist attraction that started it all: an old building right on one of Rockport’s historic wharves that was painted so often by artists at the turn of the last century that it was given the nickname Motif No.1 by Lester Hornby, a well know artist and instructor of the period. Film, poetry, dance, music, and art-making activities are all a part of the festival, as well as historical presentations and a 5k and Fun Run, with proceeds to benefit Rockport Public Schools’ wellness initiatives.
Motif No.1 Day takes place from 10am to 5pm on Saturday, May 17th in downtown Rockport. The Motif No.1 Day 5k starts at 9am.
For more information, links, and a complete list of activities, visit the Rockport Arts Festivals page here.
I am delighted to add that my Good Harbor Seal PSA was accepted to the RedShed film Festival. I’ll be there tomorrow afternoon and evening to catch all the short films by local Cape Ann filmmakers. I hope to see you there!
Cape Ann Milkweed Project Seed Pickup and Information Day is Sunday, May 18th, from 9:30 to Noon
Female Monarch curling her abdomen around to the underside of a Marsh Milkweed leaf (Asclepias incarnata) to deposit an egg. Photographed in Gloucester
Our milkweed and New England Aster seed pickup day is this coming Sunday from 9:30 to noon at Captain Joe and Sons. Captain Joe’s is located at 95 East Main Street and you can find directions posted on their website here. Thanks so much to Joey for hosting the event at the dock. Looking forward to seeing everyone!
Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team Needs Help Moving Tomorrow, Saturday
Rick Roth and I had a fun time at WGBH Radio this afternoon, with Jim, Emily and Will. Nice people, fun time.
We got the office furniture assembled. Thanks to Jean, Colleen, Anna, Tracy, John, Andrew, Jeff, Clayton, Nick, Melissa, Emily, Amber and Jessica. And thanks to Dierdre for the wonderful snacks.
WE STILL NEED HELP WITH THRE MOVE- ITS TOMORROW
The big office move is scheduled for this Saturday:
We (CAVPT and Kestrel) are moving our office from 15 Lexington Ave. in Magnolia to 186 Main St. Gloucester in Brown’s Mall right across from the police station. The plan is to do this on Saturday, May 17th. We will need help with this. If you have a truck or a van, we could use that too.
Start gathering your donations for the Big Giant Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team/Kestrel Educational Adventures Yard Sale.
Saturday May 24, 2014, 9am-1pm. St. Peter’s Square, Gloucester
Bring your donations to St. Peter’s Square at 7am on the morning of the sale. No TVs or computers please. We will need some volunteers to work at the sale too. And, we will have some stuff at our Magnolia office which will need to be moved from the office to the sale early in the morning on Saturday. How early? Depends on how many volunteers and trucks we get.
Next show: STILL NEED HELP WITH THIS
Sunday May 18, 2014 2-3pm
Snakes of New England and the World- one hour live animal presentation.
The barn at Castle Hill on the Crane Estate, Ipswich MA
Guess what?… We’ll need volunteers.
We still need lots of volunteers in the next couple of weeks, so please get in touch and let me know if you can help out. AND… WE STILL NEED A TREASURER.
Thanks, Rick
we only have one earth, save it
Dads and Doughnuts at the Sawyer Free Library
Fish on Fridays
The Fish on Fridays series is a collaboration between Gloucester photographers Kathy Chapman and Marty Luster. Look for various aspects of Gloucester’s centuries-old fishing industry highlighted here on Fridays.
Kathy and Marty were back at the Gloucester Marine Railways this week to check out the Schooner Adventure with Restoration Coordinator Geoff Deckebach. Caulking and other repairs and improvements are underway as the restoration of Gloucester’s flagship continues.
Schooner Adventure fished for cod, haddock and halibut in Georges and Browns Banks from the year she was built, 1926, until 1953. Carrying a sailing rig, diesel engine, and 14 dories, Adventure was an exceptionally fast and able vessel, the ultimate evolution of the fishing schooner. She was a “highliner,” the biggest moneymaker of all time, landing nearly $4 million worth of cod and halibut during her fishing career. When retired in 1953, Schooner Adventure was the last American dory fishing trawler left in the Atlantic.
In 1954, Schooner Adventure was retired from fishing and converted into a windjammer for passenger cruising, removing the engine, propeller, and prop shaft. Adventure carried passengers along the coast of Maine until 1987. Her grace, beauty, and prowess as a sailing vessel earned her the nickname “Queen of the Windjammers.” National Historic Landmark (1988-present)
Captain Jim Sharp donated Adventure in 1988 to the people of Gloucester to be preserved as Gloucester’s historic tall ship and to be used to inform and educate the public about the important role of fishing in American history.
From http://schooner-adventure.org/?page_id=35
B+W photos © Marty Luster 2014
http://www.slicesoflifeimages.wordpress.com
Color photos © Kathy Chapman 2014
http;//www.kathychapman.com
Cape Pond Ice
Great happenings down at Cape Pond Ice. Wonderful turnout for all the exciting announcements. “Re-Inventing Ourselves as a Player & Partner in the New Gloucester Harbor Economy.”
Artist Spotlight Series – Linda Sojda
I have recently had the great pleasure of getting to know Linda Sojda while photographing her work and designing her website. She is an amazing artist and just a joy to be around. If you have a chance, visit her studio at Cripple Cove Studios, 97 East Main Street (at the left of the driveway leading down to Capt. Joe & Sons), or visit her website at http://www.lindasojda.com to see more of her work.
Linda’s art practice examines color, pattern, shape and texture and what happens when these elements are juxtaposed. The unexpected combinations give her painting direction. Her work is non-representational and yet it is very much inspired by the landscape. Nature’s organic patterns and shapes, contrasting hues of color and unintended markings offer vast possibilities.
She works in mediums that foster exploration and unforeseen outcomes. Oil and wax can be blended, layered, scraped, and sanded allowing transparencies and depth of field. She also paints with sumi ink and gouache on Japanese Okawara paper. With this medium she deconstructs Chinese characters and uses the gestural brushstrokes and negative space to shape an image. This approach results in paintings that are direct, immediate and bold, as you can see from the examples above.
In kindergarten, Linda painted a bowl of fresh fruit sitting on her teacher’s desk. Miss Gray liked her painting so much that she showed it to the principal. He must have liked it too because he had it framed and hung it in his office. She couldn’t believe her eyes. Linda has had many great days in her life, but that day is still one of the best. Since that time, making art has never really left her. Painting in her studio, visiting a gallery or new exhibit, gathering with her artist’s group or sketching ideas at home, art has been a constant in her life, for which she is beyond grateful.
Linda grew up on the shores of Lake Erie, about fifty miles west of Buffalo, New York. In college she studied art earning a degree in art education. She taught art K-12 in New York, Michigan and California. At the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem she is an educator to both adults and children. Today she lives in Gloucester and has maintained a studio at Cripple Cove Studios in East Gloucester for several years where she leads small workshops and welcome visitors. Linda is an active member of the Rocky Neck Art Colony and currently serves on its board of directors and on the Goetemann residency committee.
Linda’s work has been exhibited in solo and group shows throughout the United States and Canada.
E.J. Lefavour
Music This Weekend – Get out and enjoy
TONIGHT, Friday, May 16, 2014
MIRANDA RUSSELL
Live and Unplugged: Fundraiser for Manchester Essex Regional Schools Spaulding Education Fund
4 Rosedale Ave., Manchester, MA 01944
|
| 7:00 pm LINDA AMERO
Menage a Trio with special guest Jack Senier (piano) & & Mark Pucci (bass)
118 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-7888 FREE SHOW
|
| 8:00 pm 1964: THE TRIBUTE
1964: The Tribute takes their audiences on a musical journey to a nostalgic era in rock history
37 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966
Phone: 978-546-7391 |
| 8:00 pm BRITANNICA
51 Rocky Neck Ave, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-4123 FREE SHOW
|
8:30 pm THE HOT TUB PIRANHAS
with special guest Frank Hawks
3 Porter Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-0131 FREE SHOW
|
| 9:00 pm DREADROCKS
27-29 Harbor Loop, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-6342 FREE SHOW
|
| 9:00 pm THE RUNAROUND SOUND
65 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-281-6565 FREE SHOW
|
| 9:00 pm EVAN GOODROW BAND
Rock & Soul
25 Rogers Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-281-0223 FREE SHOW
|
| 9:00 pm LIVE DEAD – A TRIBUTE TO THE GRATEFUL DEAD
Live Dead at The St Lawrence Literary Society
(It’s a bar!) 11 Fairview Ave., Ipswich, MA
Phone: 978 356 3125 |
9:30 pm NED AND THE BIG BABIES rock pop rock indie
40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA
Phone: 978-283-9732 |
TOMORROW, Saturday, May 17, 2014
| 10:00 am MOTIF NO.1 DAY
Instrument Petting Zoo
37 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966
Phone: 978-546-7391 FREE SHOW
|
| 12:00 pm MOTIF NO.1 DAY: WENHAM STREET BRASS
Trio of young professionals dedicated to engaging audiences through performance and education.
37 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966
Phone: 978-546-7391 FREE SHOW
|
| 6:00 pm DAN KING
Early Show with special guests
40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA
Phone: 978-283-9732 FREE SHOW
|
7:30 pm ROOTS 66
with special guest Mark Earley
38 Gloucester Ave., Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: (978) 283-4808 FREE SHOW
|
| 8:00 pm SAFETY Bridge Deck Mile Marker One 75 Essex Avenue, Gloucester, MA 01930 Phone: (978) 283-2122 FREE SHOW |
| 8:00 pm CHERYL WHEELER & MELISSA FERRICK
Leaders of the New England folk music scene
37 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966
Phone: 978-546-7391 |
| 8:30 pm SUGARTONES
51 Rocky Neck Ave, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-4123 FREE SHOW
|
| 9:00 pm DON’T CALL ME SHIRLEY Captain Carlo’s 27-29 Harbor Loop, Gloucester, MA 01930
Phone: 978-283-6342 FREE SHOW
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| 9:00 pm JOE UNIS BAND Dog Bar 65 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930 Phone: 978-281-6565 FREE SHOW |
| 9:00 pm EDDY’S SHOE Get Groovy Minglewood Tavern 25 Rogers Street, Gloucester, MA 01930 Phone: 978-281-0223 FREE SHOW |
| 9:30 pm SARAH SWAIN The Rhumb Line 40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA Phone: 978-283-9732 FREE SHOW |

The Dive Locker’s Live Diving Event!
The Dive Locker’s Diving Demonstration off Webster Pier!
Sunday, May 18, 2014, 2:00 pm
No registration required. : Free
Audience: Family Event
Join us on May 18th from 2:00 to 4:00 pm when we take the vintage Mark 5 Navy diving suit out of Paul Harling’s Diving Locker and give it a test run off the end of our pier. Commercial diver John Harvey will wear the brass diving helmet and the durable rubberized canvas suit in this working equipment demonstration. Experts will be on-hand to answer questions. Come join in the fun!
This is a free family event. For more information, visit www.maritimegloucester.org or call (978) 281-0470.
Director of Program Integration
Maritime Gloucester
23 Harbor Loop Gloucester, MA 01930
mmurray-brown@maritimegloucester.org – 978.281.0470
Scenes of Cape Ann – Open House art show at Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation
Scenes of Cape Ann – Open House art show at
Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation
Open House art show, “Scenes of Cape Ann,” will displayed selected art on Saturday, May 17 from 2-3 p.m. in the lobby of Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation, 292 Washington Street, Gloucester.
Refreshments will be served.
In collaboration with Care Ann Giclee and donations from local artists, Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, is looking to bring the residents of the memory impaired unit back home through a program entitled,
“Scenes of Cape Ann.”
Several local artists have donated numerous images of familiar places and events to bring memories and comfort to the seniors on the Alzheimer’s unit.
Seacoast Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, a member of Lahey Health Senior Care, is located on the campus of Addison Gilbert Hospital, offering a friendly and elegant setting with an extensive program of short-term rehabilitation, skilled nursing and long-term care.
For further information about Scenes of Cape Ann, please contact Alison Cox at 978-283-0300, ext. 124.
The Annisquam exchange
Wedge Salad with Buttermilk Blue Cheese Dressing
Wedge Salad with Buttermilk Blue Cheese Dressing
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