Wanted to let you know that the Rocky Neck Art Colony Winter Show, which is normally located on Main St. in Gloucester for the month of December, will be located this year at The Cultural Center on Rocky Neck. From Dec 1 through Dec 23, Thurs – Sun, 11am to 6pm, The Winter Show is open with artwork, pottery, jewelry, ornaments, etc. There is a reception each weekend, for a total of four fun events in December for you to enjoy! The Cultural Center is located in the former Christian Science Church at 6 Wonson St, Rocky Neck.
The opening reception is this Saturday, Dec 1 from 6 to 8 pm
Hope to see you there! Please pass this on to anyone you know that may be interested.
Thanks!
PEACE!
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It was such a nice day for a stroll in Ravenswood Park. We did not see any Ravens but we did catch a peek at a Pileated Woodpecker! If you look closely you can see it in the center of the tree photo.
Best-Janet
Sunet From Niles Beach Nov 23 photo by Anthony Marks
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Hi Joey, I am sure you are inundated with windmill photos, but I took these this evening (11.23). I only had my little point and shoot camera, but it did ok capturing the windmill being built now. I thought it was great that they have a stand with markers for people to use to sign the blades. Amazing to get up close to one of the 45 meter blades. And to think this one is smaller than the one at Varian. M.A. Barker
Peggy Russell (POP Gallery), Kirstin Myers (of Downtown Gloucester), and Kat, the Star Clam Lady.
Stuffed Clams that we served tonight at my gallery, made by Kat, a passionate professional. Gotta do it.
We had a great opening last night with Kat’s stuffed clams, Ginny and Nannette’s stuffed mushrooms, and Debbie Demarkis’s meat, cheese, and marinated sun-dried tomato platters, And wonderful Joy, our Angel Reader. Although we had 50+ people here, Kat’s clams, which were a huge hit, were not completely consumed, because she brought so many. Tonight I gave three of them to Steve, (one of the owners of Jalapeños). So I’m opening up the gallery for stuffed clams, and other leftovers for a mug up tomorrow at morning 10:30 am. I also have Belgian Ring Rasperry pastry to put out. Low key:, so eat, drink, and relax before the Santa Parade. BYO coffee. I’ve got soda, cider, beer and wine. All FOB’s and FOG’s (friends of the GMG Blog and Friends of the Gallery) are welcome, plus everyone else, to come in to eat, drink, and hang out. Fred
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A native of Normandy, Gide published his first novel at 22 and went on to write dozens more, as well as plays, essays and autobiographical works, receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1947. Controversy swirled around him almost his entire life, principally for his open attraction to men much younger than himself, and for his marriage to his cousin, never consummated, while siring a daughter with another woman. In his politics Gide seemed to worship Soviet Communism from afar, until he visited Russia in the 1930’s, after which he became its vocal critic. He spent a significant portion of his life in the then French colonies of North and Central Africa and passed the bulk of the Second World War in Tunisia, but ultimately returned to Paris before his death.
I was here at the Gauthier Gallery at 6AM! Paintings of 5 artists including my work are on display as well as jewelry, painted silk scarfs and other gift items.. Elizabeth also gives Painting Parties for adults and children. The children really enjoyed themselves this morning. Come down and have a look at this new gallery. Alice Gardner
Passport’s Fresh from the Oven and Always Much-Anticipated Light and Puffy Popovers
My darling daughter Liv and I stopped at Passports for lunch on the way to the train station in Boston. Although brief, it was wonderful to have her home for the holiday. Now 23, when she was a tiny tot she announced Thanksgiving was her favorite holiday, and it continues to be so. Lunch was fantastic; she had the chock-full-of lobster meat Captain Joe’s lobster roll and I had the simply scrumptious shrimp and vegetable saute.
A lovely sign for a lovely evening ~ Passports upcoming Wine Dinner Event. For more information call the restaurant at 978.281.3680.
A group of us from Good Morning Gloucester are the guest artists at Passports for the months of November and December and all our photos would make wonderful gifts. Stop into Passports and have a bite to eat while enjoying our photography show!
Clockwise from left, Kim Smith Monarch Butterflies at Dawn, Eastern Point, $85.00; Donna Ardizonni, $100.; Kim again-Monarch Butterflies at Seaside Goldenrod, 85.00; center; Joey C’s Burnham House, Essex, $135.00.
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I brought a surprise for my father to Thanksgiving dinner — and it made him happy. Back in 1962 & ’63 our family lived in Céligny Switzerland, not far from Geneva, an experience that broadened all of our horizons more than we could ever have imagined. Among many other things, my father and I discovered the wonder and delight of European cheeses — hundreds of them. One of his favorites was Bel Paese, a semi-soft Italian cheese (originally made to compete with soft French cheeses) that we would get at a local cheese shop.
So when The Cave opened on Main St., I asked Laura, the owner, if she had any Bel Paese. She didn’t but was happy to order it for me. She also ordered Appenzeller, a Swiss cheese I fell in love with at 7 years old. Here’s a video of Vickie tasting the cheeses and wine we got on our first trip to The Cave.
(Since then, we’ve learned how to pronounce the name of the wine. It sounds like Sarah Harris and that’s how I remember it — my first girlfriend was named Sarah.)
OK, back to the story: we brought a chunk of Bel Paese to Thanksgiving dinner this year and you should have seen the expression on my father’s face. Soft, buttery, with a unique aromatic flavor, this simple taste transported him back to that wonderful cheese shop in Switzerland and we began reliving adventures from 50 years ago.
That’s why I shop locally. A personal connection with the owner of a local shop is priceless.
Last year, I wrote a letter to the Gloucester Daily Times entitled Occupy Main St., with another story about shopping locally and I was surprised at comments from people who would only by locally made goods. That, to me, is going too far.
I don’t expect that everything I buy is going to be made locally. Honestly, that’s impractical and undesirable. I like European cheeses and wines. And I love chocolate and coffee, neither of which grows around here. More importantly, I’m certainly not going to wait until late next spring to eat fresh fruits and vegetables.
Trade with the rest of the world has been a major economic driver of our country and our city since the beginning. If nobody outside of Gloucester ate the fish landed here, our economy would have been dead in the water hundreds of years ago. And the Boston Tea Party was a protest against taxing a staple that comes from thousands of miles away.
I love being able to go downtown and find exotic items with the magic that brings another time to life for my father and me. The fact that supporting local shops helps keep them in business and drives our local economy makes me feel even better about it.
Do you feel this good after having stood in line at the mall? Probably not. So let’s support our local merchants and then go out and party at local venues who support local musicians. There’s tons to do this weekend. Check out the local live music schedule here.
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Philip Storey, a native of Gloucester, has spent ten years collecting the work of Louis Blend, an amateur photographer who shot thousands of tourists with Gloucester’s Man at the Wheel statue between the years of 1923 and 1973. Blend, born Levi Blinder, was a shoemaker’s apprentice in Russia before emigrating to the US in 1914. He acquired a camera kit and was able to earn a living taking photos of tourists. He eventually settled the base of his operation at Gloucester’s Man at the Wheel statue where he spent the next five decades shooting local visitors. Storey will present a "snapshot" of this unique and underexposed facet of Gloucester lore.
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