Monday, April 25, 2011

John Muir House

John Muir House

4202 Alhambra Ave.
Martinez, CA 94553
http://www.nps.gov/jomu/index.htm


On April 16th I visited the John Muir House in Martinez, CA.  John Muir was a writer and nature conservationist born in Scotland and who came to California as a young man.  He spent many years traveling and exploring the state and fell in love with the Yosemite valley.  When he married the daughter of a fruit rancher in Martinez he settled down in the home that I went to.  He still continued to do some traveling and campaigned for the protection of the natural habitat.  It was after he took President Theodore Roosevelt camping in the Yosemite valley that he convinced the president that it should be a national park.

The 16th was an event for the joint celebration of Muir's birthday and Earth Day.  There were bands playing, booths with fun activities for children and information about caring for our earth, admission to the house was free (it is usually three dollars for adults 16 and over and free for children) The curator of the museum has done a good job of mixing the decor of what you would expect to see in a historical house with rotating exhibits so that something new can be experienced and learned about Muir with each visit.


My YouTube Video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRVu-88dXk0

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John Muir Association:
http://www.johnmuirassociation.org/


National Historic Site:
http://www.nps.gov/jomu/index.htm

Monday, April 18, 2011

Crocker Art Museum

Crocker Art Museum
216 O Street
Sacramento, CA
crockerartmuseum.org

When visiting this museum the first thing you notice is it the architecture which in a way is a work of art it's self.  With the new addition there is a sharp contrast between the new cool sleek modern building and the formal opulence of the original 1800's house.  The Crocker family donated the home to the city after the death of E.B. Crocker (the brother of the Crocker who was a member of the Big Four who funded the Trans Pacific Railroad).  It was then that it became an art gallery and since then there have been two expansions, one in the 50's and another one which was finished earlier this year.

Personally I enjoyed the Impressionist art but then again, I always do.  The artists that caught my eye were, Mary Curtis Richardson, Edward Butler, Paul Burde and Wilhelm Marc.  The current temporary exhibit at the Crocker is called "The Inferno of Innocents" by Gottfried Helnwein.  It's brilliant, the emotion and thoughts provoked my a mere image were astounding.  I felt myself being drawn in and it was all I could do to keep myself from reaching out touching the canvass.  Each painting was larger than life, almost the size of a movie screen, and so realistic that it wasn't until I was only inches away that I could make out the brush strokes.

Going from one wing of the museum to the next it is like stepping back in time by way of museum display technique.  In the modern wing the walls are all white and each piece has plenty of space surrounding it and the lighting gives each and every piece of art the appearance of being center stage.  As you move to the original wing art is everywhere from the intricately carved bannisters to the beautiful wallpaper, which it all of the paintings were striped away would most likely be left with squares of evidence that they were once there, and before your eyes even have a chance to finally rest upon the century old oil paintings there is more art in the form of elaborate guided frames.