Thursday, March 26, 2015

Welcome to Staten Island!











If you’re looking for a lovely little outing that will take you out of Manhattan and across the water, hop on the Staten Island Ferry where the ride is swift and the view tremendous and take a trip to The Staten Island Museum.






My intention was to see the work of a contemporary artist unknown to me, Betty Bressi.  Getting off the ferry, I followed the signs for the Staten Island Stadium and just a short uphill hike away (on ramps most of the trek) I saw the small three-story brick building that housed an odd but pleasing array of exhibits. 


Taking the elevator to the second floor to see Bressi’s exhibit 
I first passed a small glass display of delicate and decorative porcelain medallion plates that were the gift of Edith Susskind.  Close at handI heard the sound of children’s high-pitched, raucous and excited voices mixed with the steady authoritative commands of the teachers and museum aides urging the children to clean up their mess, gather up their things and line up in their rows.  They’d been encouraged to make their own creations in the style of Bressi’s work which included weaving colorful strips of patterned paper and punching out designs on an old Underwood typewriter that stupefied them.         
Why?  Because when they pressed lightly down on the keys nothing magically happened!

As museum workers efficiently began folding up tables, gathering up materials and putting things to right, now alone in the room I was delighted by the exuberance, creativity, and color of Bressi’s work  see for yourself *



Betty began her work as an artist in the 40s and 50s in the traditional sensewith gorgeous drawings and watercolors of the things around her a Japanese internment camp, flora and fauna.



















At some point she found her style and her stride and dove in to manipulating paper, wire, and characters on the typewriter to create her magical pieces.
























Though I love art, I am not artistic, but if I were, this is the piece I felt I might create if I only had the talent and eye of Ms Bressi.




And speaking of that Underwood typewriter  it reminded me of my lovely typewriter bracelet and so I decided to give it a go and see if I could create my own "letterset" ala Betty Bressi and here is what I did...

The rest of this little museum (now in the midst of a capital campaign to build a larger place for all their artifacts and combine with Snug Harbor) offered budding naturalists a look at the wonders of nature in their Hall of Science filled with fluorescent rocks, the delicacy of birds in their habitats and some crazy oddities preserved in glass jars  rather creepy to me, but probably fascinating to the younger set. 





Not being a naturalist, I was more engaged with their collection of Staten Island Ferries memorabilia  both the objects and the art that depicted the 100+ year-life of this maritime experience just a short subway ride away.







On this day I only had time to hustle back to the ferry and Manhattan  but not before sampling some of the easily accessible local eat’n’run restaurants across the street.  Fully expecting to sample the wares at a small Spanish café (not the full-scale highly reviewed Beso’s close by, but a little nondescript dive) featuring chicken, goat and ribs, but my nose led me to A & S Pizzeria  a local hangout where the slices looked divine.  I picked a delicious specialty slice, rich with finely chopped spinach and artichokes in a luscious Alfredo sauce.  Thin crust and crisp, the dough was still chewy enough to not feel as if I was eating a cracker.  I’m kicking myself that I didn’t order a whole pie!

With lots more to see and not enough time this time to explore, I’ll be back to visit Staten Island  
that  Small Town in the Big City... and you should too.

If you want to catch the Betty Bressi Retrospective, hurry  it's on view until April 8!


8 comments:

  1. Oddities in glass jars are always creepy to me, too. Love Bressi's work and Bell's drawings; the slumbering worker's bursting shirt is perfect. Keep these delightful montages coming!

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  2. Marge! I wish you could've seen this firsthand as my photos don't do the work justice...still I'm glad I got to share the experience. I saw so many other exhibits! Will try to post about more...thanks for the comment.

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    1. Thank you so much for your comment Obat! I'm glad you enjoyed this post and hope you'll read others about art or travel if that's what you enjoy most. I tend to think the family pieces are best but...to each his or her own! I will be posting again in the near future but there are over 200 posts already up so I hope you'll dig into those. Try "In the Absence of Trees" or "Father Didn't Know Best"...I hope you keep reading!

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  5. Do you suppose Cecil Bell would be disturbed to read the placard that calls his work 'gauche'? And doesn't the white shirted man on the subway look like Richard Nixon?
    As to your POV about not being an artist, I strongly suspect the coming months will prove assessment wrong.

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    Replies
    1. Ha! I'm NO artist but I certainly recognize and admire creative talents...and as far as "gauche" well you have an editor's eye when you caught that TYPO and I did not! I will email them if I can to hope they will make the correction to gouache.!

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