Showing posts with label mural. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mural. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

February 15, 2012



Well, as some of you may know, my camera - a beloved Olympus D-620L - along with my entire camera bag was stolen. I was robbed in SOWA in the South End, which can be a rough neighborhood with thieves, drug dealers, prostitutes, addicts, sex offenders and the insane. Plus the artists, cops, art dealers, yuppies and loft-living lawyers. That was the start to my new year. I'd had that camera since 1999, the first affordable (a grand or so over ten years ago) digital SLR that came on the market. That camera had heart. How could I ever replace it?

Anyway, so now I'm cameraless, for the first time since I began photographing. But I'm looking around. I've always wanted a Leica M. That was Cartier Bresson's camera, of course. The M9 is digital, $10,000 with a lens or two.

Walking around seeing pictures and making notes, taking word pictures.

There's a woman who I see almost every day, sometimes several times, in the vicinity of the Prudential Center or Copley Place. I think she's an Indian from the Andes, but I'm not sure. She has a large face topped with a thick thatch of matted brown hair and slightly slanting eyes. She dresses in thick, warm-looking layers of yellow, red and blue ponchos under which she carries two bulging white cotton bags. She's always hatless and wears sockless sandals in every weather. Her legs are like tree trunks.

She often does a little dance standing in place, swaying and stepping from side to side, sometimes smiling, and falls to sleep standing up, eyes closed, head thrown slightly back, never losing her balance, eyes suddenly snapping open as if out of a distant dream. Sometimes I see her eating at Shaw's supermarket when I'm shopping.

Speaking of which, what is it with Whole Foods and their wretched prepared foods commanding premium prices? Their steam table offerings are awful - they can't even make a decent American Chop Suey - and the over-priced prefab refrigerated sandwiches (who wants a cold sandwich anyway?) and deli items are DOA.


Image ... Map mural (detail) on a traffic signal control box. Across from the Stony Brook T station in Jamaica Plain.

Friday, March 11, 2011

March 11. 2011



Quote of the Day
Defeat is not the worst of failures. Not to have tried is the true failure.
George Edward Woodberry

Image ... Storefront church mural, Dorchester.

Monday, October 4, 2010

October 4, 2010



Quote of the Day
Fortune favors the prepared mind.
Louis Pasteur

Image ... Two trees. Roxbury, Mass.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

September 18, 2010



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Image ... Mural. Roxbury, Mass.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

September 15, 2010



Quote of the Day
Life is a long lesson in humility.
James M. Barrie

Image ... Holy Street. Dorchester, Massachusetts.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

July 29, 2010



Quote of the Day
It takes a great man to be a good listener.
Calvin Coolidge

The quote of the day is perfect for this image. Keep cool with Coolidge.

Image ... Mural at Bob the Chef's. South End, Boston.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

July 26, 2010



Bob the Chef's on Columbus Ave. is no more and hasn't been for some time. Would that it had held in there, after decades, like Charlie's (maintained by a dynastic Greek family) down the street so that we had one remaining soul food spot in the South End. Since its demise it's gone through 2 upscale jazz club concepts and both folded (the Stork CLub, a doomed name, lasting less than a year), and is about to embark on a third incarnation.

Cleaned the house on Sunday then spent the afternoon at the garden. Too hot to do a damn thing except read, relax and water - myself and the plants. The free ice machine at HoJo's (2 blocks away across from Fenway Park) has been fixed! Now it shoots cubes like nobody's business. So happy! Had ice water all afternoon.

Quote of the Day
Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.
P.J. O'Rourke

Image ... Mural at Bob the Chef's, South End.

Sunday, April 18, 2010

April 18, 2010



Writing about bouldering. An unexpected and exciting subject, a forgotten passion from childhood. Sparked by three sites - the glacial erratics in Franklin Park, cliffs at Roxbury Crossing and the Puddingstone formations in the park at Walnut and Townsend Streets in Roxbury. All of which I'm curious to climb, just like a kid.

Started a new Radio Roofscape show, Ambient Air. The first installment is the Ibiza Mix - Oakenfold to Ligeti with lots of strange, chill stops in between.



Image ... Mural. Roxbury, Mass.

Friday, April 16, 2010

April 16, 2010



Image ... Two Trees. Roxbury, Mass.

Friday, March 19, 2010

March 19, 2010



Pete and I are working on a project at The Brewery complex in JP. It's a dense warren of various thriving small businesses located in the old Haffenreffer Brewery on Amory Street near the Stony Brook T stop. The area used to be the center of the German immigrant community in Boston and there were five breweries close by, of which Haffenreffer was the largest, along with other homey amenities of Germanic life - musical societies, social clubs, schools, etc.

The brand no longer exists, or at least not here, replaced by Sam Adams Beer, The Jamaica Plain School of Dance, Ula's Cafe, Bikes Not Bombs, Mike's Gym, Boston Pretzel Bakery, Milky Way Cafe, Bella Luna, etc. - 50 businesses in all employing 250 people. It's a really pleasant place with constant coming and going and Ula's is always packed. Good pea soup, almost as good as Charlie's. And the sun is out, spring is here. Smiling, relaxed faces everywhere after this rough winter.

Image ... Mural by Elizebeth Nicholson and Hilary Alder. On a utility box at Lamartine and Boylston Streets, Jamaica Plain across from the Stony Brook T Station.

Friday, January 22, 2010

January 22, 2010





Programmed the following late night / early morning indie pop set ...
Pernice Brothers - Working Girls
Dinosaur Jr. - Green Mind
Lemonheads - Luka
Buffalo Tom - Never Noticed
Gin Blossoms - Follow You Down
Gigolo Aunts - Where I Find My Heaven
Juliana Hatfield - Law of Nature
Pixies - Ana
Shins - Phantom Limb
Nico - Roses in the Snow
West Indian Girl - Miles from Monterey
... to immediate responses: U.S., Brazil, France, Germany, Thailand. Gained 3 listeners after the great Beethoven disaster. That Nico song is gorgeous. Just noticed that over half of these are by Boston bands. Not intended.

Watched Kurt and Courtney last night, being tired with an utterly idle mind. Good for the tired with utterly idle minds. Did he trip or was he pushed? Qui gives a shit? Nirvana was among the most boring of bands - and Hole, oh please.

Peter and I are working on a job in Bay Village. Had lunch at Mike and Patty's before we began yesterday, our new favorite spot. Mike asked if we could do a job for him. Of course. We were working in The Village (as I've never heard it refered to) again today. Brisk biking there and back again - 36°, hell, a heatwave compared to last week.

Image ... Mission Hill Mural, Boston.