It
used to be that my blog would be very waterfall centric. I have not
lost my love of waterfalls but glass, glass, glass! The eastern
United States is a hotbed of studio glass and I'm loving it.
I
stopped for a night in Connecticut because it was close to New
Bedford Glass Museum. During the Victorian era, New Bedford was
known as the “Art Glass Headquarters of the Country”. I walked
in the doors of this beautiful mansion thinking this was going to be
architecturally wonderful. I found the museum down some steep stairs
into the basement. The docent must have been lonely down there
because he spent several hours giving me a personal tour. It was a
great tour, The museum's collection was quite extensive. I now know
many many facts and stories about New Bedford glass.
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This machine used a stone to etch glass |
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Amberina Glass |
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More Amberina |
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Burmese Glass |
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Horrible picture. This is a small little fountain. The glass bulbs would be filled with water and then you would type it over like a hourglass. The water would be forced to the top and shoot out the top. |
I
thought I would take a couple of days off from looking at glass and
headed to a church parking lot. The church opens it's parking lot to
campers for a small fee. I decided to parking lot camp because it is
located just a couple of miles north of Newport, Rhode Island.
During the Gilded Age, Newport was the summer place where the
ultra-rich built their 'cottages'. One of the stand-out 'cottages'
is the Breakers, built by a Vanderbuilt, which has 48 bedrooms. That
gives you an idea of how big they are. The price to tour three of
the mansions was $57 which was exorbitant given that I had toured
them many years before. I decided that I would just do the Cliff
Walk which goes between the mansions and the sea. I could get my
daily constitutional in and view the mansions at the same time.
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The Breakers |
Edward
Gorey had an very profortable career designing sets for Broadway and
illustrating over 200 book covers for Doubleday and Random House. He
had another darker side. He is also know for drawing vaguely
unsettling scenes in Victorian and Edwardian settings. I know him
from the animated intro to Masterpiece Theater. His house museum is
located in Sandwich, Massachusetts at the beginning of Cape Cod.
Masterpiece Intro
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The Gorey House |
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Cape Cod - you have to go see the ocean |
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Not much happening here - but the sun was out! |
Of course there was a visit to the Sandwich Glass Museum. They were more known for doing pressed glass. I
also visited the glass studio of David McDermott andd Yukimi
Matsumoto. David spent several hours with me telling me about
traditional Scottish glass blowing (different from what most glass
blowers are doing today). His garden was full of 'mistake glass',
glass that did meet his standards. It was beautiful.
My
last stop in Massachusetts was Concord. I had already been to all of
the 'Shot Heard Around The World' locations. This time, the only
place I went to was to Louisa May Alcott's Orchard House where she wrote
“Little Women”. Alcott was buddies with the big three of her
time Emerson, Hawthorne and Thoreau. She was a staunch Abolitionist, Women's Rights advocate and was the first woman to register to vote in concord in a school board election in 1879.
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Orchard House |
This was so interesting. Your posts are a total abstraction from depressing news and always filled with details of your cultural visits that highlight the impact of your travels.
ReplyDeleteLove your posts
ReplyDeleteI like following you on your travels. I learned about types of glass - beautiful!
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