Posted by: David Giacalone | September 28, 2013

Walkabout 2013 outtakes

lots of questions about the old cop car - Stockade Walkabout 2013 Editor’s Note: Some of my photos from Walkabout 2013 didn’t make our main posting, because they were a little too out of focus, or the subject had already gotten more than enough coverage.  Nonetheless, I liked them too much to keep them in my dustbin.  So, I’m capturing them in a Slideshow, where you won’t be able to examine an image too closely.  I hope you think they were worth sharing.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | September 24, 2013

Lawrence’s controversial Peruvian sibling

Cusco1945

– “Piel Roja,” in Plaza de Armas, Cusco, Peru (1945); photograph by Frank Scherschel for Life Magazine

  Here in the Schenectady Stockade, we love and honor our statue of Lawrence the Indian, which was formerly known as “No. 53 Indian Chief”, in the J.L.Mott Iron Works statuary catalog. (See Looking for Lawrence for more of the statue’s story.)  If we have a dispute concerning Lawrence, it is not about whether he belongs in the heart of the Stockade, but is likely to be a neighborhood kerfuffle over how to treat him with sufficient respect: e.g.:

  Are his feathers arrayed correctly?

Are our pink flamingos just too tackyimg_3404

Lawrence-Val-VanDyck . . Or, is it undignified to take him to a saloon for photo opportunities and fund-raising?

Lawrence-aloft   When we put ropes around Lawrence and remove him from his perch, it is to assure that the statue and pedestal are properly cleaned and restored to glory.  We also make Lawrence the center of many of the Stockade’s most important events, from its Outdoor Art Show to its Christmas Tree lighting, and he graces the masthead of this weblog.

Citizens of the Saylor Park neighborhood of Cincinnati have shown similar affection for Tecumseh, their version of No. 53 Indian Chief.  Their mayor, circa 1940, sold Tecumseh to an antiques dealer for $10, because it had been damaged in a couple of auto collisions and submerged by a flood.  Angered greatly, Saylor Park neighbors spent months finding the statue and restoring it to its tiny triangle park. In 2002, ninety years after he was first erected, Tecumseh was extensively repaired, recast in bronze, and rededicated. (See this Queen City Survey weblog post from 2008 about Cininnati’s “Tecumsheh”; and Barberton High School’s retelling of the story in their tribute to Chief Hopocan, the local incarnation of No. 53 Indian Chief.)

Map-Schdy-CuzcoTherefore, given our pride in the Stockade’s statue of Lawrence the Indian, I was surprised to learn recently that Cusco’s “sibling” of Lawrence is no longer standing atop a magnificent fountain in a grand plaza, as is depicted above in a 1945 Life Magazine photo.  Furthermore, long derided as “Piel Roja” (“Red Skin”), or “Azteca,” or “the Apache”, the Indian in Cusco, Peru, was not taken down due to deterioration, or to be refurbished; nor was he moved to a location more in scale with his size to grant the statue more prominence, like Lawrence at his Circle.

[Note: At the bottom of this posting you will find information about the names and spellings of the City of Cusco, in the Province of Cuzco, Peru.  It should not be confused with Mount Kisko, NY, which coincidentally also has a version of Mott’s No. 53 Indian Chief” on prominent display, named Chief Kisko.]*

Cusco-topplePielRojaPosterAfter being resented for more than half a century as a North American Indian inexplicably given a place of honor on an ancient Inca holy site, Cusco’s Red Indian was toppled by a drunken journalist and other Inka protestors, on September 5, 1969. The 2011 poster to the right, proclaims an Inca Revival. (click on it for a larger version) The last point declared on the poster states, as translated by Vicente Goyzueta:

“at dawn on Sep 5th 1969 the statue of the ‘aztec’ or ‘red skin’ is torn down, leaving from that moment the central fountain empty for more than 42 years. “

Screen shot 2013-09-10 at 9.14.10 AM The incongruous figure of a North American Indian — its facial features, clothing, and weaponry inapt as a replica of an Inka — can be traced back to a Philadelphian, Albert Giesecke.  Giesecke came to Cuzco as a young man and spent the rest of his life in Peru, serving as rector of Cusco University, city councilman and mayor of Cusco, and in several other roles, including as an advisor at the American Embassy in Lima.  Although seemingly steeped in the history and culture of Cusco, and in the tension between its Inkan and colonial past, Giesecke brought back No. 53 Indian Chief from a trip home, and placed it atop the fountain in Cusco’s main square at some time early in the second decade of the 20th Century.

CuscoInca-002 When “Piel Roja” was violently removed in 1969, the fountain was left with only a spout of water on top until 2011.  Many residents of Cusco, having the customary human tendency toward historical amnesia, forgot that the fountain originally had no statue for a half century, from its placement in 1871 until Giesecke’s “gift” of Piel Roja.  Thus, when the Cusco mayor surprised festival-goers by unveiling a large Inka on top of the Plaza de Armas fountain in 2011 (see image at head of this paragraph), he set off another round of controversy, with dissent from many sides.

Some of the dissenters said it was traditional to have no statue atop the fountain, they having no memory of Piel Roja; many argued that Cusco should not emphasize its Inka past so extensively and exclusively; some argued that the new statue was a rather silly representation of an Inkan; others pointed out — as we surely would here in the Stockade — that the mayor had not obtained the necessary permission from the Ministry of Culture under laws that protected important heritage sites like Cusco from inaprorpriate change; and, of course, some railed at the expense, and claimed the mayor did not have an appropriate source of funding.  See  “Inca statue raises more controversy one year later”, by Professor David Knowlton, at his Cuzco eats weblog (Aug. 15, 2012).; also see, photographer Jorge Sosa Bell’s “The Inca of Discord” (June 27, 2011)

Prof. Knowlton points out at Cuzco eats that billboards depicting Piel Roja have been placed near the fountain “to justify the claim that the statue does not violate the historical integrity of the fountain since there was once a statue there.”  Thus, we have the ironic resurrection of good old Indian Chief No. 53, the quintessential non-Inka native American, to help support the legitimacy of a statue erected to symbolize an Inkan Revival.

Map-Schdy-Cuzco My virtual travel almost 4000 miles due south from Schenectady to Cuzco began earlier this month, when I saw that someone had been referred to suns along the Mohawk from a website authored by Vicente Goyzueta, named Qosqo, Inkas’ Sacred Capital.”  I wish to heartily thank Sr. Goyzueta for linking to this weblog in his “Cusco/Kisko” piece, a webposting and photo-spread that focuses on the striking similarity — “mismo” — between the Cusco Indian and the fictional “Chief Kisko” in Mount Kisko, NY.  It also presents pictures of other versions of Indian Chief No. 53, including Lawrence.  More important to the success of this posting, when I contacted Vicente with questions about the Cusco Indian, he graciously told me more about the Indian, Cusco, Giesecke, and himself, in a series of email messages.  [Of course, as authors customarily exclaim, any misstatement of facts or misinterpretations of history herein, are solely the humble Editor’s responsibility.]

  Although a Cusco native, Vicente now lives in Tarrytown, NY, from which he traveled to Schenectady to see Lawrence.  He is proud of his “hometown”, where he was a professional tour guide for over a decade, and has written a guidebook that distills his knowledge.  Vicente describes his website as an “Homage to the Mystical, Magical, most Famous and oldest City of the American Continent.”  He wrote me that:

“Qosqo [now known as Cusco] is actually the oldest living city in the American Continent, with a continuous settlement of more than 3,000 years.“

That puts into perspective our Stockade history of just over 300 years, and our claim as the oldest residential neighborhood in the U.S.A.

 Vicente translated a paragraph from his essay about Albert Giesecke, to give us more background on the Cusco Indian:

“When Hiram Bingham [“discoverer” of Machupicchu] returned to Cusco for his last expedition in April 1915, he found in the center of the main square a memorial to an American Indian, it was a representation not of an Inka, but of an American Indian that Giesecke bought in Philadelphia. Many people in Cusco called the statue the “Red Skin Indian” or “Apache”, some said it was the representation of [16th Century Aztec Emperor] Cuauhtemoc that had been mistakenly sent to Cusco, while the one of Atahualpa [the last sovereign emperor of the Inca Empire before the Spanish Conquest] that was supposed to go to Cusco was sent to Mexico.”

Screen shot 2013-09-10 at 9.10.03 AM . . . Cusco-NoStatue . .CuscoInka

– fountain shown with Piel Roja [L], without a statue [M] and with its golden Inka, erected 2011, which is also controversial  –

In addition, Vicente wrote me in an email message:

 “When I was a little kid I was impressed by the Indian statue in the Main Square of Cusco, later I learned that it was pulled down by a drunken journalist who did not like it. Once in NY, my sister told me about the story of Chief Kisko but I did not believe that it was an Inca placed there by mistake.”

 Skoll-LawrenceFlamingos Please allow me to close with a subject that may seem like a bit of a tangent: flamingos. My introduction to the Cusco Indian came about shortly after our recent Outdoor Art Show, where the fabric art exhibit of Beverly Skoll had got me thinking about Lawrence’s pink flamingo history.  Her colorful piece “2 flamingos revisit Lawrence: the Stockade” [pictured at the left of this paragraph], echoed our 2011 Valentine display, and reminded me that plastic pink flamingos might be a thing of the past at the Lawrence Circle on Valentine’s Day.  I was in that melancholy mood when looking at the Cusco Indian’s situation for differences and similarities with our Lawrence.

Screen shot 2013-09-012 . . . Screen shot 2013-09-10 at 9.10.03 AM

 Naturally, my eyes were drawn to the long-necked, long-legged birds frolicking under Piel Roja.   However, despite Peru’s significant connection to the species, they are probably not “flamenco rosa” — their beaks do not look sufficiently arcuate to be flamingos, and I see no red or pink hues on their wings or bodies in the photos taken of Piel Roja.

CuscoInka-bird Things are complicated by the red paint we see on the recent photos of the fountain under its Inka statue.  If forced to choose, I’d call them great white egrets or some other form of heron.  But, rather than being a difference between Cusco’s Indian and the Stockade’s Lawrence, I see them in shape and spirit to be forerunners of our pink flamingo custom — a lighthearted counterbalance to the stoic seriousness of No. 53 Indian Chief and all his clones.  Spotting them in Cusco’s Plaza de Armas gives me hope that Lawrence’s feathered friends will return to the Stockade for Valentine’s Day 2014. [follow-up: The flamingos did return to Lawrence late on February 13, 2014, and again for Valentine’s Day 2015. Also, see “Valentine Flamingos in the Schenectady Stockade: whimsy and mystery at Lawrence Circle“, my first photobook.]

pink flamingos daily stockade schultz standalone . . . Screen shot 2013-09-10 at 9.14.10 AM

– Lawrence [L] and Cusco’s Piel Roja –

– share this post with the short URL: http://tinyurl.com/Cusco-Stockade

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* You probably have or will notice that I have used the spellings Cusco and Cuzco interchangeably (and arbitrarily) in this posting.  Here is some of what the Wikipedia entry about Cusco/Cuzco says in its Spelling and etymology section:

“The indigenous name of this city is Qusqu. Although it was used in Quechua, its origin has been found in the Aymara language. . . .

“The Spanish conquistadors adopted the local name, transliterating it into Spanish as Cuzco or less often Cozco. Cuzco was the standard spelling on official documents and chronicles at the colonial epoch.[3] In 1976, the city mayor signed an ordinance banning the traditional spelling and ordering the use of a new one, Cusco, in the municipality publications. Nineteen years later, in 23 June 1990, the local authorities officialized a brand new spelling instead: Qosqo.

“In English, both s and z are accepted, as there is no international, official spelling.”

It seems therefore, that being arbitrary and fickle may be the only historically accurate way to deal with the spelling of the name of Qusqu/Cusco/Cuzco/Qosqo.

Posted by: David Giacalone | September 18, 2013

the 2013 Walkabout houses

215Union-1shadows

– 215 Union Street, the Edward Ellis House/Turnbull House –

– update: find 50 photos from the 2013 Walkabout here

9Wash-entry  People seems curious this year as to whether there will be a Stockade Walkabout, and especially if there will be houses to enter and explore this time.  I’m happy to tell those who don’t yet know that the 53rd Stockade Walkabout will take place (as always) on the last Saturday of September, which is the 28th this year, from 11 AM to 5 PM, rain or shine; and there will be a fine selection of eight homes, including a gorgeous mansion, open to Walkabout ticket-holders.

You can get more details, including ticket-purchasing information at the Association’s Walkabout ticket page, and at the Stockade Walkabout 2013 Facebook Page.

As always, click on a photo for a larger version.  Scroll over it for a description.

BobArtWalka

 Sylvie Briber, chair of the 2013 Walkabout Committee of the Stockade Association tells me there is a lot of enthusiasm for the show and the houses selected.  Here’s the list of homes on the tour:

1 Union Street, The Isaac I. Yates Tenant House
9 Washington Avenue, The William C. Vrooman House
15 Front Street, The Wallace S. Clark House
111 Union Street, The Giles van der Bogert House
14 North Ferry Street, The Jemmie Boyd/Isaac DeGraff House

215Union-2 . . .

215 Union Street, The Edward Ellis Mansion
232 Union Street, The David B. Engleman House
234 Union Street, the Mary Cochran Ellis House

14NFerry-chimney2  . . . 14NFerry-2june

– 14 No. Ferry Street – a work with plenty of progress –

update: 14 No. Ferry St. was not quite ready to greet Walkabouters, but 58 Washington Ave. was added to the Tour:

58WashAv1 . . entry of 58 Washington Ave. - 2013 Stockade Walkabout - 28Sep2013

You will find images of each of these homes in the following slideshow, which includes the photos from the back page of the September Stockade Spy,  and also in the Gallery at the foot of this posting, where you can click on a  thumbnail for a larger image.  Of course, the highlights of the Walkabout for most participants are the many details disclosed by the docents and found inside the open buildings.  I wasn’t able to get inside, but I believe the exteriors promise intriguing stories and interiors.

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WH13-1Union

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111Union-detail

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Below is a Gallery with the photos from the Slideshow.  Click on a thumbnail for a larger version.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | September 14, 2013

more golf ball fun with FCSS

gbd2013-predroppin

– an extra hole was prepared for the Golf Ball Drop –

GBD2013e-return2

. click on a photo for a larger version .

GBD2013-lastballs Family & Child Service of Schenectady‘s Annual Golf Ball Drop and Dinner was held yesterday evening (Friday, September 13, 2013) at Stadium Golf Club in Schenectady.  It was the 8th occurrence of the event, which is the signature fundraiser for FCSS, a not-for-profit organization that has worked from its headquarters at 246 Union St. in the Stockade for over sixty years, helping to make families stronger.  All proceeds from the fund-raiser will be directed to the support of the programs and services offered by FCSS.

Donny Michaels of Pop Crush 105.7 FM was the emcee for the evening. Nearly a thousand numbered golf balls that had been “purchased” for $10 each were dropped from a helicopter, which was flown by Bruce Mowery of North Country Heli-flite.  As usual, the three balls closest to the pin won this year’s grand prizes.

 GBD2013-flagdown To stay out of turbulent wind, helicopter pilot Bruce Mowery flew lower than usual approaching the flag for the ball drop, and the downdraft knocked down the flag.  Valiant FCSS Executive Director Bob VanZetta rushed over to stand the flag up, but a second approach knocked it down again, and it stayed that way for the remainder of the ball drop contest.

GBD2013d-measure1 . . GBD2013-BobBucket . . GBD2013b-IwoBob

 GBD2013e-returnBob . . Bob VanZetta, Exec. Dir.

Executive Director Bob VanZetta played many roles

Bruce Mowery and Kevin O’Brien of North Country Heliflite with their helicopter

After the balls landed and the distances of those nearest the pin were measured, the winning golf balls, and their owners, were:

  1. First Place: Ball #789, “owned” by Kim Powell, who won two round-trip tickets on Southwest Airlines.
  2. Second Place: Ball #903, owned by Larry Meracle, who won a custom, blue topaz and diamond pendant courtesy of Sondra’s Fine Jewelry
  3. Third Place: Ball #697:  owned by Stephen Wesoloski, who won a “Night out on the Town” package featuring overnight accommodations and dinner at the Glen Sanders Mansion and other surprised from area merchants.

  Unfortunately, we can’t show you any photos of the lucky winners, because none attended the Event last night.  All three winners had purchased their winning balls before last night, while playing at Stadium Golf Club. Congratulations to them, and thanks to all who purchased golf balls this year to benefit FCSS and their client-consumers. [Ed Note: I apologize for getting mangling two of the winners’ names when they were first posted.]

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The following slideshow has about 60 photos, two dozen taken outside preparing for and holding the golf ball drop, and three dozen taken inside the Clubhouse, where you could find conviviality, good food, a raffle and auction, and the announcement of the contest winners.  As always, meeting two of FCSS’s clients and hearing their inspiring stories — this time Nora and Christine were a highlight of the evening; and two preschoolers charmed all of us — Nicholas (3), the son of host Donny Michaels, and Zach (4), grandson of Ron Rodriguez (new husband of FCSS staffer Carla Rodriguez).  Please let me know if I have misidentified anyone or mis-spelled names.

– share this posting with this short URL: http://tinyurl.com/GBD2013

GBD2013IMG_1706 . . . . GBD2013IMG_1722

– Nora [L] with caregiver Carmine, showed us her wit and spunk (with a pretty good “stand-up” comedy routine); and Christine shared her story and played violin for us. –

  Nora told us all that FCSS has done for her over the years, with special thanks for Carmine Torres, who Nora opined should get paid more.  Nora listed things she can no longer do, but concluded to applause: “Everything is gone, but I’m still here and I’m going to enjoy it.” Carmine added, “You have to love what you do, and I love my job.”  Chrissie gave thanks for over a decade of help from FCSS, and told us of the many wishes her caseworkers have fulfilled.  She also played a Bach piece on her violin. Chrissie’s mother Pat spoke of her daughter as a role model for her family and repeated their motto, “You can do it!”

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GBD2013IMG_1665  . . .  GBD2013IMG_1736

– Fund Development Coordinator Michele Shellard [R] was instrumental in the Event’s success, and her daughter Alessandra helped out all night, too –

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– want more? click to see collages (with some blurry but memorable moments) –

GBD2013-miscmoment . .  . . GBD2013-Christine

– collage above: [L] misc. groups; [R] Christine & Patty

. . GBD2013-Nicholas . .

– collage above: [L] Nicholas & family; [R] Zach & family

 As always, many FCSS Board members and staffers, and other volunteers, worked hard to make the 8th Annual Golf Ball Drop a success.  And, many sponsors provided financial support and donated for the live auction and raffle prizes.  Pop Crush 105.7 FM was the honorary media sponsor; YNN (“only on Time Warner Cable”). Lamar Advertising, and Fennimore Asset Management Inc (FAM Funds) were the Par Sponsors.  See the FCSS website for a full list of sponsors.

   Click to see our coverage of the 2012 Event, the  2011 Golf Ball Drop, the 2010 Golf Ball Drop, and the 2009 event.

– the following Gallery has thumbnails of the photos above; click on them for a larger version and scroll over for a description –

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Posted by: David Giacalone | September 8, 2013

scenes from the 2013 Art Show

It was a people-watchin’, photo-snappin’, slow-schmoozin’ kinda day for me yesterday, at the 62nd Stockade Outdoor Art Show. My shutter finger was way too busy, so it has taken me too long to hammer this piece, and the earlier posting presenting the Show Winners, into shape for this website.  Happily, troublesome technical difficulties and delays due to my webserver have so far failed to sour my mood, thanks to the afterglow from yesterday’s enjoyable event, and the blue sky out my window.  This post, as usual, has a selective but wide array of images that caught my eye while shooting yesterday or editing since then.  Colors, people, light and shadow, and/or interesting art can be seen in over 70 photos.

OAS2013-Rthur&Alec

All of the photos in the Slideshow can be found again at the bottom of this posting as clickable thumbnail images with brief descriptions.  There was far too much for anyone to see or record at the Show, and I apologize to all the fine artists and interesting people and pieces that have not made it into this posting. (When you’re finished here, you can click to visit the Show’s Facebook Page. If you came from there, thanks for taking their suggestion.)

As with prior coverage of the Art Show, I hope knowledgeable people will let me know in a comment or email if I have mislabeled a person or piece, or otherwise gotten my facts confused.  If I have pictured your exhibit without having your name, please let me know. The subject artists may use any of the images without asking permission.  Others may also do so, if their use is non-commercial.  A credit to suns along the Mohawk would be appreciated.

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– both Ethan [L] and Lorraine were first-timers at the Outdoor Art Show –

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  In addition to arts-related activities depicted in this posting, I’d like to mention that Bob and Sylvie Briber spent the day promoting the upcoming Stockade Walkabout.  Yes, the Walkabout is back, with an impressive array of houses on the list.  It takes place Saturday, September 28, from 11 A.M. to 5 P.M., rain or shine.  You can purchase advance tickets and save a few dollars by going to the Stockade Association’s Walkabout webpage.

OAS2013-StGeoRow-ShantraNair

– as always, St. George’s was a beautiful backdrop for many exhibitors, like Shantra Nair, above –

IMG_1234  . . .  IMG_1251 Another venerable Stockade addition is also back: Arthur’s Market.  It will be fully operational in October, but owner-manager-host-dreamer Richard Genest brought lots of goodies from his Moon & River Cafe to the Market for yesterday’s Art Show, and will also do so for the Walkabout.  I was inspired to make a collage of photos I took of and at Arthur’s Market  yesterday, to celebrate its return.

OAS2013-arthur'sback Click on the collage thumbnail for a more satisfying viewing of the collage.

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OAS2013-PettaExhib . . . . OAS2013-SusanWileyExhib

– from the Petta [L] and Wiley exhibits –

– if you missed it, click to see the winning art and artists

– thanks again to all who helped to make the event such a success.

Share this posting with the short link: http://tinyurl.com/2013StockadeShow

 p.s.  Getting to know the artists has been one big benefit of taking my camera to the Show the past five years and highlighting the Show here at suns along the Mohawk.  On Saturday, I missed seeing the work of several of my favorite artists from other years, like Stockade neighbors Steve Kowalski and Frank Gilmore, as well as Gail and Claire DellaRocco, and Christine Romano.  When I ran into Chris and Gail and Claire on Saturday, they told me they wanted more new pieces to present before returning and promised to be back in full force next year.   I hope so.

The Slideshow photos can be examined more closely in this Gallery.

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Posted by: David Giacalone | September 8, 2013

the 62nd Stockade Outdoor Art Show picks winners

OAS2013-LawrenceCameo All the ingredients for a successful outdoor art show came together yesterday around Lawrence’s Circle in the Stockade, including just enough heat, a good array of artists, and an appreciative crowd.  The new management team, headed by Jessica and Charles Gelarden, and powered by a small but devoted group of helpers (including Karen Johnson, Jennifer Wells, Joe Fava, Erich Bachmeyer, the Schmidts, Zoe Oxley, Meredith Anker, and more), should be proud.  They presented Connie Colangelo with a special thank you gift in gratitude for the decades of work she and her family have devoted to the Outdoor Art Show.

Click for the Stockade Art Show’s Facebook Page.

– for about 80 of my favorite photos from yesterday’s Show, see “scenes from the 2013 Art Show.

Peter Watrous' painting received the blue ribbon for best in show

– Peter Watrous’s 1st Place painting –

This posting features photos of the art pieces chosen by the judges in the Show’s traditional categories, and the artists, too.  “Scenes from the 2013 Art Show” has scores of images of the people and exhibits and colors that made the event a pleasure to attend on many levels.

Peter Watrous took home the Blue Ribbon for best in show (see above).  Deborah Angilletta took 2nd place and Millie Patnode 3rd Place prizes (click on the photos for a larger version):

Deborah Angilletta's rural scene won 3rd Place . . .  Millie Patnode took the 2nd Place ribbon for a piece called "Last Line"

-above: the 2nd [L] and 3rd place selections –

Connie Colangelo received a special thankyou bouquet for decades of effort on her part making the Art Show a valued Stockade tradition

The other awards presented yesterday were:

Nick Colangelo Award for Best First Time Exhibitor:  Stephanie Holt

Oakroom Artists Award: George Searing

Ernest A.R. Cohen Award for Best Depiction of the Stockade: John Morrette

Youth Awards:

1st: Charles DeMarco

2nd: Grace Lambert

3rd: [tie] Jacqueline Danek and Elizabeth Petta

Honorable Mention: Alec Acevedo, John Elliott; Eric Laffer, Tim Prendergast, Jean Thatcher, and Bonnie White.

People’s Choice Award (chosen by ballot from the public):  Mary Occiogrosso

– congratulations to all the winners! –

Want more Stockade Outdoor Art Show winners? Click to see click to see our coverage of winners from 2012; 2011; 2010; and 2009

exhibitors and visitors filled up Front Street under variable skies  The following Slideshow includes the winning paintings and photography in each of the categories, plus photos of those winners who made it to the Circle and moved slowly enough for me to capture them digitally  (I will add the People’s Choice winner as soon as I ascertain the artist’s identity.)  The same photos can be found in a Gallery at the bottom of this posting.  Click on the Gallery thumbnails for a larger version of the image.

Note: Artists may use any of the photos in this posting without asking permission.  Others may also do so, for any non-commercial purpose.  Please attribute the photo to David Giacalone and suns along the Mohawk.

Also, please let me know if I have mislabeled, mis-spelled or omitted any piece or artist.

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.Lawrence Circle at the time the Show opened

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The Slideshow photos can be examined closer in this Gallery.

Read More…

Posted by: David Giacalone | July 31, 2013

a perfectly postponed picnic

2013Picnic-Richard&LydiaDance With weather too good to hope for in late July, and under beautiful blue skies with imaginative clouds, the 2013 Stockade Neighborhood Picnic (postponed to July 30 due to rain on July 23) was a lovely, relaxing evening in the Park for a few score of neighbors and friends.  A refreshing breeze even kept the dreaded mosquito scourge from sucking out our good spirits. Thanks go out to Valerie Ackerman, who orchestrated the event, which was sponsored by the Stockade Association Safety Committee and Neighborhood Watch, and was made possible by the efforts of many neighbors.

Maybe I was at the wrong place at the wrong time, but I confess to missing all the kids who livened up our 2011 picnic, as well as last year’s 2012 neighborhood picnic. It was nevertheless a most enjoyable event for me, and apparently for the other participants.  Naturally, I snapped quite a few photos, but also remembered to put down my camera and take advantage of all the good will and good food.  My favorite shots from the picnic can be found in the Slideshow below.

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Mellow music was provided by the Kitchen Jazz quintet, which includes Stockade residents Richard Genest, Sylvie Briber, and Norm Ainslie

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– click on the collage below for a larger version –

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If you would like me to email you a copy of any of the photos in the Slideshow, please let me know.

Posted by: David Giacalone | July 21, 2013

fun inside the Zoppé tent

   Thanks to an invitation from Jay Walther, who fills many roles at the Zoppé Family Circus (including the White Clown, Papino), I got to enjoy the show inside the beautiful Zoppé tent on Broadway this lovely Sunday afternoon in Schenectady.  (see our earlier post for many views of the outside of the tent) It was truly, a traditional, “family” circus, with plenty of heart, skill and smiles.  The current leader of the family circus, Giovanni “Nino the Clown” Zoppé, welcomed their guests outside the tent before the performance, and it was clear from the start that we were in for an enjoyable afternoon.

 Zoppé Family Circus tent - Schenectady NY 17Ju2013  . . The Daring Jones Duo on the trapeze - Zoppé Circus in Schenectady NY - 21July2013 It was a treat to take photos inside a tent filled with light, shadows, primary colors, and happy people of all ages.  This posting has over forty photos taken this afternoon, each of which is presented in the slideshow below in chronological order; each photo is repeated in the Gallery at the bottom of the post.  Clicking on a Gallery photo will put you inside a carousel with larger versions of each photo, and a link to the original file for each image.

I put together four collages commemorating episodes from the show: Nino trying to find his red hat, with the help of a young audience member; three knife throwers showing their skills; photos of youngsters and families taken with the little horse Cavallino; and Nino trying to figure out just where Papino will allow him to play his trombone (“big trumpet”).  Click on each of them for a larger version:

IMG_0765knives .  . IMG_0741Hat . .

……… knife play …………….. where’s my hat?

IMG_0839Cavallino  . .  IMG_0899trumpet

 ……. pictures with Cavallino ……. trombone agita ………

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my first view inside the tent –

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IMG_0717 After taking photos of an event, I often feel like I was too busy shooting to enjoy the show.  Today, I figured out quickly that I needed to take a lot of short breaks from photography so I could share in the applause and smiles of the rest of the audience.

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