Wednesday, December 23, 2009

NOLA Art & Whimsy 018 - Stick Nativity

Please click on the image for a larger, more-detailed version.We're all affected by the recession.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

NOLA Burial & Necropolis 010 - Jefferson Fire Company #22

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
The Jefferson Fire Company No. 22 crypt is one of four or five firemen group tombs in Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 The Lafayette Hook and Ladder Co. No. 1 and The Chalmette Fire Co. No. 32 are also in attendance. The writing on the relief of the pump reads: Incorporated April 27 A.D. 1845- Ready at the First Sound.

A lot of filming happens in this cemetery.

I was only inconvienced a little bit.





Saturday, July 18, 2009

NOLA Art & Whimsy 017 - Mardi Gras Indians

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
This is a T-shirt I bought in New Orleans after Katrina. I tried to buy a lot of shirts because I know it's a high profit-margin item. $2.00 to make; sell for $35. Fine with me. This is one way I tried to "contribute to the local economy".
This person is dressed as a Mardi Gras Indian. The Mardi Gras Indians are black, working class people who, 100 years ago, realized they would never get into the Krewes that participated in Mardi Gras parades and social events and so started their own. They created personas in homage to Native Americans as some of the first people near New Orleans to help slaves get to freedom. Some of the original Mardi Gras Indians may have been former slaves.

Unlike the other parades, the Mardi Gras Indians do not have a planned or defined route. It happens when and where their "Big Chief" decides.

Decades before gangs, the Indian parades were events in which tribal groups and individuals aired grievances. It was violent and chaotic. The police could do nothing in the pandemonium that is
Mardi Gras. Also, originally the Indians were masked.


The act of dressing this way on Mardi Gras Day is called "suiting". Again, decades ago, having someone in your family suiting on Mardi Gras day was equivalent to seeing them dress in the colors of Crips or Bloods. It only meant trouble.
Big Chief Tootie Montana settled all that down and now the Indian parades are heralded as a great cultural event, though still not many white people attend. The chiefs of the tribes spend all year making the suits and can use tens of thousands of beads and innumerable feathers. The suits can cost upwards of $20,000 to make. The suits are only used once and often go directly to museums.

The Back of the shirt reads: "Won't Bow Down" from the song, "My Indian Red".

"
I've got a Big Chief, Big Chief, Big Chief of the Nation
Wild, wild creation
He won't bow down, down on the ground
Oh how I love to hear him call Indian Red
When I throw my net in the river
I will take only what I need
Just enough for me and my lover
I will take only what I need
Mighty cooty fiyo - hey la hey, hey la he"


The Indians are also the subject of the extremely popular Sugar Boy Crawford song, “Jock-A-Mo”, now known and covered as "Iko Iko".

In 1976, the "The Wild Tchoupitoulas" tribe made an album of "call-and-response" songs with famed New Orleans producer Allen Toussaint and members of the musical groups The Meters (you know "Cissy Strut") and the Neville Brothers (nephews of Wild Tchoupitoulas' leader George "Big Chief Jolly" Landry.
There are volumes to be read about the customs, behaviors and dress style of the different tribes- how they great each other with songs or acquiesce to a rival's superior suit craftsmanship and what-have-you. I won't load this post up with details, but I encourage you to look them up. I would just have to Google for more information, anyway. At least do an "image search".

A few related Links:
Andrew Justin: Runnin' Pretty
Krewe of Zulu
The World That Made New Orleans
Wewontbowdown.com
Mardigrasneworleans.com/Indians

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

NOLA Architecture 028 - Skull Rose Fence

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
This iron fence is made to look like flowers from one angle,
but skulls from another.
This is to ward off evil spirits.



The upper gallery features clusters of roses that look like skulls from certain angles.

Friday, June 12, 2009

New Orleans Flora & Fauna 028 - Jasmine

Please click on the image for a larger, more-detailed version.
You wouldn't think I could get sick of the smell of jasmine.
But I did. The air is dizzy with it in April





Wednesday, June 10, 2009

NOLA Art & Whimsy 016 - Street Name Tiles

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
Many of the streets in New Orleans are labeled with while tiles with blue letters. These are called "Encaustic" tiles, which means the lettering is clay dust fired with the tile, not dyed or painted, then glazed. These were likely made by the American Encaustic Tile Company of Ohio and New York.
That company went out of business in 1935, so the original tiles are at least 75 years old.

Like the Sewage & Water Board meter cap, there exists an entire design industry utilizing this motif. You can buy coasters, T-Shirts, trivets, there's even a Facebook page.



Being that these tiles are scarce and replicas are pretty expensive, sometimes you do what you gotta do to work with an old idea.

But notice that this is at Seventh St.




Monday, June 8, 2009

NOLA Architecture 028 - Pigeon Wall

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.Gotta keep the pigeons off somehow.

Some other types, too.



Saturday, June 6, 2009

NOLA Flora & Fauna 027 - Lush Life

Please click on the image for a larger, more-detailed version.
Not just a Coltrane album.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

NOLA Food & Bevvies 004 - Café Du Monde







Café du Monde is a stinking joke of a tourist trap.
The coffee is disgusting and the one in the French Quarter has never been cleaned (this is normally charming in New Orleans, but this place is just gross). The beignets are good but you can get good beignets anywhere.


It was sold out to a Japanese company decades ago. There is one in the French quarter, there are 4 more in the closest malls just outside of New Orleans and there are 56 of them in Japan. Cafe du Monde really hasn't been worth crap in 100 years. If you want good coffee & chicory, go to any restaurant owned by the Brennans.

The great old coffee houses in New Orleans are pretty much gone.

As I mentioned Rue De La Course had to downsize due to outrageous Magazine St. rent prices. They are the best chain there.

There is a lovely coffee shop at Magazine St. and Nashville called Bella Luna. They have a beautiful old mansion where you can sit out on the old wooden porch. They have blue sky and clouds painted in the ceiling of the outside porch. But their WiFi always gives me trouble.


My other favorite place is up on Oak St in Riverbend. It's called Z'otz. Great coffee, great Art.

Still Perkin' at Prytania & Washington has a lovely outdoor deck for reading the paper.


Fuel on Magazine St. is a new favorite.

CC's (Community Coffee) and PJ's are also near & dear to my heart.


Kaldi's down in the quarter was awesome; also couldn't afford skyrocketing rent.
They are all still doing the best they can, competing in a reduced city in a crappy economy,

but I'll tell you who isn't worried...



Please click on the image for a larger, more-detailed version.

Good job, fat mid-western white tourists.

This is not my city
.



Wednesday, June 3, 2009

NOLA Burial & Necropolis 009 - Colored Crypt

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
"One of these things is not like the others,
One of these things just doesn't belong,
Can you tell which thing is not like the others
By the time I finish my song?
"

This crypt is an interesting splash of color in the otherwise whitewashed Lafayette Cemetery No.1. I'm very surprised there isn't more of this here.
Columnar markers are common in the New Orleans cemeteries. Most indicate "societies" and "associations" to which the deceased belonged. I need to do some research and make a post about these.
Note how long ago these people died. It's good to see that someone is keeping up on the maintenance of the tomb.



Monday, June 1, 2009

NOLA Architechture 027 - Anne Rice's St. Elizabeth's

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Where Napoleon & Prytania streets meet sits St. Elizabeth's, formerly owned by Anne Rice. I don't know much about it, except that I rode my bike past it most days as I went to work, 2/5 of a mile away on Prytania. On the Prytania side of the buiding hung a sign that read, "Stan Rice Gallery". Far as I know, Stan died and Anne sold the place. Now it is St. Elizabeth's Condominiums , for which I'm guessing she should be shot. There seems to be a fair amount of text about it (as well as interior pictures) on her website and the condo website. Please visit the links provided for that.







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Thursday, May 28, 2009

NOLA Flora & Fauna 026 - The Elusive Uptown Cypress

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.As I took this picture, I said to my wife, "Huh. You never actually see Cypress trees in the city. You only see them in the parks and swamps."


A day later I noticed that THERE ARE TEN OF THEM DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF MY HOUSE!
I'm pretty sure these don't have the cypress knees, as they are not close enough to water.

Monday, May 25, 2009

NOLA Art & Whimsy 015 - Meditation Walk


Please click on the image for a larger, more-detailed version.Audubon park is a public park that spans the land from Tulane / Loyola Universities to the Mississippi River. It has been the site of a World's Fair, the Cotton Centennial and served as a staging area for soldiers a few times. The area riverside of Magazine is now the Audubon Zoo.

The majority Audubon's acreage lakeside of Magazine St. and Riverside of St. Charles Ave. is unfortunately a golf course. Around the golf course is a 1.7 mile jogging / biking path. A sliver of peripheral land is open for public use. You see here a gateway to the "meditation walk". This is the former entrance to the Heymann Memorial Conservatory which stood since Cotton Exposition in 1884 and was demolished by the Audubon Nature Institute in 2001.

Now I don't know about you, but to me, "meditation" means quiet, contemplative thought as well as relaxation and peace. I'm never as anxious, flinching and tense in my life as I am walking around a golf course. I ain't meditating on crap. I'm making sure I don't get beaned with a golf ball. Maybe if you get hit in the right spot it'll open a chakra or something. All you can do is hope for the best.




Friday, May 22, 2009

NOLA Architecture 026 - Rue De La Course

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.This building once housed one of the best coffee houses in the city, Rue de la Course. I spent lots and lots of time here. It's on Magazine between 8th and 9th Street. The story that was told to me is that the owners of this building either would not renew the lease to Rue de la Course or made rent prohibitively expensive, forcing them out. Then the building's owner leased it to a friend who put in another coffee shop. Rue de la Course is was a beautiful, beautiful space. The new shop (as you see in the next two pics) was the tackiest, most visually offensive food/beverage business in the city. I never went inside the place once this opened. They always had huge, ugly, plastic banners and signs hanging outside, just puking all over this lovely building.

The good news is: Rue's owners, Debra Dunn and Jerry Roppolo purchased a space directly across the street. Retail rent on Magazine street went from 12-$16 / sq. ft. from 1997 to 2005. After Katrina, it jumped to $21. So they are hopefully in a much better position now that they own. And it looks like they thrive to this day.

The better news is: the new coffeehouse that went into the building above failed pretty quickly. This building (with massive square footage that can get premium rates) has been empty for many months if not a year. And I'm glad for it.

disgusting:



This one was taken through a window, so there is a reflection in which you can see the new Rue de la Course. See if you can make out the coffee bean sticker on the back wall:


Though I'm not afraid to play tourist and take loads and loads of pictures of the city (and did the same when I lived there), I don't think I'll ever have the cajones to take pictures inside of a place while people are eating or shopping. So I had to steal pictures from the interweb-thingy to show you what a typical Rue De La Course looks like. Only one of the pictures below is from the Magazine St. Location, but they all look this good.



Rue de la Course Magazine street.
This chalk board and tin work were replaced by yellow walls (more like egg-bread colored) and the coffee bean sticker mural.



Rue De La Course on
S. Carrollton was a bank (then a Kinko's).
And now it's breath-taking.


Rue De La Course on S. Carrollton

Rue De La Course on S. Carrollton




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Thursday, May 21, 2009

NOLA Flora & Fauna 025 - Ant

Please click on the images for larger, more-detailed versions.
This is an ant that was spied walking across some moss at Oak Alley. There is nothing terribly remarkable about this image or animal. I just want to say I'm terribly impressed with the "macro lens" feature on my crappy $100 camera. I've owned this camera since last summer and never bothered to use this setting because I remember how "digital zoom" looks.



Tuesday, May 19, 2009

NOLA Food & Bevvies 003 - La Madeleine






601 S Carrollton Avenue New Orleans LA, 70118

http://www.lamadeleine.com
Dress: casual


Yeah, it's a chain. I don't care.
Yeah, it has plastic cafeteria trays. I don't care.
The unisex bathroom is scary and has two mirrors that meet in a corner so you can see yourself throwing a whiz from 8 angles at once (GOD, I hate that!). I don't care.

This is one of my favorite places in the city. Almost across the street from Cooter Brown's, La Madeleine looks like a rustic French country home. There is a pastry case as you first walk in. You can go in and order pastries to go as you would in a bakery or doughnut shop. Or you may proceed along the "tray rail" to get very unique and tasty breakfast foods for cheap (they have a full menu, I don't know why I only go there for breakfast). They have little quiches and potato gallettes on a warming cooktop to throw onto your tray. Or granola & yogurt (served in a wine glass) or Strawberries with a brandy sauce (served in a wine glass). You can also order a full breakfast (bacon & eggs, etc.) and sit outside. You can hang out with a laptop like a coffee house, if you like. There is a self-serve island in the dining area with free coffee refills, endless bread & butter, and water (served in a wine glass- it never loses its novelty!). Down South we serve coffee cream warm. They just keep a thermal pump carafe at the coffee station.These pictures are humorous to me because I used to back my ancient, decrepit Mercedes 300D (for Diesel) into this parking spot, belching alternately black or white (or two-toned black & white) exhaust onto the patrons. Then I'd go in and get a quiche.
I've got a pretty good chuckle going on right now.

It's pretty close to the street car line.


This is the patio rebuilt after Katrina. We miss the little planter whose greenery hosted little green anoles we could watch as we ate breakfast on Sunday mornings. But all in all, it's a better dining area.



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