I live a retired life in Tasmania, Australia. I love books, travel, animals, photography, motor biking and good friends. I indulge in all these activities with the little Travellin' Penguin who has now shared five continents with me. We love book shops, photography walks and time with friends as all our family is in USA and Canada. I enjoy visitors to my blog so hope you'll stop by.
I love photography so I was more than happy I was able to check this wonderful book Vivian Maier, Street Photographerout of the library. Â Ms. Maier was born in 1926 in Europe and died in 2009 in Chicago. She worked many odd jobs but nobody really knew much about her. She was most known for her work as a nanny, working in various homes. What people didn’t know was she took photos. Not just photos. Excellent photos. She took her camera everywhere she went. When she worked as a nanny she dragged the children everywhere on excursions so she could take photos. I think at times the children were quite the inconvenience but she had a place to stay and some spending money and three freedom to roam the streets of Chicago. One day she took a couple of her charges through the slaughterhouse in Chicago, a very in appropriate place for children I would think but she wanted the photos. (I have not included any here!)
In 2007, the author of this book, John Maloof of Chicago was at a large sale and came across many boxes of her film, much of it undeveloped. Â He had his own interests in photography and bought the lot. Over the next few years he sorted them, catalogued them until the job became too much and he turned it over to others to help him. He was responsible for establishing biographical information through her photos as much as he could.
Most of her photographs were taken during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. Although she continued to shoot pictures into the 1990s.
I recently watched the biography documentary of her life on Netflix that went right up to her death. Â She was described as exceedingly private and eccentric. She also had mental health issues. She never married, she didn’t always get on with people and in the end she spent her time surrounded in her apartment by hoards of things she kept. She was a classic hoarder. No one knows how the thousands of film canisters came to be sold.
I enjoyed both the Netflix documentary and this book. I also looked her up on line and read quite a bit about her. Now I will share some photos of her work with you. I hope you enjoy them as much as I do.Â
Today I took the dogs out for a walk. Â I get bored walking up and down through the same neighbourhood but we all need the exercise. Â I came across this book in some review I read. Many of you would be familiar with Keri Smith’s “Wreck This Journal” in bookstores that sell journals. Â It is a journal with pages that you can destroy according to the directions. Â I have never been interested in it but she has this one that might be a bit of fun over the winter months.
First off, I have always been a scavenger. Â I have organised a scavenger hunt for next Saturday in the historic town of Richmond (Tasmania) for our photo club. That is a story for another day.
I am the kind of person that picks up paper clips or buttons, and reads invoices and notes
The List from the Book
that I find in the gutter. I have this weird curiosity to know what people throw away or lose and I know there are others like me. There are web pages and books of things people find.
So it is not surprising I am attracted to The Pocket Scavenger by Keri Smith. Â It is a pocket paperback, sized A5, and has lots of things to look for. I’m sure I’m on the spectrum at times.
The Pages
On the right hand page is what I am to look for and on the left hand page is a place to paste my photo of it once found or to draw a picture of it. Â There is also a space to write the date, the location found, the time and to write a short paragraph about the circumstances I am in when I found the object. Â There is also a bibliography in the back.
Seed Pods (from the list) from a gum tree. I will attempt to draw these on the page.
The rain is moving in this afternoon and it is quite cold and blowy out. I thought I’d go out on a couple of kilometre walk with Odie and Molly and see if we find anything along the road or through the bush. Â I limited myself to just a couple as several items will be easy to find and I don’t want to rush it.
I am sharing the pages of the book with you and if anyone is so inclined to follow along I’d love to hear about it. You could use a blank journal, copy the items posted here or make up your own. Â This is something fun to do while walking to keep me moving when I’d rather be curled up in a chair with a hot drink and a couple of cats or dogs.
Moss- I will draw moss on the page
Do you ever pick up things in the street to see what it is?
Odie and Molly, my fellow scavengers. My Best Friends. They love to sniff around the stuff I find. No one else does 🙂
This has been a hectic week so today Mr. Penguin and I are having a Pyjama Day. It’s cold out. There’s been a lot of rain with more to come. It’s winter in Tasmania. Pajama Day is a day where you wear daggy clothes, stay home, read books, put a roast in the slow cooker and drink hot drinks…all…day…long.
Stamp commemorating the Berliner Ensemble Production
Tuesday our play reading class made good progress on Mother Courage and Her Children by the German dramatist and poet Bertolt Brecht (1898- 1956). Â It is an anti-war play rated as one of the most important plays of the 20th century. It takes place over a period of 12 years in 12 scenes. Â The class is enjoying it very much.
Wednesday had our Writing Group admitting a new member. This week’s topic was “about a walk”. It could be a walk in nature, a walk you’d like to do, a walk you’ve done. Â It has been a popular topic and we had a variety of perspectives.
He wrote a series of books about his life as a migrant worker. I thought the book is relevant to what is happening in the United States now. Â It appears to be written for a younger audience and I can compare it to a simpler version of The Grapes of Wrath but from a Mexican view point. Â It raises important issues and details the hardships that migrant workers face between escaping a poorer, more dangerous life, Â trying not to get caught by U.S. immigration officials. Mexican migrants work incredibly hard and American agriculture wouldn’t survive without migrant workers.Â
I picked this book up because I was drawn to the cover. I am really enjoying it and will be finished with it very soon.
Uncle Buck and Odie are the best of friends.
On a personal note we had a bit of trauma with our brain injured cat, Uncle Buck (aged 12). We’ve had him since he was three weeks old. Â He came home with me as a kitten from a veterinary practise I was working in at the time. He had been badly injured and wasn’t expected to live but 12 years later he is an important member of our family. He has neurological damage and as a result of that he only chews on the left side of his mouth. That means the right side gums and teeth need to be watched. He was to undergo a general anaesthetic but he crashed on the table so the procedure was aborted. This hadn’t happened before but our lovely veterinarians and their nurse got him back after a good five minutes and he survived. It was described to me by one of the vets as “controlled panic.” Â We have been keeping a close eye on him. It turns out he reacted negatively to the anaesthetic and after Friday’s ultrasound we learned he has been diagnosed with cardio-myopathy. It pays to have health insurance on your pets. He begins medication next week and we are happy to report he is back to his purring self.
Thursday was a lovely day. I mean lovely. Sunny, Â 16 degrees and no wind. That’s 60 degrees to my North American friends and relatives. Mr. Penguin dropped me in town with my camera for the afternoon on his way to the gym. I spent the next couple of hours meandering through Battery Point and Salamanca as well as the waterfront for the next couple of hours. Both of us needed a very stress free day after the previous activities and events. Â Battery Point is the oldest section of Hobart. The original settlement began here. Â I include a few photos here.
Arthur’s Circus is the name of this circular street. The cottages are lovely.
Old and NewView of the Derwent River from Princess Park
When I got home my friend rang me and said she was looking forward to us going to the theatre on Friday night. I said, “What?”. Â We booked Sweeney Todd at the Playhouse some time ago and I hadn’t put it in the diary. As both of us laughingly state, “If it’s not in the diary it doesn’t happen.” So last night was a meal out and a three hour (including intermission) of Sweeney Todd. It was a musical and very gruesome. The story goes (in a nutshell). English man married with child. He gets transported to Australia for a crime and returns after 15 yrs. He meets the pie shop owner who falls in love with him. She tells him his wife has died. But a daughter remains and is holed up in a mansion with a lecherous judge who adopted her at a young age but now wants to marry her. He wants his daughter back but can’t get past the judge. The pie shop isn’t doing well. Â The man is a trained barber but has competition. He ends up killing the competition and when trying to work out what to do with the body, they decide to bake him in the pies. The pie shop takes off because the pies are so delicious. To keep business going the barber continues to slash the throats of those in his chair if they are strangers or loners (no one will miss them) and keep the pie business booming. Â I won’t give away anymore but the trend does continue with a few surprises. Â We enjoyed the play but after three hours in a hot theatre we were glad to get out in the winter’s night air at 11:00pm.Â
This pretty much brings you up to date on last week’s wandering. I’m hoping for a quieter one next week.Â