Thursday, February 28, 2008

hopper, the real thing

after our initial failed attempt to see Hopper's show at the art institute we tried again last Friday.
said Anna four five months ago
no last Friday but late February we finally did make it to see Hopper. I didn't whiz thru it and it still took me no more than an hour, they didn't have my favorite painting but all in all I still like the artist. I liked the transitions between the sections, you could see how his style developed and how he became more and more minimalistic, which is nicely (what a word to describe art) captured in my personal favorite

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

andersonville


andersonville, or the swedish neihgborhood, is a small patch on chicago's multicultural map. it looks like a nice place go for a walk, wander thru really cool european clothes shops, european prices, too, stop and enjoy a swedish bagel and bump into yet another lesbian couple. the place is colorful and friendly, but watch out! don't go there if you're feeling homesick, it will make it worse.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

hopper, false start

anyone who knows me a little better than hi how are you knows about my hopper craze. so when i found out a couple of months ago that there's gonna be a hopper exhibit in chicago i couldn't believe my luck,
speaking of my luck, it's a second day after the opening and it doesn't take a fortune teller to guess that the line would go outside the door. and no fortune teller am i. i guess coming back during the week would make much more sense
and that's how the story ends, for now

milwaukee in snow

most of my travel experience this year seems to somehow be defined by weather, it was no different with today's trip to Milwaukee

catching a megabus in Chicago is not a piece of cake, it's an adventure on its own, but when you finally get on a bus, get over initial excitement about going out of Chicago and you finally get to Milwaukee... well, dunno how to put it... you are dropped off next to the main station, or, to be more precise - they drop you off under some bridge with lots of crumbled pieces of concrete lying around, looked like Poland a bit

make a right and keep going, and keep going, and keep going and all of the sudden you see three cute ladybugs

you walk a couple of blocks east and you get to the lake, not that you can see the lake in such weather (see, again!) you just assume it's there, but you can surely see a weird thing on your left, looks like a huge white bird, they say, to me, it looked more like a bird of paradise, what do you reckon? anyway, from the outside, I admit, it looks good, but what really took my breath away was when you walk into the main hall and see the frozen lake, it's all white, the walls are white, the window frames are white, obviously enough, the lake is mostly covered in snow, my eyes actually hurt from all this bright white around


the museum itself hosts an interesting collection of ancient, Renaissance and the 19th century art (might as well not be there for me) and modern and contemporary art. I liked a small op art section, you can't really look at it too much, actually, you can't look at it at all, the eyes hurt so much,


the place is supposed to be really cool in the summer, we weren't that lucky but it was still worth a visit, especially that after the museum we still had more than three hours to go, and imagine this, five people can spend three hours in a Milwaukee bar for ... less than 20 bucks, and we didn't linger over a pitcher of water neither

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india 07


the time's come to live up to my promise of going back to my past trips. it seems like for the time being there's nothing much happening in my little bit of Chicago, and since it's been almost a year that I went to India it seems like a good place to take off.

You might think - ancient history, in a year you are bound to forget the whole trip, maybe all that's left are some stereotypes that, after all, stay with us the longest. But that's not true. I remember a lot, the longer it's been, the more I miss India. And it's not because I look at it through rose tinted glasses, no, I think I am aware of all the faults that lie in this subcontinent, of great poverty; nevertheless, I appreciate my Indian experience a lot.

When I think of it, the most amazing thing about India are its people. They are open and hospitable. This is what some say of Poles when they come here but to my mind there can be no comparison between these two nations. After all I don't know any Polish family that would invite complete strangers from a different country to dinner. And that's only one of many nice things that happened to us during our three-week trip. At first I thought it was because they wanted us to buy something from them or trick us somehow. Now I am ashamed this thinking. Most people we met on our way turned out extremely friendly and helpful, which makes you wanna come back even more.

The more you realize how immense and undiscovered the country is, the more you want to come back. We only visited two regions and it took us almost two weeks to see some parts of them. Anywhere we went there were people telling us what else there is to see and all we could do is shrug our shoulders with helplessness at our limited money and time resources and promise ourselves that one day we would be back.

What struck me most in India was the colors and the smell. I don't think I have to explain this. For me, a product of European mass culture, it was like being dumped in the whole different world, a world where women don't wear black jackets and don't scurry off to their offices. I realize it's not like that everywhere, and definitely not in Mumbay ;) but still. I really liked the fact that young girls and women wore sari one day and jeans and a T-shirt the other, that they have a choice and they are wise enough not to reject their tradition but they know how to combine it with the new.

Our cultures are different, we eat differently, we work differently, we dress differently. I appreciate all those differences realizing that it's just the way we are, you have yummy veggie dishes, we have good dumplings, for you it's OK to run late, we wouldn't be admitted to classes coming 30 minutes late, you wear lots of jewelery, for us one or two rings and a bracelet is enough. But there is one thing about which I can't think differently but in terms of sheer jealousy. It's about how you dance! When I went to a Hindu wedding and saw ten-year olds dancing I turned into a green-eyed monster.

Even though I skipped classes during these three weeks I learned a whole lot. This India experience taught me not to give up so easily (haggling) and to enjoy little things (an ice-cold lassie in a crowded street cafe) and to know what you want and how much you can sacrifice.

art inst

My first museum in Chicago: the Art Institute of Chicago. It was a Sunday, the last day of Jasper Jones's Gray exhibit. In Poland when you go to an exhibit on the last day you'd better prepare for some elbowing, well, not here.
Lukasz said he was disappointed with the exhibit, I quite liked it, Aga liked it a lot, but she says she likes gray color, that's why. What I liked the most, though was the way in which the exhibit was organized, there were I think about ten big rooms, each focusing on a different aspect but it was all very coherent, sort of flowing one into the other.
What we all liked was Girls on the Verge: Portraits of Adolescence, a series of photographs of young girls from all around the world. Some time ago there was a coverage on it by Wysoki Obcasy. Can you see peer pressure steaming in this pic? Don't even let me started on American teenager girls...
With love, grandma

crazy chicago weather

now, what could that be. you wake up, look out of the window and decide to put on your cute red spring coat, it's plus 11 Celsius out there and no trace of snow that had just fallen yesterday night. you go to school, walk out in the evening and it blows your head off, and you find yourself in the middle of a snow blizzard, oh, and sure enough it's not plus 11 any longer. where on earth is that possible but chicago???
let's start from where I am now, and then I could tell you where I've been so far and where I'm headed. Sounds like a plan?