action and reaction, ebb and flow, trial and error, change - this is the rhythm of living.

Friday, March 4, 2011

DeGrazia-the place, the man, the art

I spent the morning with the most amazing art, amazing gallery, amazing location, amazing man I have ever seen. Although the man is dead, the gallery has many pictures and videos to bring him alive to the visitors. And there were many visitors. I arrived at 1000 when no one else was there. By 1200 when I left the parking lot and the gallery were packed.

The Man




(In the pictures of him I was sometimes reminded of Hemmingway and sometimes reminded of Fidel.)


Ettore DeGrazia was born in 1909 in the mining village of Morenci. His father worked in the copper mine there. He earned 3 degrees, including a Master of Arts with a thesis that explored the relationship of color and sound.

Many of his early paintings were published in Arizona Highways and his painting Los Ninos was chosen as a UNICEF greeting card that sold millions worldwide.

He traveled to Mexico City and worked with Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco.

In 1976 to protest inheritance taxes on works of art, Degrazia hauled about 100 of his paintings on horseback to the Superstition Mountains and set them on fire. This event was published in the Wall Street Journal and People Magazine.

He was also a musician, played several instruments and at one time led a big band.

He died in 1982 and is buried on the gallery property.


A self portrait



The Place

The DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, is on a 10 acre plot of land in the foothills of Tucson's Santa Catalina Mountains. It was designed and built by DeGrazia to give his art a place to call and to feel at home. It is now funded and kept open (daily 10 a.m.-4 p.m., admission free)  by the foundation and the sells from the gift shop.


Inside


Outside.

The entrance, which he designed and built, was fashioned after a mine door and entrance in remembrance of  his boyhood days in the mining town.




A large part of the floor is made out of these sliced jumping cactus.



On the property is the Mission of the Sun which he built in 1952 to honor Father Kino. Inside is an alter where many people have left mementos of loved ones. There were several pictures and notes in remembrance of the recent Tucson injured and killed along with Senator Gifford. 















Next to the mission are the artist's original home which he built and his grave site.









I LOVE this little house!!! I could so live in it!!!


His grave is mostly just a pile of rocks which I found interesting considering how beautiful and elaborate the gallery is.


This was near his grave. I am not sure what it is.


His Art

His work includes watercolors, oils (many done with a knife instead of brushes), ceramics, and sculptures.

Of course, these are just pictures of the art work and do not do it justice but will give you an idea. And they are only a few. The real amount is staggering.






I love the simplicity, the repetition and the flow of his work.


This is one of the few of his paintings that have faces.



This was a metal sculpture in a doorway.








He painted a lot about the Mexican people, Native Americans, angels, children and horses.


He made masks,


And crowns,


He sometimes painted while listening to classical music and named the painting after whatever he had been listening to.

I visited this gallery because I happened upon the brochure and it looked a little different from the run of the mill tourist stuff which I do not have much interest in. I was so pleasantly surprised. It is on the top of my list.

www.degrazia.org




Thursday, March 3, 2011

I SAW SATURN!!!!!!!!!!!







Kitt Peak is no where near the largest observatory. It is no where near the largest telescope. But Kitt Peak does have the distinction of the most telescopes on one mountain in the world.






This houses the telescope I looked at the sun through. I saw sun spots which I learned are cool areas. I saw large hot flares shooting out from the orange ball that was the sun.  




 This houses the actual BIG solar telescope.




Made me look down!








 Yea, I looked down again.






The day was so beautiful. The domes so white and the sky so blue. I couldn't stop taking pictures. 



There was a little snow from a storm earlier in the week.





 This was SARA. I can't remember what that acronym stood for. But she was beautiful. We visited her at sunset.



Most of the viewing now is done with computers off site. The astronomer can open the domes, point the telescope and view it from the privacy of his or her own living room. These both opened as we stood watching the sunset.








 Good night SARA.



After dark the real fun and learning began.

We were taught how to use a Planisphere to locate and identify constellations. We also viewed many objects in the night sky with binoculars. We had three guides for about 40 people so we were divided into groups. The guides were all amazing. Very knowledgeable and funny and one was VERY good looking.


 The highlight. 
We looked through one of the real telescopes to view: 
        another galaxy
 baby stars,
  dying stars
   AND SATURN. 


Each time our guide would describe what we were going to see and where in the telescope lens we would see it. Each time I thought OK, this will be interesting. And each time the awe I felt when I actually saw it was beyond words.


Then... the next and last highlight. To minimize the light pollution as we left, we all had to caravan down the twisty, turny, windy, cliff on one side mountain road WITH OUR LIGHTS OFF!!!

It wasn't bad.

www.noao.edu