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A Belfast Wedding

Filed under: Family Events,Travel — Chamberlain @ 8:57 pm
No. 57

Our special thanks to Nick Salter for this family update on the recent wedding of Lucy and Edward Petre in Belfast Ireland:

Lucy and Edward Petre’s Wedding in Belfast, Northern Ireland on the weekend of 27th and 28th September.

“This was a very happy and hugely enjoyable celebration.

The Bride was beautiful in her Irish lace dress and had white flowers in her hair.

Lucy and her husband looked very happy and it was a beautiful Wedding service at St. John The Evangelist (Church of Ireland) with outstanding music, a trumpeter and a female soloist with the most beautiful voice.

The reception was held in a country estate with drinks and eats first in a beautiful garden before a hasty retreat had to be made as the heavens opened – all part of the UK’s charm! There was then a fantastic and delicious dinner with great speeches before Lucy and Edward took to the dance floor, strutting their stuff *.

The happy couple departed in an open top bright red Caterham 7 sports car with their honeymoon being in Tanzania and Mozambique.

Belfast is also a very interesting historical location being the home of Harland and Woolf (shipbuilders) and having the dry dock in which the Titanic was built.”

[* Chamberlain's emphasis - for the origin of this highly non-Anglo phrase see below...]


Photos thanks to Nick Salter:

Lucy and Edward Petre with their Bridesmaids
Entire Bridal Party
Newly-Wed Petres “Strut their Stuff”
The Get-Away in the Red Caterham 7 Sports Car
Picturesque Belfast City Hall (1906 – Alfred Brumwell Thomas architect) – Classical Rennaisance Style
Alicia and Ray Salter at the Waring Street Merchant Hotel in Cathedral Quarter of Belfast
Nick travels south to the O’Toole Farm – old homestead and barn ruins
Clare Cromie O’Toole as Flying Buttress

Nick provides this description of his post-wedding excursion to visit the O’Tooles in the South:

An Irish visit:

“After Belfast, I drove to the South to spend two wonderful days with Clare and Laurence O’Toole, down on the farm.

It was lovely to see them and catch up on all their news and that of the Cromie clan. I also loved my chats with Laurence’s father Patrick, hearing about his 27 years spent in UK.

They were wonderful and very generous hosts and Clare very kindly took me on a guided tour of the beautiful countryside including a visit to Rushborough House (a Palladian villa complete with its prancing stone lions) and the Wicklow hills.

I loved our visit to the Dying Cow public house and my tour of the family farm with its ruined house and barn and Alfie the bullock.

A memorable visit and lovely to see another American cousin in 2008 (we are spoilt with Molly living in London at the moment before some foreign land entices her and Gareth away) – hopefully I will get to USA in 2009.”

Nicholas Salter
Senior Procurement Manager
™Go Native – Accommodating People


* Footnote – here are the lyrics from “Cakewalking Babies from Home” made famous by the Clarence Williams Blue Five Jazzband (with Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet) in 1924 and also sung by Bessie Smith in 1925. It was composed in part by a St Louis born vocalist Eva Taylor (1895-1977), also known as “The Dixie Nightingale.” Take the few moments to listen to Bessie Smith’s inimitable rendition of this barnburner

Cake walkers may come, cake walkers may go,
But I wanna tell you ’bout a couple I know

High steppin’ pair, so Debonair -
When it comes to bus’ness not a soul can compare

Here they come, look at ‘em, demonstratin’,
goin’ some, ain’t they syncopatin’?

Talk of the town, easin’ ’round,
Pickin’ ‘em up and layin’ ‘em down

Dancin’ fools – ain’t they demonstratin’?
They’re in a class of their own

Now the only way to win is to cheat ‘em,
you may try but you’ll never beat ‘em

Strut your stuff
They’re the cake walkin’ babies from home…

Strut your stuff, strut your stuff, cake walkin’ babies from home
Here they come, look at ‘em, syncopatin’,

Goin’ some, ain’t they demonstratin’?
Talk of the town, easin’ ’round, pickin’ ‘em up and layin’ ‘em down

Dancin’ fools – ain’t they syncopatin’
They’re in a class of their own

Now the only way to win is to cheat ‘em,
you may try but you’ll never beat ‘em

Strut your stuff, they’re the cake walkin’ babies form home
Strut your stuff, strut your stuff, cake walkin’ babies from home

Thanks Nick!

Chamberlain

Glimpses VII

Filed under: Art,Family Updates,Glimpses — Chamberlain @ 10:08 am

Fastforward – Art in antiquity now gives way to the cutting edge creativity of another family member, Joseph Pentland.

Depending on your internet connection speed and your software you may be able to link to these examples of Joe’s work from his website – be patient after clicking on these images – it may take a few moments for them to load….

These brief flash video clips give only a hint of the impact of Joe’s powerful public art – it is not really possible for a web page to present them to full effect. Realize that these are wall-sized, mechanized and computer synchronized creations meant for large public spaces. His website www.PatternCreation.com (use the password: generator) gives a better sense of his incredible creativity – a combination of artistry, mechanical engineering, and computer wizardry. Again, keep in mind that these images represent large assemblies of moving objects that are choreographed by computer into infinitely variable patterns of shape and color – truly ‘new age’ public space artistry.

Joe describes his work as follows:

“Geometric patterns and sequences have always interested me. While pursuing a PhD in electrical engineering, I started to think a great deal about what distinguishes a pattern or sequence from a random set. It was about this time my interest in patterns turned to fascination and I began to identify an approach to creating and/or generating patterns. Although my work would not be possible without a background in math and engineering, I soon realized this fascination was leading me in a new direction… a form of installation that embodies and facilitates pattern creation and generation….”

And Joe goes on to say…

“I have been working on my artwork for the better part of 4 years now, and on the pieces you see on my website for about 2.5 yrs. Before I build an installation, I first create animations of the piece and the software I use is called Maya. My ideas are mostly from my engineering background. I am afraid that my studio isn’t very glamorous at the moment….”

I don’t know about a ‘glamorous’ studio, but Joe’s work is certainly breathtaking and undoubtedly we’ll be seeing and hearing more about him and his art in the future.


Indications from antiquity (circa 1980) that a military career was unlikely…

(MOUSE OVER FOR CLOSE UP)

The Chamberlain

Glimpses VI

Filed under: Art,Family Updates,Glimpses — Chamberlain @ 12:28 pm

“Drink with me, play music with me, love with me, wear a crown with me, be mad with me when I am mad and wise when I am wise” (Athenaeus, an antiquarian ca. 170-230 BCE)

Zellie McClelland’s Spotlight Gallery Talk “Serious Drinking: Vases of the Greek Symposium” was presented Sept 3 2008 at the Washington University Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum. The presentation provided a illuminating history of the Greek symposium – “a highly choreographed all-male drinking party that often drew to a close with a riotous parade about the shuttered streets of town”.

Zellie’s gallery exhibit, organized in collaboration with Professor Susan Rotroff of the Classics and Art Departments, includes a formal recreation of the ‘andron’ (a ‘for men only’ space designed for entertaining). It features rarely displayed and exquisite period piece vases from the Washington University antiquities collection. The exhibit augments the fall 2008 course “Ancient Athens” which looks at both the archeological and literary records from the 4th century BCE.

Here are a few photos from the opening of the exhibit.

The Mildred Lane Kemper at Wasington University
The Exhibit Poster
Exhibit Opening – Zel’s Presentation
The Nolan Amphora (475-465 BCE) on display


Zellie is a PhD candidate in the Department of Classics and the Department of Art History and Archeology. Her exhibit “Serious Drinking” will remain on view in the Teaching Gallery of the Kemper until January 5, 2009. This link to the Spotlight Gallery Talk series is worth browsing. If you are in the Washington University vicinity you will enjoy seeing this fine new gallery and Zel’s exhibit.

An Aside

“Greek Life” on American University campuses began with Phi Beta Kappa, founded December 5, 1776, at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. Formed as a literary fraternity for faculty and students, Phi Beta Kappa “grew into the most prominent and respected honorary society in academe” (Wikipedia). Subsequently, Greek-letter student societies (beginning with Kappa Alpha, Sigma Phi, and Delta Phi, the “Union Triad” formed in the 1820′s at Union college in Schenectady, New York) were primarily social societies whose members were exclusively students rather than faculty.

One might wonder why these organizations adopted Greek mottos and letters as emblems. Though not by intent, Zellie’s exhibit provides a possible explanation, spotlighting the similarities between the Athenian ‘symposia’ and the American college fraternities. Indeed the subject matter of the Nolan Amphora itself may suggest a ‘hazing’ of a youth preliminary to his acceptance into the “men’s club”.


The Sweetheart of Sigma Chi

The Symposiarc