The other day I came across
a folder of old family photos that I had filed in the wrong place and
hadn't seen for years. Many of the snapshots showed my parents as they
were in the 1930's. (They were married in 1932, but I, their first
child, didn't come along until 1941.)
The
thing that struck me was how dressed up everyone was in the 1930's.
Even in the 1950's, when I was growing up, I remember my mother would
always put on a hat, even to go next door. And when it was a tea party
or church, both she and I would wear a hat and white gloves. (Please click "read more" to see the other photos)
Friday, September 25, 2015
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Before TV and Movies, There Were Stereoviews
This post was first published on 7/23/12
(Please click on the photos to enlarge them and see them better)
(Please click on the photos to enlarge them and see them better)
The Story Behind the Photos--19th Century Greece
Starting around 1860 and lasting well into the 1900’s, nearly
every home in the USA was equipped with a stereopticon viewer and a good supply
of stereoview cards. Some of the stereo-viewers
were fancy tabletop pieces mounted on a base, often with inlaid wood. But most of them, like mine above, were
simple hand-held models.
"An old dream realized at last, ship-canal through Isthmus, E.S.E. Corinth, Greece" Underwood.
It was traditional for wealthy families to send their adult
children on a “Grand Tour” to finish their education. Families of more modest means could sit in their parlors and
view all the outstanding sites and monuments of the world in 3-D thanks to their
stereo viewer. The reflecting
lenses inside the viewer fused the two images on the stereo card—which were taken
by separate camera lenses-- into one image that appeared to be three
dimensional.
"A Father and Son of the race of Homer, Patras, Greece. 1897"
From the very beginning of photography—the daguerreotype in
1839—photographers have created stereoviews that appear three-dimensional when
seen through a viewer, but if you ever
come across a stereo daguerreotype (polished silver on a copper plate) or ambrotype (on glass), you’ve found an
extremely rare and valuable photograph.
Oddly, the few stereo dags I’ve seen often portray nude or partially
nude women—I guess the porn industry began long before the invention of
photography.
The
stereoviews that flooded the country from 1850 were
(first) albumen prints pasted onto cardboard cards. From the 1880’s to
the 1920’s, the 7 by 3 1/2-inch cards had rounded corners
and were curved to enhance the 3-D effect.
In their parlors, Americans viewed the horrors of dead
bodies on Civil War battlefields, exotic customs of foreign cultures and the
wonders of the world. Explanatory
notes were usually printed on the back of the card.
By the turn of the century, viewers often collected groups of
cards that were posed by actors to tell a story—for instance a series showing a
soldier leaving his fiancée to go into battle, then being wounded and finally
nursed back to health by his sweetheart who traveled to the hospital to care
for him.
Sometimes the series told a humorous story like 10 cards I
once owned showing how Mrs. Newlywed catches on to her husband’s dalliance with
the comely cook by spying a floury handprint on the back of his suit coat, so
she replaces the attractive cook with a plug-ugly one.
Often identical views were published by more than one
company—many of these were pirated and of inferior quality.
"Temple of Nike, Acropolis, Athens, Greece."
In the U.S. the major makers of these super-popular stereo
cards were (first) the Langenheim brothers of Philadelphia, then Underwood and
Keystone and dozens of other lesser-known publishers. I haven’t been able to
find proof of a connection between the humorous stereoview series and early
silent movie companies like Biograph which produced “The Keystone Kops”, but it
seems that early silent movies would be a natural successor to the stories told
by actors in stereoviews.
"Statue of Byron, Athens, Greece."
Before 2004, when Athens was preparing to host the Olympics,
I started collecting stereo views taken in Greece around 1896 when the first modern
Olympics were staged in the country where the Olympic games were born. I used the photos on these stereo cards to design a series
of note cards and a poster, sometimes adding a touch of color.
Left: "Recruits for the Army before the Temple of Theseus, Athens."
Right: "The best preserved temple in all Greece, the Theseion in Athens"
What thrilled the original owners of these stereo views was
the lifelike three-dimensional quality of the scenes. But what thrilled me, upon viewing the antique photographs
of Greece, was the chance to see my husband’s native country and countrymen the
way they looked as they went about their daily life at the end of the 19th
century. It wasn’t the temples and ruins that intrigued me—they look much the same
today when I visit Greece. It was
the people—the extras in the scene—that I cared about.
Left: "The Argolis plain, looking from Nauplia to Mykenae"
Right: "East end of the Parthenon on the Acropolis at Athens"
Because the photographer wanted to dramatize the 3-D quality
of each photo, he would choose some important site—let’s say the Acropolis—for
the background, then he would put something—or someone—in the foreground and
often in the middle ground too.
And the “models” he’d ask to pose were people who were handy-—soldiers,
farmers, school children, pedestrians.
Left: "The Acropolis from Philopappos Hill",
Right: "Columns of the Temple of Olympian Zeus and the Acropolis in Distance, Athens"
I’ve never read anything about the methods of these stereo
photographers, so I don’t know if they paid the bystanders whom they coached to
stay very still until the photographer had focused on the scene with his large,
boxy stereo camera on a tripod.
Left: View from Lykabettos Hill past the Royal Palace and the Acropolis to the sea,
Right: "Greek Girls among ancient ruins"
I suspect these “extras” in the scene posed for free, just
to witness this new-fangled thing called photography.
"City milk delivery, Athens, straight from the goat."
But in their traditional dress and everyday tasks, these
humble Greeks achieved a kind of immortality as they became extras in historic
scenes illustrating how life was lived in the days before electricity and television,
smart phones and I-pads.
"Shepherds bringing Lambs to Market, Nauplia, Greece"
When I first visited Greece in 1968, there was still no
electricity in my future husband’s village of Lia in Epiros, and women often
wore their traditional garb, including the headscarves and embroidered vests,
but by the seventies, electricity and television made it to the villages and
all that authentic traditional detail was lost by the time they’d seen “Dallas” and “The Fugitive.”
Whatever your area of interest—trains, ships, history,
architecture, native Americans, anthropology, you can put together a great
collection of antique stereoviews on the subject without a huge outlay of cash,
thanks to EBay and sellers like my friends at Dave’s Stereos. But if you come across any great views
of 19th century Greece, give me a heads up first.
Monday, September 7, 2015
Another Amalia Birthday—New York Style
The day began with a safari or wagon train to transport
everything over the four crosstown blocks from Amalia’s 14th floor
apartment, into the park, and then on behind the Metropolitan Museum to a spot
near Turtle Pond. Of course the passengers in the wagon train included Amalia’s
little brother Nicolas, four months old.
We used two strollers and a cooler on
wheels, and the stuff we toted included a pink “princess castle” and a small
inflated Doc McStuffins “bouncy house” filled with multiple balls. Amalia and her Mommy wore matching dresses from Nicaragua.
Parents with toddlers and babies arrived; wine, beer, pink
lemonade and popcorn were dispensed and Amalia’s Papi walked over to Farinella’s on Lexington to pick up long,
rectangular pizzas (called “palams”).
Meanwhile little Nicolas made friends
with Milind, Siya’s little brother.
We had already bought
and transported the two cakes—a carrot cake from Citarella’s (the only cake flavor Amalia will
eat—and only $20!) and a Sugar Cookie Cake from Insomnia Cookies on Second Ave.
and 82nd.
This was an expanded
version of the only cookie Amalia likes--she calls them “moon cookies” because
of the moon on the Insomnia Cookies sign (They deliver warm cookies to your
apartment up to 3 a.m., hence the “Insomnia” in the name.)
The candles on the cakes were lit and blown out by the
birthday girl.
After that came the Doc
McStuffins piñata, under the direction of Amalia's Papi, which was gamely attacked by Amalia, but not broken open
until an older boy took the stick. But
before the cake and piñata came the highlight of the party that everyone had
been waiting for—Manny the Bubble man.
Amalia’s folks had discovered Manny the Bubble Man in
Central Park a year earlier. He’s not
the only street entertainer in the park who creates giant bubbles with sticks,
rope, water and dish detergent, but he is probably the maestro of bubbles.
He considers bubble making an art form and
was a little disappointed (as were the parents) that the youngsters kept
popping his giant bubbles before they reached their full size.
Manny told me that he has done ads or commercials for
Tiffany’s and with Sarah Jessica Parker.
Eleni and Emilio had booked him for half an hour, but he stayed an extra
fifteen minutes, creating customized bubbles for each child plus parent. Here’s Eleni’s long-time roommate Katherine
with her son Pace.
And Amalia with her Papi.
Nobody wanted to leave, but it was getting late and people
started packing up. “The goody bags
come at the end,” Amalia informed me, as she passed out Dr. Seuss bags from
Target with back-to-school treasures inside.
We reassembled the wagon train, complete with all our gear
and lots of presents for Amalia to unwrap later, and headed back toward home,
thinking “Thank goodness for good weather, an August (not December) birthday date, and the magic combination of
little kids and really big bubbles.”
Friday, September 4, 2015
About the Photo of the Dead Boy on the Beach
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The photograph shows the body of a little boy, about three
years old, cradled in the arms of a Turkish officer after his body was found
face down in the sand near Bodrum, Turkey, one of 12 migrants who drowned while
trying to flee from their town of Kotani
in northern Syria.
This photo is all over the internet, at the top of the
trending list. It’s also in yesterday’s New York Times, although in small size
in black and white on an inside page—page
A11 in my edition-- with the caption “A Turkish gendarme on Wednesday
carried the body of a child who drowned en route to the Greek Island of Kos.”
First this photo
became viral on the internet, shared everywhere, eliciting worldwide demands for
aid to these families who are risking death and all their life’s savings to get
out of Syria, Iraq or Afghanistan, to reach Europe and safety. Seventy
immigrants were found stuffed into a truck in Austria, suffocated by ruthless smugglers
who abandoned the decomposing bodies and fled.
Days ago we read about that and were appalled, but it had only a
fraction of the impact of the photo of one little boy found dead on a beach in
Turkey.
The second wave of attention to the photo was an internet flood
of protest—“Leave the dead their dignity!”
people wrote, “Show some respect!
Don’t show me this photo again!”
I found this outburst of protest to be heartless and
stupid. This is what photographs are
for, people! To put a face to suffering
and injustice and to motivate us, the viewers, to do something about it. Photographs, in their immediacy, have the
ability to hit us in the gut far more than any collection of words, no matter
how eloquent. That’s why, since the beginning of photography in 1839, photographs
have been used to touch people’s
emotions and sway their opinions. Even
before the Civil War, Abolitionists were using photographs like “The Scourged
Back” to raise anti-slavery emotion. And
the pro-slavery factions did the same; witness the notorious daguerreotypes of stripped
and humiliated slaves ordered by the country’s leading scientist, Louis
Agassiz, to promote his theory that blacks were a separate and inferior species..
Think about the famous photograph by Nick Ut of the little
girl running from the napalm during the massacre at My Lai. The New
York Times debated putting this photo on the front page—after all, the
little girl was naked and screaming and on fire. But the editors had the grit to put it
prominently on page one. I remember, in
1972 picking up the paper from the mat and saying to my husband, “This
photograph is going to win the Pulitzer prize.”
And it did.
Sadly, The Times did not show the same courage with yesterday’s
photo of the boy on the beach in Turkey.
After much debate, they decided to run it inside and to choose a less
distressing photo with the child’s face obscured. Both the Los Angeles Times and the Washington
Post put the more moving close-up of him face down on the sand on their front
pages. (Today, Friday, The New York Times had a much larger photo in color of the boy lying in the sand, while a Turkish gendarme prepares to pick him up. Still on an inside page.)
When President Nixon saw the photo of the “Napalm girl” of
My Lai, he wondered aloud if it had been faked.
But it was very real. The little
girl in the photo, Kim Phuc, lived to grow up, defected to become a Canadian
citizen, and founded the Kim Phuc Foundation,
which offers medical and psychological assistance to child victims of
war, including Ali Abbas, a boy who lost both arms in Baghdad during the
invasion of Iraq in 2003.
The photo of the “Napalm girl” that The New York Times dared
to put on its front page electrified the world to the reality of what happened
at My Lai and ultimately did some good for humanity, leading to her
humanitarian foundation.
There won’t be any happy ending for the little boy on the beach
in Turkey. His name was Aylan
Kurdi. He was three years old. At least 12 people drowned when his boat
capsized in the night while trying to reach the Greek island of Kos. The bodies of his brother Galip, five, and
his mother Rihan, 35, were found farther
up the beach.
The original photo I saw of the boy’s body being carried by
the Turkish police officer did not show his face, but just now, on line, I saw
a photo of the little body sprawled in the sand, in his red shirt and blue
shorts and smart new shoes, as if dressed for the first day of pre-school. I
could see his face. That’s when I
couldn’t hold back the tears.
“Leave the dead their dignity. Show some respect!” cry those
who don’t want to see such images, but photos like these give the dead and
the abused back their dignity,
especially if the reaction to such disturbing images can alleviate the
conditions that caused these deaths.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Trying To Put the Fun Back in Boyhood
Allen Johnson with his dog Co-Co in the early 1940's
Allen Johnson
Jr., 79, has lived a life filled with adventure, travel and success, but he
insists, “My life peaked at nine.” He has written a memoir and books of poems
and essays, often reflecting on the unfettered joy of growing up under the
“benign neglect” of his parents and the loving guidance of black employees in
his parents’ large Alabama home surrounded by forest in Mountain Brook, an
affluent suburb of Birmingham.
Johnson
attended three universities, and sailed to Europe in the mid Fifties on the Ile de
France when he met Ernest Hemingway on board. He has lived in a variety of
places including Switzerland, Cuba, Florida and Vermont, where in 1971 he
founded the Vermont State Craft Center. He
plays jazz guitar. He met and wrote about Albert Einstein and Nat King Cole and
he served in the army in ’59 and ’60.
But he insists the best time of his life was his boyhood in the South.
His
memoir “Fun! A Boyhood”, was written and
published over twenty years ago, primarily “so that my descendants would be
able to know what I was like as a boy. I also wanted to memorialize what was an
extraordinarily joyful time in my life along with some of the people—and dogs—who
gave me so much love and fun.”
In “Fun” Allen
remembers the particular pleasures of a boyhood in the 30’s and 40’s--handmade
slingshots, comic books, pocket knives , war-time Spam and margarine instead of
butter, his Dick Tracy cap gun and the little comic strips that were wrapped
around Double Bubble gum, radio shows like “Terry and the Pirates”, hoecake
dripping with melted butter, BB guns and firecrackers, water pistols, yoyos,
chemistry sets—most of which would never be permitted by careful parents
today. “Having a dollar in your pocket
was money. Having six cardboard tubes of copper-coated BBs in your pocket
dragging down your pants was wealth,” he wrote.
Re-reading
his memoir 20-some years later, Johnson reflected, “I found the seventy-three
year-old me in complete accord with the fifty-two year-old me on the subject of
the negativism in the modern world. I
continue to want to do my small part to turn this trend around. It is essential that we start to pay more
attention to the source of the joyful, fun things in life.”
So he drew on
his childhood memories for three books, known collectively as the Blackwater
novels, and turned to his long-time friend George Schnitzer of Premium Press America,
an independent publisher, to publish them.
The books, which are reminiscent of Mark Twains’ works about boyhood a
century earlier, are targeted at forth and fifth graders but appeal just as
much to adults and especially grandparents who want to share their childhood
adventures with their grandchildren. (Many
of Johnson’s own adventures, bad and good, including blowing up the toilet with
a cherry bomb, appear in the books.) They have won a number of awards including
the INDIEFAB Book of the Year Award, and the IPPY 2015 Bronze Medal for Best
Juvenile Fiction.
In the first
novel, “My Brother’s Story”, identical
twins Johnny and Will are orphaned and adopted by two families, Johnny by an abusive
aunt in Tennessee and Will by a loving couple who live in the country near
Birmingham. Johnny runs away and is sheltered deep in the Blackwater Swamp by
Linc, a reclusive black man who is persecuted by Bobby Scagg, the son of the
man who lynched Linc’s father. In turn,
Johnny is able to care for Linc when he becomes ill with malaria. “My Brother’s
Story” is a record of the twins’ adventures as they search to find each other
and then to win the right to live together.
The second
novel, “The Dead House,” continues the tale of the twins, and draws on author
Johnson’s love of tree houses, riding on Pullman trains, dogs, and mysterious
mansions. The third, “A Nest of Snakes” begins when the twins, up
in their tree house, overhear a plot. With
their friend Rad Fox they decide to help Linc, who is in danger from the Ku
Klux Klan. One reviewer, Morris Dees, of
the Southern Poverty Law Center said, “Their story has an important childhood
lesson at its heart: How good men and women, black and white, would stand up to
violent, scheming racists in the era of Jim Crow.”
Race
relations and the inequities of the past play a part in each of the Blackwater
novels. As Johnson told me, “The point I
try to make in these books is that a lot of love existed between the races, and
in my entire boyhood I never saw one interaction that wasn’t based on love and
respect. When I was growing up, a lot
of us were exposed to a black person who worked for the family. I learned about honesty from our cook, Nettie. They became part of the family and helped to
raise us.”
But as an
adult, Johnson realized the poisonous injustices rampant in the South. “As a child I didn’t understand. But my college years at the University of
Alabama also gave me first-hand experience of the good people coming together
with love to help each other and to confront racial hatred. I was in the audience when Nat King Cole was
attacked.” (In 1956 the entertainer was
assaulted on stage during a concert in Birmingham, Alabama.)
Beyond describing
interactions between the races in the
1930’s and 40’s, the novels are a celebration of the joys of an
unfettered, unscheduled boyhood. “My
hope is that grandparents will read the novels to their grandkids for fun and
to help them understand how life was back in their day.”
He laments that such an unregulated and independent childhood is not necessarily possible today. “The country is much more urban than when I was a child. Roaming free in the woods is not possible for many kids. Rough and ready fun, contact with nature, has been lost. Also, the media have got parents so scared that they won’t let kids go off on their own. Modern kids are over-structured and hooked on technology and there may not be much we can do about it.”
But Johnson, who
has three adult children but no grandchildren (yet), is hoping that he can help
today’s kids rediscover the possibilities of childhood. “I consider these books to be parables on how
to live. They come from an earlier time when young people played outside as I
did as a boy in Alabama. Fun was my goal
and the possibility of getting into trouble added spice. When I went out the door in the morning, I
knew I was going to have fun. The only
question was how much fun.”