The ghosts of folk art cast a long shadow at “Folk Fest” (http://www.slotinfolkart.com/folk_fest/folk_fest.html ) made longer by the lack of a deep bench of compelling new work. The artists with the most distinctive newer works, Missionary Mary Proctor and Cornbread, have works around virtually every corner, and like them as I do (I own nice examples from […]
Death to the “Arguable” Thesis: Before We Argue, Let’s Believe
“Have you come up with a thesis yet?” “No, I haven’t even started. I’ll get to it tonight or early tomorrow morning.” “Yeah, I am great under the gun. I write so much better when the pressure is on!” “I can make up something in time.” […]
Ecce Quam Bonum: Happy New School Year
(What follows is a devotion I gave this morning at the beginning of Faculty Forum at The Westminster Schools) Behold, how good and how pleasant it isFor God’s people to dwell together in unity! (Psalm 133) I have been studiously avoiding the news recently. Adjusting to a new job has helped […]
A Way of Seeing: Learning to Make Photographs
Headed toward Stressa on Lago Maggiore (Ross Peters) In advance of a trip to Italy two summers ago, my wife bought a entry level DSLR camera. We were going to be there about a month, so […]
Devotion to the Task…Are You Ready?
Are you ready? It is the time of year when summer athletic practices begin in earnest, and along with some parents, faculty members, and alumni, I was a spectator for the Boys Cross Country time trial this morning. Poised at the starting line at 8:00 a.m., there looked to be about forty-five nervous, already sweaty […]
The Comfort of Poetry during the Move to Atlanta
We have to wait for just the right day, and unfortunately for an English teacher trying to work with some sort of course plan, I cannot identify that day until it arrives on the lawn, buried in an assortment of leaves. In Sonnet 73, Shakespeare asks us to look out into autumn, a particular moment […]