Over the past couple of weeks, we have seen two movies. One of them I liked, the other I detested.
First, the film that I liked... "Nuremberg"
Over the past couple of weeks, we have seen two movies. One of them I liked, the other I detested.
First, the film that I liked... "Nuremberg"
I had been thinking about buying some sort of decoration to have on the door of the apartment when it's not the Day of the Dead or Christmas season. On Monday I was at Alejandro's family's house. I had a dentist appointment that evening, and I was walking the few blocks to her office. I passed a store which sells decorative items, and at the entrance was a beautiful metal wreath decorated with flowers and hummingbirds. It looked as if it would be too big for my door. On my way back, I went into the shop to see if that had any similar items in a smaller size. They did indeed. They had a number of decorations, all by the same Mexican artisan, all with a hummingbird motive.
I decided upon this one which is now hanging on my door.
It will be on the door until October when I start to decorate for Day of the Dead.
Easter is on its way, but my poinsettia plant is now in full bloom.
My first Christmas after the move to Mexico, I bought a poinsettia. After it was done blooming, I cut it back and let it sprout new foliage. In the fall I put it in the guest bedroom, but I was not good about closing the blinds or shutting the door each night. Even though it did not get total darkness, by February it had some nice blooms.
This past fall, I did not even bother to give it total darkness. Christmas is long past, but I think that the late blossoms are the best I have ever had!
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I have also written frequently about my attempts to get my orchid to bloom. I bought the plant at Home Depot, and the flowers were beautiful. But then, for over a year, I could not get it to rebloom. July of last year, I took the plant to a nursery, and had a professional repot it. He said that I had been over-watering it. He cut away some rotten roots, and planted it in bark with a time-release fertilizer. He told me to give it no more than one cup of water per week.
In August, just a month after repotting, a flower stalk had sprouted, and by October my orchid was in full-bloom The flowers lasted until January.
A few days ago, I was looking at my orchid. I wondered whether the time-released fertilizer was spent, and if, now that winter has passed, I should begin fertilizing it. I noticed that at its core, a new leaf was emerging. And then, much to my surprise, I saw that a new flower stalk had sprouted.
When I learned that Alejandro has a subscription to HBO, I found a series that I had wanted to watch... "The Gilded Age". It's already on its third season, but back in Ohio I never had HBO.
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| (image taken from the internet) |
The series was created and written by Julian Fellowes, the producer who brought us the popular "Downton Abbey" series and movies, and it bears many resemblances to the British series. Both of them are "soap operas" disguised as costume dramas. However, they are very high quality "soap operas". I do think that "Downton" is the better of the two. What attracts me to "The Gilded Age" are the performances of two actresses that I like very much... Christine Baranski and Cynthia Nixon. Baranski plays the widowed Agnes von Rhijn, and Nixon is her meek, spinster sister Ada. Barnaski's role could be compared to Maggie Smith's role as the Dowager Countess. She is a snob who looks down her nose at those flashy "nouveau riche", especially her neighbors, the Russells. But just like the Dowager Countess, Agnes has a good-hearted side as well.
I am hooked on "The Gilded Age", and I am already well into the third season. I look forward to the fourth season which is expected to premiere in August of this year.
There are many paintings in the museum by artists who are not as well known outside of Mexico. However, I have been to so many art exhibits down here that many of the names have become familiar to me. And perhaps, if you have been reading my blog long enough, they might be familiar to you too.
The last time I was at the Museum of Modern Art in Mexico City, I was quite upset. Most of the museum's galleries were being used for temporary exhibits. There was just one small space for a dozen or two paintings from their permanent collection. I thought that any tourist coming to the museum to see the richness of Mexican art would have been sorely disappointed.
When I went to the museum last week to see the Gelman exhibit (see my previous two entries), I found that a much larger portion of their permanent collection was on display. It's probably a fraction of their holdings. (Most museums have only a portion of their collections on exhibit.) However, it definitely gives visitors a much better overview of 20th century Mexican art, especially with the Gelman collection to supplement it.
The so-called "Big Three" of Mexican muralism... David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera, and José Clemente Orozco... were well represented with smaller format works.
Here are more paintings from the Gelman collection now on display at Mexico City's Museum of Modern Art...