Long time, no post!
A year's gone by since I've last
updated this blog, and after some (fortunate) persuasion by several
people, I've finally convinced myself that it's high time to continue
posting here. I don't want to include too much personal stuff on this
blog, but life's been a little crazy for the past eleven months, and
certainly quite busy. College, friends, and internet culture kind of
takes over, and all of a sudden, you find you aren't updating things
like you used to! Anyway, hopefully that's over, and I can continue to
post photographs and information here, celebrating Michigan's
architecture.
After a long, eventful summer of working with the photographs at the U of M Clements Library,
I'm back in Marquette, for my junior year at Northern Michigan
University. I'm taking four art classes this semester, including the
dreaded AD 303 Individual Art Review -- wait, I suppose I should
backtrack a little, back to my work over the summer. Working at the
Clements was, to put it simply, amazing. The project was financed by
the Michigan Photographic Historical Society
and it was one of the best learning experiences I've ever had. My job
was to reorganize the photography collection -- and it was a huge, but
rewarding project.
The Clements Library's photograph collection is primarily comprised of American vernacular photography -- that is, photographs showing everyday life, family pictures, and city scenes -- as opposed to fine art photography. I had the opportunity to view all kinds of cartes de visite, matted photographs, cabinet cards, and, most interesting of all, photograph albums. Thanks to MiPHS member David Tinder, there are hundreds -- thousands -- of photographs of Michigan alone, and seeing those was particularly fascinating.
For example, I had no idea that Marquette suffered a major fire back in the mid-1800s. There were several views of the city, dating from, if I remember correctly, the 1870s, where the buildings downtown were built from wood -- and I learned soonafter that Marquette had burned. Replacing the destroyed wooden structures were stone buildings, many of which remain today.
In any case, the job was fascinating, rewarding, and very educational. If you're in the Ann Arbor area and interested in what the Clements Library does, I highly recommend stopping by. It's one of the most beautiful pieces of architecture on the University of Michigan's campus -- designed by Albert Kahn in 1922 in the Italian Renaissance style, it is a very graceful, ornate structure, inside and out.
The Clements Library's photograph collection is primarily comprised of American vernacular photography -- that is, photographs showing everyday life, family pictures, and city scenes -- as opposed to fine art photography. I had the opportunity to view all kinds of cartes de visite, matted photographs, cabinet cards, and, most interesting of all, photograph albums. Thanks to MiPHS member David Tinder, there are hundreds -- thousands -- of photographs of Michigan alone, and seeing those was particularly fascinating.
For example, I had no idea that Marquette suffered a major fire back in the mid-1800s. There were several views of the city, dating from, if I remember correctly, the 1870s, where the buildings downtown were built from wood -- and I learned soonafter that Marquette had burned. Replacing the destroyed wooden structures were stone buildings, many of which remain today.
In any case, the job was fascinating, rewarding, and very educational. If you're in the Ann Arbor area and interested in what the Clements Library does, I highly recommend stopping by. It's one of the most beautiful pieces of architecture on the University of Michigan's campus -- designed by Albert Kahn in 1922 in the Italian Renaissance style, it is a very graceful, ornate structure, inside and out.
So,
here I am, now, in Marquette, living off-campus with my best friend
Ashlee, in an apartment right across the street from Lake Superior.
It's amazing -- no, incredibly awesome
to be away from the dorms and away from all the hubbub and noise that
is NMU. We're minutes away from downtown, seconds away from the lake,
and a twenty-minute walk from campus.
I mentioned earlier AD 303 -- Individual Art Review -- the pass-or-fail class that determines whether or not you can continue being an art major. It's a serious-business course, and at the end of it all, you must have a prepared statement of intent and extensive portfolio that you show to various members of the Art and Design staff. It's a big deal. As far as that portfolio goes, I've got a general idea of what I want to do (and I'd better, because the first draft of that statement of intent is due next week!) -- unsurprisingly, it involves theaters, from both an artistic and preservationist standpoint.
I'll go into more detail in later posts, as my idea is developed and refined, but look for updates as the semester continues, and as I stress myself out into an unintelligible pile of goo!
Until then, enjoy a few views of our great state's architecture.
I mentioned earlier AD 303 -- Individual Art Review -- the pass-or-fail class that determines whether or not you can continue being an art major. It's a serious-business course, and at the end of it all, you must have a prepared statement of intent and extensive portfolio that you show to various members of the Art and Design staff. It's a big deal. As far as that portfolio goes, I've got a general idea of what I want to do (and I'd better, because the first draft of that statement of intent is due next week!) -- unsurprisingly, it involves theaters, from both an artistic and preservationist standpoint.
I'll go into more detail in later posts, as my idea is developed and refined, but look for updates as the semester continues, and as I stress myself out into an unintelligible pile of goo!
Until then, enjoy a few views of our great state's architecture.
How
about a Great Lakes lighthouse? Eagle Harbor's lighthouse, taken the
first week of May, right after the Winter '08 semester had ended. It
was still snowing in the Keweenaw Peninsula, much to the chagrin of my
father and myself.
A
pair of bad architectural additions on display in Cheboygan, back from
April of this year. I'd like to have a word with whoever approved these
designs...
Working
our way downstate and earlier into the year, here's an abstract view of
some clashing architecture: the white columns of the Jiffy Mix factory
rise up above the brick façades of downtown Chelsea.
I'll
leave you with a night view of Houghton's Lode Theatre, taken during
Michigan Tech's Winter Festival in February. As many people have told
me, the interior of the theater building has been torn up and divided
into several screens -- an unfortunate fate that many theaters have
suffered. I'm motivating myself to finish my theater project and
hopefully it will be completed soon. I've done the photography... and
now it's time for the real work!