Browsing the archives for the Art category.

Night, St. Louis.

Here is a nice view of the downtown St. Louis taken yesterday after an event in the Jesuit Hall in the St. Louis University.

The American presiding reverend father who had spent eighteen years as a presiding priest in a Catholic church in Lagos Nigeria had graciously given us a tour of the Jesuit Hall where the priests lived, and of the view from the top of the fifteen-storied building into the church across the road and the city at large. A great experience.

Patti LaBelle as Funmilayo

I just came across this video. It’s Patti LaBelle’s performance as Funmilayo Ransome Kuti in the Broadway play Fela!. Watch out for the octaves going high and low. What a woman. What an amazing performance.

Remodelling the Arch

The Gateway Arch in St. Louis, Missouri, is one of the United State’s most recognizable monuments. Well, not really. The State of Missouri and the city of St. Louis has not explored the tourism potential of the nation’s tallest man-made structure as much as they should have. And over the years, the most iconic images of the United States abroad has been either the Statue of Liberty in New York or the Hollywood sign in Los Angeles. In some cases, even the Golden Gate Bridge and the Mt. Rushmore carvings in the Black Forests of Dakota have taken a bigger pride of place on items that represent America the most. Until now. The city of St. Louis and the state of Missouri have devised a plan to revamp the image of the Arch and develop its potential for tourism around the country and around the world.

To achieve this, a competition whose goal is to revitalize the grounds at the Jefferson Expansion Memorial where the Arch is located was set up. The aim was to elicit proposals from architects all over the world out of which the best is chosen and implemented for the beautification of the whole area. “We gave each competitor 10 goals to meet in their plans, including connecting the Illinois side of the river,” Tom Bradley said. He’s the superintendent of the Jefferson Expansion Memorial. The estimated cost for the project is $300 million. So far, each of the 5 finalists of the proposal have been given $100,000 to create not only colourful, but meaningful, proposals which are going to be scrutinized before the winner is chosen.

Speaking with Chancellor of the University Mr. Vaughn Vandegrift last week at the public exhibition held at the Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, I got the impression that the project is not only beyond the State of Missouri, the State of Illinois and the city of St.Louis where the monument is located, it is beyond this current generation as well. The renovation of the Arch and surrounding which is expected to begin when the winner of the bid is announced later in the year will be expected to be totally complete in 2015. “As this plan makes progress,” he said to the campus newspaper, The Alestle, “students can tell their children and grandchildren that they once saw the winning project on display at SIUE.”

All of the proposed designs incorporate parts of Illinois on the other side of the river into their designs and each presentation make for very enchanting viewing. One proposes an international conference centre around the Arch so that people don’t just come to see the monument but could also come for shows and events. Another one proposes tram, bicycles and pedestrian paths across the Mississippi river in a way that gives a better viewing access to the Arch area. What most of the proposals have in common is their love for flair, and a very thorough re-imagining of the Gateway Arch and its surroundings. If one thing is sure as the judges look over the finalists to choose the winner of the bid, it is that the riverfront and the areas around the Gateway Arch is not going to remain the same in the next ten years. Hopefully, it will open a bigger opportunity for tourism in the St.Louis area of the United States. For me, I will be glad to be able to say that I was here when it started.

The Gateway Arch, also known as the Gateway to the West, is part of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial in St. Louis, Missouri, and was built to commemorate the westward expansion of the United States. It is located at Walnut St & South Memorial Drive St. Louis. It was opened to the public on July 10, 1967 after two years of construction. It is locatedĀ  is 630ft tall. The Washington Monument in DC, its closest competitor is only 555ft tall, and the Statue of Liberty in New York is 305ft.

The Fiddler on the Roof

I have chanced upon a large collection of very old movies some of which I should have seen a long while ago but couldn’t because of inaccessibility. As much as I can, I will tell you my views on them, and the impact they had on me (for those that do make an impact, that is). The last week has been a tour of Guys and Dolls, a movie featuring Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando (before he became the large framed guy we grew up knowing). The 1955 musical is famous for being the only movie in which the two famous men starred together, and the only one in which Marlon Brando sang. The story is nuanced and playful, but very entertaining, and timeless.

The other new memorable film I saw, also a musical, is The Fiddler on the Roof, a powerful story of family, love, tradition and the departure therefrom, and the story of the Jewish persecution in Tsarist Russia. I am always inevitably drawn to stories that have real life historical background because they constantly remind that we’re not just watching a movie, but learning from the story of a people that lived during a trying period in the larger history of the world. This story, based on the life of Tevye, a poor Jewish man with five daughters, is set in 1905 and tells of the endurance and transience of tradition, the strength of love’s bond, the perseverance of humanity in the face of persecution, the conviviality of family life, and the presence of hope in every dire situation. It was particularly interesting for me to discover that the persecution of Jews in Russia did not start during the Second World War but had been there far much earlier. And when you see a whole village trooping out on their feet in the cold winter out of a place where they’d lived for generations into the outside world to places unknown, your heart breaks. Add to this a letting go of a father of her daughter who had abandoned the faith and family tradition by marrying a Christian secretly, then you get a scene of denouement with a powerful emotional finish.

I can’t tell you more of any of them without letting out the plot, but I must strongly recommend them for whomever is interested in musicals, history, love, laughter and a few teardrops. You may also come off with a strong love for a few of the songs in The Fiddler on the Roof. My favourite is “Sunrise, Sunset.” and “If I were a rich man”, but you may also like “Tradition” and “Matchmaker.” As for Guys and Dolls, watch out for “Luck be a Lady” and a few other jazz classics.

Ten stars out of ten.

Summer People (I)

Random images of people I met and interacted with during the summer.

Includes Bola, Rotji, Yun Hsin, Nneoma, Laitan, Ron, Jolaade, Papa Rudy, Chiedu, and Elizabeth in no particular order. One of those light-skinned beautiful women is my sister. Go figure.