My Laguna Bacalar House Is For Sale

The decision has been made. It was not an easy one because I adore the house, the pool, the view, my garden. It will be hard to leave but financial and medical reasons make it necessary.

Finalmente yo hecho el decision vender mi casa en la orilla de la Laguna Bacalar en el ojo de la Laguna cerca del Hotel Laguna.  No es facil salir porque yo adoro mi casa, la alberça, la vista y mi jardin.  El link abajo es por un galerie de fotos de la casa.

View of Dock

A new album of the house with interior and exterior views is now available at http://7colorlagoon.com/galleries/houseforsale/index.html

There is also a new set of pages with contact information and a page noting that the house is for sale at Bacalar House.

As promised I am working on a new pdf download with a more complete description easily printed or forwarded.

For now the following agencies are representing the house and property which are properly titled, all taxes up to date:

Denis Couture
MexicoCaribbean
(248) 434-2407 (office)
(248) 980-4014 (cell)
www.mexicocaribbean.net

Denis Couture/  Mexico Caribbean

Office: (248) 434-2407 and Email www.mexicocaribbean.net

Sra. Jenny Martinez Sabido in Chetumal, Mexico

(983) 833-9179  Cell: (983) 836-0176

Email:    gmars76@hotmail.com       Señora Martinez habla Español mejor.  Ella conoce la casa muy buena durante toda la vida de la casa.

Again: contact me at hfd@7colorlagoon.com or hfdratch@yahoo.com

I Have Returned

That general said that as he took back the Phillipines on the way to Japan.

My return is less spectacular but filled with culture-shock. I am back in Bacalar, still kicking albeit weakly and in Spanish. For a time I closed the walls of the property around the house and closed the house around me. I needed my hermit-like privacy. Now I begin to function.

The culture shock was shocking in its dual feelings of foreign-ness in both this alien country where I live and in my own, changed America. This, after all, was America’s good-bye and bon voyage to the M/S Fascination as we left Miami under guard. Two jet-skiers headed with whoops of glee would have played in the wake of the ship but for being headed off by a serious looking USCG craft escorting the floating hotel to the high seas.

Coast Guard guard for the Fascination

Photo ©Howard Dratch, 2007

Let me plug a nifty (that is the appropriate word) little application, iGlasses.  It adds huge functionality and fun to Apple’s Photo Booth.  Since I don’t do and haven’t the bandwidth for video messaging, it is still great fun with my series of self-portraits from the MacBook Pro’s built-in lens in the screen.                      Heat sensitive self-portrait

Miami Art Museum Shows New Gifts Celebrating 10 Years

10 to the First Power or The Power of 10: Miami Art Museum’s collection is increased by gifts of collectors.

Leger In Courtyard At the Miami Art Museum

The Miami Art Museum, which they want to call MAM, is celebrating its 10th anniversary. It is not old for a museum — not even for an American museum. But Florida, when I grew up here in the 1950s and part of the 60s, was not noted for its culture. It still is much better at presenting amusement parks and ball games than museums or the performing arts.

The focal point for its’ tourism success is a huge amusement park in the center of the state based on a cartoon mouse. Mouseworld tries to create a mythological America that never existed. It is the symbol of Florida. They even put one in France and an original in California. Symbols of America like golden arches. Symbols and myths do not always deliver cultural benefits, educational excellence. Florida also boasts a beer garden for the kindergarten set in Tampa and multiple arenas for the worship of football and baseball, some terrific racing of cars, hydroplanes and other beautiful things that go fast.

Miami has both the pop boat shows, grand prix racing and a new performing arts center, growing galleries, the “Design District” and some museums. MAM sits in the center of the Downtown and is planning to break ground for a massive new facility in 2008 in what is to become Miami’s Cultural District.

The plan was to report on the Tamayo show at MAM that ran from June through September 23. The plan was to report on it before it was taken down but some surgery got in the way of my writing energies. Still, the show (Tamayo: A Modern Icon Reinterpreted) was organized by the Santa Barbara Museum of Art together with the Consejo Nacional de Bellas Artes and Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporàneo in Mexico City. In Miami the Consulate General of Mexico also helped present it.

If you get a chance to catch it in a different gallery or museum, do it. Tamayo was known to me, some of his works familiar from the Modern and, I seem to recall, works in an L.A. museum and in books looked at in that great pile in my memory that have lost their titles and where I found, borrowed, bought or merely looked at them. Rufino del Carmen Arellanes Tamayo (Mexicans have not only wonderful names but lots of them) was Oaxacan even though he ended up painting in both Mexico and the United States.

His history mirrors many other artists through the ages who were destined and groomed for some useful and responsible profession. His mother died in 1911 when he was 12 and was moved with an aunt to Mexico City. She put him in accounting school (someone once suggested I become an accountant rather than photographer and, luckily, I demurred) so that he could do the financial reporting for the family fruit-selling business. He wisely followed the muse to the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes where he sat in on classes until they took him in officially in 1917.

The early paintings are dark and heavily influenced by both European movements — Cubism, Fauvism, Neo-impressionism and other rising isms of the new century. He threw in Mexico’s indigenous facets and the violence of the Revolution of 1910. Then he stirred in his hopes and dreams and the power of the isms and out of the cauldron came Mexican forces labeled him traitor to the Revolution which helped propel him into the New York of the 20s and, later, the late 30s and 40s.

Sadly, some of MAM’s galleries, particularly for these earlier works, were poorly lighted. The lighting appeared to be an on-going problem which, we can assume, will be addressed in the building for which ground will be broken next year. Not all the pieces were impressive but the jewels that were among the choices were just that, jewels of his own modernism infused with the spirit of Abstract Expressionism of post-war New York. There are Mexican women of Tehuantepec drawn Cubist style that still smell of chiles and emanate hot tropical style unknown to Picasso. There are supernatural figures with glowing eyes, phantoms of the post-war apocalyptic fears of nuclear annihilation that threaten to escape from the confines of the canvas frame and symbolic birds with tropical colors and universal hopes and fears.

He was still painting in the 1970s and 80s although death had become one of the motifs in his work. We are not surprised since that angel, that seductive temptress that comes for us all, hovered with his muse and he made his peace with her. He shows it in his work. He shows, too, the love for his wife of many decades in the portrait of her that embodies so much in so little. Luckily these later pieces, the supernatural, the birds of the Cold War are the ones that I found in the better-lit galleries. MAM impresses in a state usually in love with the new and pop, chain stores and art on velvet.

People Mover In Miami’s Downtown Transportation Network

Tamayo is gone from Miami but, wherever the show lands next, I hope you get to see it. If not dive into a mound of art books and pull some of the images out to imprint in the galleries of your mind.

Ten to the first power at MAM. Yes, MAM. The show at the Miami Art Museum is called the <i>Power of Ten</i>. This one runs through 23 October and you can still get there to celebrate gifts the museum has received during the first 10 years of its life as a “collecting institution”. Are they all good? Are they equal in vision in quality? They are gifts, mind you, and we all have a closet with some ties that didn’t make the grade, a pair of multi-colored golfing slacks along with the treasures without which our life would be lessened. So it must be with museums. (more…)

Miami Condo Construction Continues

Like the Supreme Court that lags behind cultural and political changes because justices have been previously appointed and serve a lifetime; major construction projects take time.  Even when the financial foundations have become weakened by financial changes, the projects have a life of their own, their millions dedicated and their crews hired, contracts made and, sometimes, owners waiting for their expensive cubbyholes.

Downtown Miami Condo Construction

The Sub Prime Crisis In Pictures

Since my vistas have turned to stock markets with the flashing red and green lights of money changing hands and my education in economics from years of working with the Levy Institute of Economics at Bard College finally being made useful; I throw in a visual interpretation of the recent volatility in the Market.

The Formal Garden At Blithewood

You may note that I have changed the headline image from the shot of Laguna Bacalar (Lagoon of the 7 Colors) to this recent picture of Blithewood Garden at Bard College.

Rose in Blithewood Garden

Blithewood has many emotional connections to my life and is one of the country’s fine 19th century gardens. It was designed by Andrew Jackson Downing and is found below the Jerome Levy Economics Institute of Bard College on the shore of the Hudson River about 90 miles north of New York City.

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Radicals Seen In Miami

WordPress has been updated to 2.3 “Dexter”.  It was time-consuming but not terrible.  Everything was backed up 3 ways until Sunday — since it is Sunday.  It was relatively painless with the use of the plug-in WordPress Automatic Plug-in which is a great help.

Note that Lifehacker today had a great link to a BBC questionnaire about sleep habits that returns a personalized response.  I tried it and was fascinated and reassured by its response.  My “insane” sleep patterns, they said, were really not so bad, unhealthy or crazy.  It is definitely worth a 10 minute visit.

Seen on my first excursion with a camera for a week of intense post-surgical pain — the radicals are not all hiding from the current paranoia of a tense nation.  The management does not necessarily endorse the contents of other people’s bumper stickers.

Radical Car in Miami