The title of this blog says it all -- sharing my observations about art in all in manifestations in libraries, mostly public ones, but there will be exceptions.
It's hard to know which came first for me, my love of art or my love of books. I saw before I read and I read before I wrote, but I started drawing and painting before I could read. I remember the feel and smell of playing with finger paints. I loved transferring Sunday comics onto Play-Doh. I built things out of Tinker Toys and Lincoln Logs.
I can't remember the first time I was in a library but I do remember seeing the lions outside the New York Public Library. I swear I sat on one of them. But I don't know if that is even possible. "Patience" and "Fortitude" are they names. I probably sat on Fortitude because I have always been short of the former.
My family taught me to read and write before I entered first grade. My mother stayed home and took care of us. Everyone in the family felt it was important for me to spell my name, and since it was a long, complicated one, reading and writing came along fast.
In addition to newspapers and popular magazines like Saturday Evening Post and Life, we subscribed to National Geographic magazine. I discovered the world through it and the many books that they published. My older brother was interested in art so he shared his books with me, too.
Art with a capital "A" started when we moved to Germany for two years. I got dragged to so many museums and cathedrals and old castles. Mostly, it was fun, except when I got hungry and tired and cranky. What's with those old chairs scattered about the galleries with strings tied over their seats so you can't sit down? And I don't think they had museum cafes like they do now.
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| Fortitude |
However when I showed my childish scribbles to my parent's friends, they gushed over "the artist" and I felt proud. In Europe art matters, and I felt it was a respectable life choice. I use to love watching artists copying masterpieces in the museum galleries and wanting to be like the chalk artist who painted in the plazas.
All this time, I was reading. In Germany we subscribed to Der Spiegel and Stern. My father's hobby was photography and I loved helping him in his makeshift darkroom in the kitchen, the magic of the image slowly appearing in the developer, the sharp smell of the stop bath. He had a copy of The Family of Man. My interest in photography stems from this early exposure.(Pun intended)
At first, I used school libraries. I was so excited when my parents bought a copy of Smokey the Cowhorse at a sale at my new middle school in Texas. It turned out it was for the library--not for me--but I got to read it first. The bookplate inside had my name as the donor!
Maybe this wasn't a good thing because I spent the next eight years reading "horse books". Walter Farley and Marguerite Henry were my choices in fiction; and in nonfiction, reading anything about animals. All I drew were horses.
Then we moved withing walking distance o fa public library. I could spend hours browsing the shelves and then spend more hours reading them. They took me far away. Just like making or seeing art does.
