August Edition

Friends and family have been spending the sultry days of August resting, relaxing and sending photos of their adventurous destinations from all points on the globe. A few of us have taken advantage of summer Friday’s extending the weekend to catch up on cultural aesthetics within the community, while others have vested several weeks traveling to various countries.

Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens
1550 Anacostia Avenue, NE,
Washington, DC 20019

Starting in Washington DC my dear friend Quy enjoyed the “waterlilies and lotuses” which sprout from the ponds of the Kenilworth Aquatic Gardens, the only national park devoted to water loving plants, and is part of the Chesapeake Bay Gateway network. Here you may experience the flora and fauna of this 12-acre park and most definitely come away with ideas and colors schemes for your personal gardens.

National Museum of African American History and Culture
1400 Constitution Ave NW,
Washington, DC 20560

I had the opportunity last week to visit the newest Smithsonian museum that opened on the Mall at 15th Street and Constitution Avenue. The building is an architectural wonder not to mention the collection containing over 37,000 pieces. A lot will capture your attention, such as the Portrait of an African by Albrecht Dürer in 1508 and the lace shawl worn my Harriet Tubman that was a gift from England’s Queen Victoria. It is free to visit the museum, but you must acquire tickets to enter so, visit the website for additional information.

K

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Yayoi Kusama’s: Infinity Mirrors

If you take a rainy Friday, put in for half days leave from work, travel to the Hirshhorn to see the final showing of Yayoi Kusama’s “Infinity Mirrors”, you have the start to a relaxing weekend.

Upon entering the museum the first item on the grounds is an amusing and whimsical sculpture of a giant gourd called “Pumpkin,” 2016- courtesy of Ota Fine Arts in Singapore. Kusama indicated pumpkins bring about poetic peace of mind, and have inspired her since childhood, when she was surrounded by her family’s nursery in Japan.

Yayoi Kusama is a phenomonical woman who moved in avant-garde circles with such artists as Andy Warhol and Allan Kaprow, while continuing to hone her skills on mirrored installations, and dots and motifs. She also became the first woman to represent Japan at the Venice Biennale.

This exhibition will embark on a tour of five major museums in North America and Canada, and is now headed to the Seattle Art Museum from June 30-September 10, 2017.

Create stylishly,
K

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