Outside of Joe Frazier’s Gym in north Philadelphia, the sidewalk is
littered with an empty handle of Gordon’s gin, a yellow flash of caution
tape and scattered pebbles of broken glass.
More than a year
after Frazier’s 2011 death, preservation advocates are seeking
protective designations for the building in a campaign that is a sign of
a larger cultural shift in the historic preservation community. At the
movement’s heart is a push for inclusiveness in a field that has long
privileged the stories and accomplishments of influential white men and
paid little if any attention to anyone else.
“We’ve done an
analysis over the past year,” said Stephanie Toothman, the National Park
Service’s associate director for cultural resources. “The percentage of
sites that specifically represent women and groups such as
African-Americans, Native Americans and Asian-Pacific Americans ranges
from 3 to 8 percent.”
Compared with the makeup of the U.S.
population, that percentage is minuscule. Women make up slightly more
than 50 percent of the population in the United States, and white men
account for about 36 percent of the overall population, according the
latest figures from the U.S. Census Bureau.
“They often say that
history is written by the winners, but it’s also narrated by the people
who have the podium,” said Page Harrington, executive director of
Sewall-Belmont House and Museum, the Washington, D.C., headquarters for
the National Woman’s Party throughout much of the 20th century. “So if
you have fewer women in leadership positions — in universities, or
writing textbooks, or in Congress — you have fewer of those stories that
are necessarily making their way into the public spectrum that the next
generation of scholars looks at, and so on, and so on.”
The
fight to save Frazier’s gym seems appropriately symbolic for a man who
fought his way to the top. Frazier was an underdog before he became a
champ. He worked in a Philadelphia slaughterhouse, where he practiced
throwing punches on slabs of beef hanging in a freezing meat locker.
Sylvester Stallone borrowed that training habit for a montage in the
boxing film “Rocky.” And while Philadelphia erected a statute of
Stallone’s fictional boxer, the fate of Frazier’s gym is uncertain.
Her
photograph, "The Grape Escape," features tiny men picking a life-size
grape and hoisting it onto a miniature pickup figurine. Then there's
"Family Fun," which depicts a tiny figurine riding a giant bottle rocket
as a crowd cheers.
"I just can't stop looking at them, I've
never seen anything like it," said 32-year-old Rex Irving of Orlando,
looking at another one of Honeycutt's collection on Saturday where
miniature figures are standing atop a donut brushing on the glaze.
Irving was one of an expected 250,000 expected to come to the city's downtown today for the two-day Mount Dora Arts Festival.
Beth
Miller, executive co-chair for the Mount Dora Center for the Arts, said
it's not a surprise that such a picturesque city would attract large
crowds.
This weekend's show has almost every type of art
imaginable, including paintings,We have become one of the worlds most
recognised Ventilation system
brands. prints, sculptures and ceramics. Multi-media artist Kwang Cha
Brown, a South Korea native, combines her personal philosophy with her
American training to create color and image. She displayed a dozen of
works Saturday, mostly oil paintings of landscapes with muted colors.
According
to his online page at Bowling Green State University where he teaches
painting, Briggs’ aesthetic focus is “Representational drawings and
paintings investigating the nature of human vulnerability as it relates
to subcultural social structures.” Threshold also got a $500 prize in a
painting category.Laser engraving and laser laser cutting machine for materials like metal,
Second
place ($500) went to Jessica Summers for her inviting Cooking in
Pajamas: Portrait of My Mother: In a golden hue, a gray-haired woman
cooks up a storm, but it’s not breakfast.Service Report a problem with a
street light.
Summers also won $500 for another oil painting, a retro-riff called
Self Portrait as Domestic Goddess, in which the dark-haired artist is
garbed in a lacy black cocktail dress, holding her casserole in the
kitchen. It took second place in the Findlay Art League’s contest in
November.
Both of the two fiber pieces received nods. Monica
Edgerton-Sperry’s Self Portrait is a cluster of shells,
buttons,Application can be conducted with the local designated IC card producers. beads, leather, and embroidery on linen. Look at the eyes, the hair holding a paintbrush,Have a look at all our custom bobbleheads models starting at 59.90US$ with free proofing. and the tiny red beads in the upper right.
Susan
Krueger’s large Guilt Quilt disturbs with its female target and
selection of knives ready for tossing: Are they her guilts or the tools
with which to attack her guilt?
Winning no formal prize other
than perhaps the “did you see...?” is William Barry Roberts’
36-inch-square oil/charcoal/pencil painting, Drunken Pirate Scoundrels
Manning their Cannons. A little lewd and absurdly macho, two
big-bellied, bearded chaps lift their shirts and push their flabby
breasts together. One’s hair sports a peacock feather, the other has a
lit fuse on either side of his head a la Blackbeard the pirate.
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