San Diego Museum of Art

San Diego Museum of Art
Balboa Park
February 27, 2016

We used our Macy’s Museum Month pass for a 50% discount at the Museum of Art, which we had not visited for several years.

Bob had spotted an article in the Union Tribune about a triptych of paintings on display, the Virgin of Sorrows, an altarpiece painted during or about 1564 by a Flemish artist, Pieter Claeissens the elder. We found the Madonna on display in the gallery devoted to religious art. That same gallery includes pieces by El Greco, Murillo, Sanchez Cotan, and Zurbaran, among others. Meredith lingered in that gallery while Bob moved on to other works.

SDMA

We then viewed the special exhibition of works of Harry Sternberg, a 20th century artist who first worked on the East Coast then moved to Escondido. His paintings are powerful, but the most moving pieces were the simple black and white works featuring the gritty reality of steel mills in Pennsylvania and the artist’s youth in New York City. The Sternberg exhibition closes May 8, 2016.

Margaret has struggled recently with several health problems. Last week we visited, planning to take her for a stroll around the Lake Balboa park. On the way to the park she felt ill, and we ended up taking her to the hospital instead. She spent a couple of nights there, being treated for atrial fibrillation and congestive heart failure. She is back home now, this time on oxygen. We visited on Sunday and brought sandwiches in. Meredith read her several Robert Service poems, and all three of us looked through recent letters and photos that Min, Bob’s aunt, had sent to Margaret.

MB_at_home_2-2016

We wonder whether and when Margaret will recover enough strength to resume our customary outings. Or have the many decades of heavy smoking left her heart and lungs too weak to be up to that level of activity? Too soon to tell; we will just have to take things as they come.

National Parks Movie

National Parks Adventure
IMAX Theater
Reuben H. Fleet Science Center
Balboa Park, San Diego
February 25, 2016

Fleet_theater

We went to see the new IMAX movie, National Parks Adventure, at the Fleet and loved it. The movie has stunning footage of various national parks throughout the U.S. We cannot begin to do justice to the photography; check out the movie’s website for a trailer and still photos of some of the sites in the film.

The film is narrated by Robert Redford, and its release was timed as part of this year’s centennial celebration of the park system. It runs less than an hour, following a trio of climbing buddies and then filling us in on John Muir, Teddy Roosevelt, and the history of the park system’s foundation.

Our outing was a special preview offered to REI members. The film opens to the general public on March 18, and we recommend it highly.

While waiting for the theater to open, we explored the lobby of the Fleet Center. The current exhibit features microbes and we had fun looking at the various stations and doing some of the hands-on activities.

Fleet_microbe

Macy’s Museum Month

Macy’s customers enjoy half price admissions to participating museums for the entire month of February. Passes can be picked up at any Macy’s store and then can be used all month long at any of over 40 participating museums in San Diego County, Temecula, and the Imperial Valley.

According to the San Diego Museum Council: Guests with a pass can bring up to three people to participating museums to receive half-off admission for the entire party. Additional fees may apply for special exhibitions. Each pass also features an exclusive $10 coupon off any [purchase of] $30 or more at Macy’s. For more information, including a list of participating museums, visit the museum council website.

Recuperating

Van Nuys
January 30, 2016

Our latest visit with Margaret was a quiet picnic in the backyard of the board and care home where she lives. She spent four nights in the hospital this past week, admitted for a bleeding ulcer but kept for observation and treatment of cardiac issues. As Meredith’s sister Kathleen wryly observed, it is like taking your car in for an oil change, only to have the mechanic find other problems.

Happy_Traveler

In any event, we did not want to tire Margaret out with an extended outing, so we brought in sandwiches. After lunch we called the Seattle granddaughters on FaceTime, and gave them a chance to chat with Margaret. Then we played a cooperative game of Happy Traveler with her. HT is a long out of print game from the early 1990’s that we enjoyed playing with our kids on car trips in the past. Categories such as “things associated with trains,” “types of vegetables,” “things at a fair,” and “summer things” prompted input from Margaret, and she shared several memories. She told us about her Girl Scout summer camp Wayaka in Maine, and we compared notes about favorite things from country fairs in the past.

Before the hospital admission we had planned to take Margaret to see the new exhibitions at the Craft and Folk Arts museum on Wilshire. We may go there on our next visit, if nothing else comes up in the meantime.