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08-30-2003 08:42 AM |
For all you "artsy fartsy" folks
Posted By: <b>leon</b><p>This is pretty long reading but entertaining.....a fellow co-worker sent this.....if you have a few minutes it's pretty good.....and yes this was cut and pasted.....regards all<BR><BR>In the catalog for "The Perfect Game: America Looks at<BR>Baseball," the sweet and nearly pitch-perfect show at the<BR>American Folk Art Museum, the writer Roger Angell evokes<BR>what it must have been like to visit the Polo Grounds or<BR>Yankee Stadium on a midweek afternoon in, say, 1934. <BR><BR>There would have been no rock music blaring from<BR>loudspeakers and no flashing video scoreboard. There was no<BR>television. Fans would straggle in from work midgame to<BR>catch a few innings before heading home for supper. "Ours<BR>is a working man's entertainment," Mr. Angell writes, "and<BR>a sense of commonality between the athletes and the<BR>spectators is palpable in these mild settings." <BR><BR>Commonality and mild settings. The exhibition at the folk<BR>art museum, which Elizabeth Warren has affectionately put<BR>together, is about both. It is not a documentary of the<BR>sport. It's an elaborate illustration of a shared love<BR>affair with a game, expressed, as love often is, through<BR>art. <BR><BR>Baseball already is art, aficionados will say, and you know<BR>what they mean if you have watched Pedro Martínez or<BR>Mariano Rivera pitch. But it is also a game strictly<BR>governed by rules, with three outs per inning and exactly<BR>90 feet between bases, whereas art fancies itself to be<BR>about breaking rules. That may be why many artists take to<BR>baseball: they are attracted to what is beautiful in their<BR>opposite. <BR><BR>Because the Folk Art Museum show is a story of private and<BR>eccentric passions and not a history of the game, Joe<BR>DiMaggio and Cy Young do not tip their caps anywhere in it.<BR>But George Sosnak does. He started umpiring military games<BR>in Germany after World War II, attended umpiring school in<BR>Florida, umpired some spring training games for the Detroit<BR>Tigers, then busied himself, until he died in 1992,<BR>intricately detailing baseballs with India ink. He adorned<BR>balls with portraits of ballplayers and scenes of games,<BR>elaborately annotated. Baseball fans are obsessive about<BR>details like batting averages and pitch counts, and<BR>Sosnak's baseballs artfully manifest this characteristic<BR>state of a true fan's mind. <BR><BR>We are also introduced in the show to the work of Lamont<BR>Alfred Pry (1921-1987), <object.title class="Movie"<BR>idsrc="nyt_ttl" value="36134">"Old<BR>Ironsides,"</object.title> who taught himself to draw and<BR>paint after being confined to the Carbon County Home for<BR>the Aged in Pennsylvania in 1968. When the home was razed<BR>seven years later, Pry's art turned up nailed to the boiler<BR>room wall. Pry drew baseball scenes. The show includes one<BR>heraldic image of two swinging batters, white and pink,<BR>with colored bunting looped across the top of the picture<BR>and two rectangles representing dugouts, inside which<BR>chairs are lined up like seats in a schoolroom. <BR><BR>Who knows what was in the water in Carbon County, but<BR>Justin McCarthy (1891-1977) was another local son.<BR>Recovering from a nervous breakdown, he healed himself<BR>partly by drawing pictures of what he saw on television,<BR>including ballplayers. His itchy, searching line may remind<BR>art mavens of Raymond Pettibon, although the affinity,<BR>which is almost eerie, might best be described the other<BR>way around. <BR><BR>It's an unspoken theme of the show that, as with McCarthy<BR>and Pry, art inspired by baseball is often an escape from,<BR>or a curative for, a troubled life. John Tracy, a captured<BR>Union soldier in the Confederates' Libby Prison in<BR>Richmond, Va., carved baseball scenes onto a cane to pass<BR>time and to save himself from going nuts. Ray Materson<BR>sewed. As a 9-year-old Little Leaguer in 1963, he idolized<BR>the New York Yankee team of Mickey Mantle, Roger Maris,<BR>Elston Howard and Whitey Ford. Thirty years later, Materson<BR>was in prison in Connecticut serving a 15-year sentence for<BR>armed robbery. He took up embroidery, of all things,<BR>improvising with the rim of a plastic plate to make an<BR>embroidery hoop. For thread he used unraveled socks and<BR>shoelaces, with scraps of boxer shorts for backing.<BR>Materson sewed sports logos, flags, a group portrait of his<BR>prison baseball team and pictures of his former Yankee<BR>heroes. They're about 3 inches by 2 inches, smaller than<BR>baseball cards, 1,200 stitches per square inch: miniature<BR>portraits of unlikely delicacy, each of which took him<BR>about 50 hours to complete. <BR><BR>He sewed a picture of Mantle swinging for the upper deck;<BR>Tony Kubek scooping up a grounder at shortstop, with a view<BR>behind him of the bleachers packed with fans; and Clete<BR>Boyer crouching at third base, baked by sunlight, casting a<BR>shadow toward the outfield. <BR><BR>In Materson's embroidered Proustian madeleines, it is still<BR>1963 and the Yankees are still playing the Dodgers in the<BR>World Series, which they hadn't yet lost, and Materson is<BR>not yet in prison but still 9 years old and playing in the<BR>Little League, and it is a perfect autumn afternoon that<BR>will never end. Some people, when they are lost, find<BR>themselves through baseball or art - or as in Materson's<BR>case, through both. <BR><BR>Much of the exhibition consists of charming paraphernalia:<BR>weather vanes, quilts, decorated bats and a spectacularly<BR>handsome cigar-store show figure by the ship carver Samuel<BR>Robb, possibly of the 19th-century slugger King Kelly. The<BR>Whitney Museum sold it off a few years ago; the Folk Art<BR>Museum, thanks to the baseball art collectors Millie and<BR>Bill Gladstone, fortunately bought it. <BR><BR>And there are board games, banners, mechanized model<BR>players, croquet wickets, a whirligig and signs, like the<BR>red double-sided one for Red Rolfe's service station.<BR>Rolfe, the Yankee third basemen from 1934 to 1942 - and an<BR>All-Star from 1937 to 1940 - had a second job, like many<BR>players back then. He owned the Texaco franchise in his<BR>hometown, Penacook, N.H. <BR><BR>The closest the show gets to classic memorabilia are a seat<BR>from the Polo Grounds and an ornamental terra-cotta frieze<BR>from the original Yankee Stadium. The Polo Grounds went the<BR>way of Ebbets Field, and Yankee Stadium has been<BR>modernized. Times change. The major league game, with its<BR>astronomical salaries and periodic strikes, can seem hardly<BR>to resemble the sport most of the artists here dreamed<BR>about. But baseball is still played in Mr. Angell's mild<BR>settings. <BR><BR>The other day, as we do every summer, my family drove to<BR>tiny Waconah Park in Pittsfield, Mass. (Consider this<BR>digressionary anecdote the review's seventh inning<BR>stretch.) The park opened in 1919 and, unlike most modern<BR>stadiums, the field faces west, so occasionally there are<BR>sun delays because the batters can't see the pitchers. It<BR>used to be home to the Pittsfield Mets before they<BR>abandoned Massachusetts for Coney Island and fancier digs<BR>as the Brooklyn Cyclones. <BR><BR>The outside of Waconah, sheathed in tatty, corrugated<BR>metal, is still painted blue with orange trim, the Mets'<BR>colors. Now the Berkshire Black Bears of the Northeast<BR>League have moved in. The evening we visited, they were<BR>facing the Bangor Lumberjacks, and the woman who had<BR>answered the phone at the stadium that afternoon swore that<BR>the game would take place even though it had been raining<BR>steadily for a week. Miraculously the rain did stop, just<BR>as she had promised, and the sky turned purple and orange<BR>over the outfield wall, which is one of those old-fashioned<BR>stadium fences covered with signs for local businesses. <BR><BR>We chose our usual $5 seats in the horseshoe grandstand, a<BR>dozen or so open rows of weather-beaten wood benches on an<BR>old steel frame, surrounding the infield, nominally<BR>protected by a rickety tin roof. At game time, a couple of<BR>guys in T-shirts with rakes and bags of sand were still<BR>pensively readying the field, in no hurry, it seemed, while<BR>the team mascot, Tater, in a scruffy black bear costume,<BR>greeted every child and flirted improbably with the girls<BR>raffling eyeglass cleaners, compact disks and hair products<BR>from behind home plate. A detour to the men's room provided<BR>a chance to quiz one of the visiting players who was also<BR>there. He opined that while the outfield was soaked, the<BR>diamond was fine. <BR><BR>The field certainly looked beautiful, in that satisfying<BR>way baseball diamonds do, with their improbable green grass<BR>and geometry. One of the artists in the Folk Art Museum<BR>show is David R. Mellor, the current director of grounds at<BR>Fenway Park in Boston. Mr. Mellor is in charge of rolling<BR>the grass at Fenway into fantastic patterns: the Red Sox<BR>logo, the American flag, checkerboards and stripes. The<BR>show has photographs of his work. His fields are the<BR>opposite of Waconah or maybe its apotheosis. Players can't<BR>see the patterns from the field. But folks in the stands<BR>and watching on television do. <BR><BR>Call it folk art for the masses, which is not the worst<BR>definition of baseball. <BR><BR>Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company<BR><BR><BR>
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