Please Sit

The Cincinnati Art Museum is one of my favorite places to roam. There’s always something to discover and plenty of beauty for the grand total of zero dollars admission.

There’s one room with an enormous wooden bench where I sometimes sit to just appreciate the space. Truth is, that bench is my favorite thing in that room but I never really thought about it’s origins. In that room, my fella especially enjoys a painting called Alexander the Great and the Fates by the Italian Baroque artist Bernadino Mei. It’s a compelling work of art where two of the three Fates who control the tread of life spin and measure Alexander’s life thread. The third goddess grapples with Alexander, preparing to cut the thread and end his life. There’s much more to it than that and I always see something new. 

I usually go in and plop down on that big bench. It’s a great place to rest a moment and appreciate Alexander the Great before continuing on through the maze of galleries. On our last visit, I noticed there’s a card on the end of that bench. It reads “Palace Bench, Florence Italy, 15th Century, Walnut, Museum Purchase 1953.156, PLEASE SIT.”

Holy cow. How many times have I sat here without knowing that it’s more than just a pretty bench? 

How many people have sat on this bench to pray, to mourn or to celebrate? How many museum goers have, like me, wandered through without noticing that we were sitting on a piece of history?

Here’s my advice for today. Don’t be afraid to look around and to admire things in a museum. Stand in one spot and just take in your surroundings. Study the painting you don’t understand. If you think it’s interesting, Google it while you stand there so you can understand what’s happening. Pay attention to the things that no one else looks at. Read the card discreetly placed on the thing everyone sits on. 

There’s usually a story! 

Discovering Ansel Adams

When Ansel Adams turned fourteen, his father gave him his first camera. For you camera junkies out there, it was a Brownie Box model by Kodak. Just after that, his family vacationed in the Yosemite Valley, a trip that would change his life and the face of 20th century photography.

Last month, I stood in awe of a large collection of his images and notes on his life at the Cincinnati Museum of Art. There’s an exhibition underway until January 19, 2025.

An only child born to wealthy parents, Ansel Adams survived the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake but suffered nasal injuries that left him a mouth breather for the rest of his life. He was prone to frequent illness and hypochondria and contracted the Spanish Flu during the 1918 flu pandemic. During his recuperation, he read a book about lepers and became obsessed with cleanliness.  He was an intelligent young man who taught himself to read music and play piano.

The thing that truly captured his interest and attention was photography and nature.

These are things I learned at the museum. I also saw a picture from his first trip to Yosemite as a fourteen year old. Adams wrote “I climbed an old and crumbling stump of arboreal grandeur with my camera and was about to snap the shutter when the stump gave way, and I plummeted to the ground. On the way down, I inadvertently pushed the shutter.”

Friends, that photo teenage Ansel Adams made while falling off a stump was superior to anything most of us will ever make. Sigh. 

It’s an interesting collection of photos that represent what you might expect of Ansel Adams and some things I didn’t expect to see. Photos of indigenous people, ancient cliff dwellings, Georgia O’Keeff, and a New Mexico church caught my eye as much as any of the landscape portraits he was known for creating throughout his career. 

There were also some terrific portraits of Adams throughout his life and the entire experience went a long way toward humanizing this larger than life artist. 

Discovering Ansel Adams will run through January 19, 2025 at the Cincinnati Art Museum. This museum is amazing and general admission is free but there is a $12 admission for adults to view this exhibition. Seniors, college students and kids pay a reduced rate. Learn more here.

Cincinnati has a ton of things to entertain you for a fall or winter weekend. Live performance, the American Sign Museum, bookstores, a walk at Spring Grove, the Newport Aquarium (just across the river in Kentucky) and lots and lots of public art to enjoy will keep you occupied and wishing you had more time.

Home From Adventure

Columbus Day week has long been my favorite week for vacation. Ever since I left the tourism business in a community known for its fall foliage, I have spent this week on staycations, day trips and occasional longer journeys. This time, I struggled to make a plan. The first option was a return to Michigan and then I considered Harper’s Ferry, Charlottesville and a few other spots without ever committing to anything.

This is where we point out that there are far too many places to see and far too little time and money to spend seeing them. 

Then I remembered an Ansel Adams exhibition at the Cincinnati Museum of Art that I badly wanted to see. This became the anchor for a few days in Cincinnati. Adam and I did less sightseeing than I would normally choose but we stayed busy browsing bookstores. We also walked around Spring Grove Cemetery and Arboretum and spent an evening at Blink, a multimedia event that creates spectacular nighttime artwork throughout the city.

Along the way, we explored Mainstrasse Village in Covington and I took Adam to the famed Jungle Jim’s grocery store for his inaugural exploration of the international foods department. 

We walked many miles and came home with a back seat full of books, a treasure trove of memories and lots of laughter to make coming home a little sweeter. Scout was glad to have me home and I’m happy to have some fresh stories to share. 

Come back tomorrow and we’ll start talking about this adventure. Meanwhile, remember to follow Make the Journey Fun on Facebook.