I have been basking all day in the generous, thoughtful and beautiful review of "Take Me to the Water..." posted by John Foster on his Accidental Mysteries site. I have watched from afar as John has become a discriminating and elegant commentator on photography and art of all forms. His blog is adventurous reading for anyone interested in the broadest interpretation of the word art. It is made all the more fascinating by his unique "wide open eye" which is unfettered with divisive definitions...a rare thing in the art world from my view. I am humbled, grateful and thrilled. The photo above was found after production of Dust to Digital's book and CD, I wish the young lady could have been included."Going to be Baptized" Azo Real Photo c. 1910 Collection Jim Linderman
Church Donation "Reminder" Envelope 1929 Duplex-Richmond, Va. Collection Jim Linderman
Back in 1964, when the Beatles were haircuts, not individuals...their wax effigies were rushed into production "for the kids" at the World's Fair. Close, but not close enough. Ed Sullivan was easier, he'd been around forever. Here the wax sculptor accurately captures Ed's famous flexibility. Ed realized it was important to rope in young viewers so he booked numerous rock performers, but frequently censored them. (The Stones complied, Dylan didn't, he walked) The Doors said they would change some offending lyrics, but Morrison sang them anyway. Ed banned comic Jackie Mason for flipping him the bird. David Crosby, to his credit, engaged in a shouting match with the talentless tyrant. Sullivan also cooperated with the witch-hunting followers of rabid alcoholic Senator Joseph McCarthy. The Beatles appeared on his show three times...but then hilarious Canadian "comedy" act Wayne and Shuster appeared 67 times. The Beatles went on to sell so many records, it took Troyal Garth Brooks years (and a cloned version of himself known as Chris Gaines) to catch up. Strangely, Chris Gaines also had a funny haircut.