Beware of Fraudulent Websites Soliciting Boston Marathon Donations

An Important Message from the Chester Resident State Trooper:

Subsequent to the Boston Marathon bombing, more than 100 websites were created to make people believe the site could have a legitimate charitable purpose to help those affected by the bombing.

It is believed many of the sites will instead, be used to solicit money fraudulently.  Those wishing to help should channel their gifts through reputable organizations, and verify new charities that claim to be set up to help victims of the Boston bombings.

As always, I can be contacted at (860) 526-3605 if anyone needs further assistance.

Sincerely,

TFC Matt Ewing
Chester Resident Trooper

Frame Finished at New Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook; April 2014 Opening Still on Track

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Hoisting the final steel girders for the frame of the Shoreline Medical Center at Westbrook.

In an informal “Topping Off” ceremony last Thursday morning, the steel-girded frame of the new Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook was declared complete. Or, as one observer put it, “The steel skeleton is now finished.”

Huge crane that put in place the steel girders for the new Westbrook medical center

A huge crane was used to lift the steel girders into place for the new Shoreline Medical Center.

There now remains the task of covering the frame completely with new surface materials, as well as constructing the entire interior of the new medical center building.

Workers precariously perched on narrow steel girders at construction site

Workers perch precariously on narrow steel girders at the construction site.

Also, according to an official of Middlesex Hospital, which is building the new Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook, the project is still on track to open its doors for new patients in April 2014.

New Westbrook Center Will Be Off Exit 65 of I-95

The new Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook will be located on Flat Rock Road at Exit 65 off I-95.  The new 40,000 square foot, emergency medical facility will be twice as large as the present Shoreline Medical Center in Essex, which it will replace.

A Middlesex Hospital spokesperson said that there are still no plans as what to do with the Essex Shoreline Medical Center, once the Westbrook center takes its place.  Further dwarfing the size of the present Essex Shoreline center, the new Westbrook Shoreline Medical Center can be expanded from 40,000 square feet to 60,000 square feet, if necessity demands it.

Although Middlesex Hospital’s publicity materials stress that the new Shoreline Center in Westbrook is only three miles away from the present Shoreline Center  in Essex, it seems in the minds of many Essex residents that they feel their emergency center is gone forever, despite the new improvements in care promised at the new Westbrook facility.

Artist rendering of finished Shoreline Emergency Medical Center in Westbrook

Artist’s rendering of the completed Shoreline Emergency Medical Center in Westbrook

Read a related article by Jerome Wilson:

New Emergency Medical Center to Replace Essex’s Medical Center in April 2014

‘Spirit of the Doughboy’ is ‘Back Where it Belongs’ at Old Lyme’s Memorial Town Hall

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Former Old Lyme First Selectman Timothy Griswold hangs the new plaque acknowledging the restored ‘Spirit of the Doughboy.’

A small group of local dignitaries, residents and Old Lyme Town Hall employees along with the professionals involved in the restoration of The Spirit of the Doughboy — a large pastel drawing by Albert Herter — gathered yesterday evening in the town hall lobby to celebrate the return of the restored drawing.

The iconic drawing has been hanging over the main stairway in the Memorial Town Hall since 1920, but was removed for safekeeping during the renovation of the Town Hall from 2008 to 2010.

Based upon a subsequent evaluation by Jennifer Lacker of J. London Appraisals, the drawing underwent conservation treatment by Sarah Dove (Fine Art Conservation) and was reframed by Mara Gillen Beckwith (Studio M Framing).

Back in situ: 'Spirit of the Doughboy.'

Back in situ: ‘Spirit of the Doughboy.’

Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts alumna Morgan Wilcox interns for both the conservator and the framer, and had also been involved in all stages of the restoration process.

Local contractor Michael Magee returned the drawing to its home above the stairway earlier this month.

Referring to the title of the drawing, First Selectwoman Bonnie Reemsnyder explained during the reception that soldiers were nicknamed ‘Doughboys’ during World War I.  The term GI was only introduced in the Second World War.

Reemsnyder commented on the great improvement in the quality of the painting subsequent to its restoration, noting, “how beautiful it came out.”  Dove, the conservator who had worked on restoring the drawing, pointed out that, in fact, the “bright colors had never faded,” but the double layer of glass over the artwork had been “infiltrated … with a lot of dirt,” which was obscuring their vibrancy.

Dove noted the drawing was originally done as a poster and had been repaired at some point.  It was so fragile that it had required “a huge sheet of machine-made paper stretched over linen and reinforced structurally,’ to support it.  Ultimately the restored drawing was covered with museum quality acrylic, making it significantly lighter.  When asked by one of the guests at the reception, the new weight of the work, the framer responded by recalling to laughter that it had taken four people to remove the painting, but only two to replace it.

Beckwith also noted that the task of reframing the drawing was a complex one and she had been forced to develop, “a huge checklist of how to approach it.”

The drawing was hung there when the building was first opened and is believed to have been a donation from W.E.S. Griswold.  The post-World War I Committee charged with creating a memorial to those who had given their lives during the war included former First Selectman Timothy Griswold’s grandfather.

In honor of that family connection, Reemsnyder invited former First Selectman Timothy Griswold to hang the new plaque acknowledging details of the restored drawing.

Artist Albert Herter, a contemporary of John Singer Sargent and James McNeil Whistler, is most known for his World War I “Liberty Bond” posters.

After thanking all those involved in the restoration and Griswold for his family’s donation of the drawing originally, Reemsnyder concluded the ceremony saying of the drawing, “I’m very happy to have it back where it belongs.”

Fair Showcases Local Volunteer Opportunities, All Ages Welcome

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Participating organizations now added.  The Lyme-Old Lyme Girl Scouts and the Old Lyme based ‘Volunteer Connection’ is hosting a Volunteer Fair from 5:30 to 7 p.m. on Tuesday, April 23, in the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Commons.

The fair, which will feature more than 25 local agencies, will offer residents an opportunity to learn about different volunteer opportunities and services in the community.

Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau (LYSB) Director Mary Seidner stresses, “All ages are welcome to attend the fair.  It is not just for school- or college-age students.  This is a great opportunity to showcase under one roof the enormous range of volunteer opportunities available locally.  We’re hoping lots of people drop by to find out more.”

The participating organizations to date are:

Caroline’s Miracle Foundation
Child & Family Agency of SE CT
Common Good Gardens
Florence Griswold Museum
Estuary Transit District
High Hopes
Literacy Volunteers Valley Shore
Lyme Academy College of Fine Arts
Lyme Ambulance Association
Lyme Art Association
Lyme Land Conservation Trust
Lyme Public Hall Association
Lyme-Old Lyme Soccer Club
Lymes’ Youth Service Bureau
Mentoring Corp of Community Development
Old Lyme EMS
Old Lyme Historical Society
Old Lyme Land Trust
Old Lyme Parks and Rec
Old Lyme – Phoebe Griffin Noyes Library
Old Lyme Selectmen’s Boards, Commissions & Committees
Old Lyme Visiting Nurse Association
PTOs of Lyme Consolidate and Mile Creek Schools
Salvation Army Emergency & Disaster Services
Shoreline Soup Kitchens and Pantries
Valley Shore YMCA

For more information or to register an organization, contact LYSB at 860.434.7208.

Space*Time*Memory on Show at diane birdsall gallery

Broken Branch III is one of Forrest Bailey's works featured in the new exhibition at the diane birdsall gallery.

Broken Branch III is one of Forrest Bailey’s works featured in the new exhibition at the diane birdsall gallery.

The diane birdsall gallery’s new exhibit:  Space * Time * Memory, opens this evening with an artist’s reception this evening from 5 to 7 p.m. The exhibit includes the distinctive woodland paintings of Forrest R. Bailey and the sculpture constructions of William Vollers.

Bailey’s oil paintings create a sense of place that may feel familiar if  you have trekked  our  regions preserved woodlands. In the ‘Broken Branch’ series, Bailey handles the reflection  and movement of light  to create a cathedral like setting, affecting a  moving, touching, stirring and poignant nostalgic memory. The paintings range in size up to 66 x 48 inches.

Bailey, paints from a cumulation of recorded photographs and returns to the studio to invent the landscape he wants to paint from a sense of space, time and memory.

In a second series titled ‘Cut Branches,’ Bailey has prominent diagonal lines criss-crossing in front of our eyes as a mesmerizing obstacle. The pile of branches is handled as a beautiful object.

Three works in oil are dominated by large rock surfaces depicted in geometric form. In this series titled Joshua Rock III, IV, V, Bailey uses a full spectrum of color, primarily using blue and violet  hues. “ Rocks are such a part of Connecticut. They intrude upon my paintings.  I use light to accelerate movement.” Forrest Bailey

Early in his career Forrest Bailey taught Art and Painting Methods and Materials at the University level, at Michigan Sate University, University of Minnesota and University of Iowa. He returned to school  to attend the prestigious Cooperstown Graduate Program in Conservation  studying under Caroline and Sheldon Keck.

Forrest Bailey came to Old Lyme in 1999 from  Kansas City, where he had been the Resident Conservator at the Nelson  Atkins Museum of Kansas City Missouri from 1973-1998.

The American painting collection includes the largest collection open to the public of works by Thomas Hart Benton, who lived in Kansas City.

Diane Birdsall asked him what it was like to work as conservator, on the paintings of an important American Painter like Thomas Hart Benton.

Question : Tell me what you understood or saw when working on Thomas Hart Benton’s art.

Answer: Movement through space and the Mannerist forms were what interested me in Benton’s work. The subject matter wasn’t  as relevant to me.  Jackson Pollock, who was a student of Benton, pushed movement through space to a personal, logical conclusion.

Question: Is there another restoration/ conservation experience you can share with me that may have had a profound effect on you?

Answer: My most challenging project was working on a painting by J.M.W. Turner …  that and a painting by Grant Wood.  I remember that working on a painting by John Constable was a revelation. You really learned what painting was about conserving works by great masters..

In conjunction with the woodland paintings of Forrest Bailey are sculpture constructions by William Vollers.

Vollers  has been a resident of Chester, Conn., where his home studio- gallery have been open to the public. Vollers creates wall mounted and free-standing sculpture. He has been involved in this art form for 10 years.  Previously, William Vollers, was a successful graphic designer and Art Director in New York City winning awards from the Art Directors’ Club in three different states.

Vollers has a zen like approach to his work. He often refers to the definition of Wabi Sabi. which can be defined as : Japanese world view or aesthetic centered on the acceptance of transience and imperfection.

Vollers collects elements of once useful working parts, tools, games, metal and wood. He combines these pieces to create his art/constructions. They are both rough and smooth with the surface of age and time retained in its found condition.  It is the bringing together of these bits and pieces that reflects his sensitive regard to design, shape and balance. Vollers engages his acute sense of  selection and balance to create an entirely new work of art.

This exhibit, which runs through May 18,  illustrates two artists in two very different mediums who work with the elements of nature in their living and transforming stages.