Lyme-Old Lyme HS Environmental Club Honors Earth Day 2014 with Special Event Tonight: All Welcome

An osprey brings lunch.

An osprey delivers lunch.

Earth Day 2014 is this coming Tuesday, April 22, and the Lyme-Old Lyme High School Environmental Club is hosting two speakers at 7 p.m. at the high school at 69, Lyme Street in Old Lyme.  Students from high schools in the local region, as well as the general public, are invited to attend.

Before the speakers take the stage, the audience will be able to visit with various groups who will be manning information tables in the Commons area of the high school.  These groups will include the Lyme and Old Lyme Land Trusts, the Old Lyme Conservation and Open Space Commissions, the Potapaug Audubon Society, the Tributary Mill Conservancy and the CT River Gateway Commission.

The theme on which the speakers will focus is: “Spring Migrants And Our Coastal Food Chain: Alewife, Menhaden, and Osprey.”

First to speak will be conservation biologist and ornithological expert, Dr. Paul Spitzer, who will discuss his current study of osprey in the lower Connecticut River estuary.

Inspired by his mentor Roger Tory Peterson, and Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, Spitzer was part of the movement that banned DDT in 1972, documenting its correlation to the thinning of osprey egg shells.  He is now collecting data related to the over-fishing of menhaden, a primary food source for osprey chicks.

Spitzer will be joined by Connecticut DEEP biologist Steve Gephard, supervisor for the State’s Diadromous Fish and Conservation Enhancement programs.  Gephard will discuss efforts to restore and protect the fish that migrate between Long Island Sound, the Connecticut River and its tributaries.

It was announced last week that President Obama has appointed Gephard to serve as the Commissioner of the Council of North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization.

According to Congressman Joe Courtney’s office, this is “an international organization established by an intergovernmental convention in 1984 that seeks to restore and manage Atlantic salmon populations”.

Middlesex Hospital Hosts “Open House” at New Medical Center in Westbrook

Exterior of Emergency Center with helicopter coming in to land.

Exterior of Emergency Center with helicopter coming in to land.

Middlesex Hospital held a very successful preview of its new Shoreline Medical Center in Westbrook on Saturday, April 19.  The new center is located off I-95 at Exit 65 and has a street address of 250 Flat Rock Place in Westbrook. The four-hour preview event, which lasted from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., attracted a flood of visitors to the new 44,000 square foot medical facility.

The new medical center will open its doors for patients on Monday, April 28.  Until then, Middlesex Hospital will continue to provide medical services at its present medical center in Essex.  Once the new center opens in Westbrook, the Essex center will be closed down permanently.  It should be noted that Middlesex Hospital has been providing emergency medical services at various locations in Essex since the 1970s.

Middlesex Hospital’s new facility on Flat Rock Place in Westbrook is housed in a single long building, which is divided into two discrete sections.  The section on the right, when facing the building coming off Flat Rock Road, houses the Emergency Center.  The section on the left houses the Outpatient Center.  There is a single walk-in entrance to the Emergency Center.  There are two entrances to the Outpatient Center, one facing Flat Rock Place, and the other at the left side of the building.

The Emergency Center

The Emergency Department, named the “Whelen Emergency Pavilion,” offers emergency medical treatment, for things such as a heart attack, or a crushed limb.  Also, located at the Emergency Center is an “Express Care” treatment center, which offers treatment for injuries of a non-emergency nature, such as a sprained ankle, or for a minor cut.

Laurel Patt, Director, Radiology Services; Paula Howley, radiologic technologist; and Kim Carey, radiologic technologist.

Laurel Patt, Director, Radiology Services; Paula Howley, radiologic technologist; and Kim Carey, radiologic technologist.

There is also a separate ambulance entrance to the Whelen Emergency Pavilion, with a helipad located just beyond the ambulance area.  To give visitors a little extra excitement during the recent open house, the LifeStar helicopter made a special landing on the helipad and allowed visitors to explore it.

The Outpatient Center

The Outpatient Center is the section of the Medical Center, which is to the left of the Emergency Center when entering from Flat Rock Place.  The Outpatient Center has two separate entrances, one at the front of the building and another on the left side of the building.  The services offered at the Outpatient Center are extensive.  They include: a Radiology Department, which offers state-of-the-art imaging services, including the latest generation MRI, CT scanning, X-ray, digital fluoroscopy, among other services.

Interior of waiting area of the Outpatient Center.

Interior of waiting area of the Outpatient Center.

A Women’s Imaging Center is also located in the Outpatient Center.  It includes private spaces for digital mammography, ultrasound and bone density examinations.  Also in the Outpatient Center has a new MRI unit, which features the most advanced imaging with a wider and shorter opening aperture.

In addition, this is the location of the Medical Center’s laboratory, which is accessible to outpatients and for emergency services.  Finally, in the Outpatient Center there is an infusion section with a private area for receiving intravenous (IV) fluids.

On an artistic note there is also a Community Gallery featuring rotating works of art by professional, amateur and student artists.  There is also an open area stone garden off the left end of the building.

Entertainments for the Day

At the recent Saturday Open House, in addition to tours of the Emergency and Outpatient Centers, there were vehicles on display from the Westbrook and Essex Ambulance Associations, the Middlesex Hospital Paramedic service and neighboring commercial car dealers.  Also, there were free blood pressure screenings offered to visitors, and a roving magician to entertain the young.  Connecticut State Police officers distributed child fingerprint ID’s, among other amusements for the young and old.

Letter From Paris:  Van Gogh at the Orsay Museum

Nicole Prévost Logan

Nicole Prévost Logan

During the last four years of his life, Vincent Van Gogh produced a phenomenal number of works.  But it was also the time when he suffered episodes of madness, which were to lead him to suicide in 1890 at the age of 37.

The Orsay museum chose this period of intense creation and of psychological despair to present the current exhibit entitled,  “Van Gogh/Artaud. The man driven to suicide by society.”   This new approach to the genius of Van Gogh is through the eyes of Antonin Artaud, a poet, actor and artist, who suffered serious mental illness, was interned nine years and underwent shock treatment.  In 1947, he had a chance to see a major retrospective of Van Gogh’s works at the Orangerie museum.  He wrote, “Van Gogh was not crazy, he was saying a truth that society could not accept.”  He went on by denouncing the prejudices of  moral and science unable to fit genius and madness within the accepted norms.  Throughout the exhibit,the paintings and drawings of Van Gogh are commented in poetic terms by this  troubled soul mate.

Visitors study the Van Gogh paintings in the new exhibition of the artist's work at the Musee d'Orsay.

Visitors study the Van Gogh paintings in the new exhibition of the artist’s work at the Musee d’Orsay.

The exhibit opens in a very dark room, with incoherent sentences scattered on the black walls with a back drop of moaning sounds.  Forty six of Van Gogh’s strongest works have been selected along with some graphic works.  The visitor travels through four periods of the Dutch painter’s life – in Paris, Arles, Saint-Remy-de-Provence and Auvers-sur-Oise.

Several among the more than 40 self portraitsVan Gogh painted throughout his life are — for the public — like a brutal confrontation with the artist.  They certainly are not an exercise in complacency, but a harsh and almost merciless exercise.  American art historian Meyer Schapiro remarks that, for Van Gogh, creating a self portrait was a form of therapy and a way to reconstruct his inner self.  The artist used it to protect himself from crises of instability.

In contrast, portraits of ” La Berceuse”  and “Père Tanguy” express the peaceful and introspective mood of the models. In both paintings, the background — floral in one,  Japanese etchings in the other — show his attraction to pure decorative and aesthetic considerations reminiscent of Matisse’s.   The portrait of Dr. Gachet, at first his psychiatrist and then his friend, seems to radiate kindness, but also melancholy.  Van Gogh writes, “This man is in as bad a shape as myself.  He wears the sorry expression of our times.”

After the tragedy of the night of Dec. 23, 1888, when he had a fight with Gauguin, who was visiting him in Arles, Van Gogh sliced his left ear.  At his own request, he was admitted at the Saint-Paul hospital, near Saint-Remy-de-Provence.  However, he was  authorized to go out and, on those occasions, painted some of his most powerful  landscapes.

His trees are soaring into the sky and dwarf the silhouettes of people.  In “Cyprès avec deux femmes“, June 1889, the tormented volutes of the trees are an ominous shape hovering over two young women walking.  In “Arbres dans le jardin de l’hopital Saint -Paul” , October 1889, the twisted trunks tower over a barely visible woman carrying a red parasol.  His “Foret de pins au declin du jour ,” (pine forest at dusk) December 1889, is a frightening scene, where the trees are beaten by the wind.  They are outlined on an acid yellow sky and a smoldering orange sun.

During his last months in Auvers-sur-Oise, north of Paris, he painted  farm houses with red tiles or thatch roof, giving them a quaint and welcoming touch.  Only the sky, scratched with jagged lines,  reveals the artist’s tension.

The most important work of the exhibit – “Champ de Ble avec Corbeaux” (wheat field with crows) – is projected on a screen, drawing the onlooker into the heavy yellow mass of wheat swaying under a stormy sky.   The tracks on the path combined with the birds everywhere create a harried movement with little time to spare.

HeadshotAbout the author:  Nicole Prévost Logan divides her time between Essex and Paris, spending summers in the former and winters in the latter.  She will write a regular column for us from her Paris home where her topics will include politics, economy, social unrest — mostly in France — but also in other European countries.  She also will cover a variety of art exhibits and the performing arts in Europe.  Logan is the author of ‘Forever on the Road: A Franco-American Family’s Thirty Years in the Foreign Service,’ an autobiography of her life as the wife of an overseas diplomat, who lived in 10 foreign countries on three continents.  Her experiences during her foreign service life included being in Lebanon when civil war erupted, excavating a medieval city in Moscow and spending a week under house arrest in Guinea.

Opening Reception for LOL Junior Women’s Club Art Show & Benefit Sale, Friday

'Reverie' by Sarah Lucas is the signature work for the 98th Elected Artist's Exhibition at the Lyme Art Association.

‘Reverie’ by Sarah Lucas is the signature work for the 93rd Elected Artist’s Exhibition at the Lyme Art Association.

Each spring the Elected Artists of the Lyme Art Association (LAA) display their finest work in the historic building’s sky-lit main galleries.  The 93rd Annual Elected Artist Exhibition will be on view from April 18 through June 1.  The opening reception on Friday, April 25 from 6 to 8 pm is free to the public.  

The juror for the 93rd Annual Elected Artist Exhibition will be Dr. Keith Morgan, Director, Architectural Studies Program, and Professor, History of Art & Architecture and American & New England Studies, at Boston University. Dr. Morgan is the author of “Charles A. Platt,” the leading scholarly study of the LAA’s celebrated architect, Charles Platt.

This year the Lyme-Old Lyme Junior Women’s Club returns with its benefit exhibition and sale of work by invited local artists, on view in the upstairs Goodman gallery and in the newly remodeled lower level galleries.

Over the past 27 years, the Lyme-Old Lyme Junior Women’s Club Art Show & Benefit Sale has served as the organization’s largest fundraising event, with hundreds of thousands of dollars raised from the show going directly to help local charities.  This year’s two main beneficiaries are the Estuary Council of Seniors and Safe Futures.

“The Lyme Art Association is extremely excited to welcome Dr. Morgan to the gallery as a juror in our centennial year.  Dr. Morgan’s work on Charles Platt has been a tremendous help to the Association’s efforts to better understand the history of our gallery and its place in Platt’s body of work, ” comments Joe Newman, LAA Executive Director.  He continues, “We are equally thrilled to host the annual Lyme-Old Lyme Junior Women’s Club Art Show, and applaud their tireless dedication to making our region an even better place to live.”

The gala reception for the annual art show will be held on Friday evening, May 2, from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Lyme Art Association.  The opening night of the fundraising event features an art show, as well as a silent auction, accompanied by drinks, and hors d’oeuvres.

Both exhibitions will be on view in the Lyme Art Association’s historic galleries from April 18 through June 1.

The Lyme Art Association was founded in 1914 by the American Impressionists and continues the tradition of exhibiting and selling representational artwork by its members and invited artists, as well as offering art instruction and lectures to the community.

The Lyme Art Association is located at 90 Lyme Street, Old Lyme, CT, in a building designed by Charles Adams Platt and located within a national historic district.  Admission is free with contributions appreciated.  Gallery hours are Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.Sunday 1 to 5 p.m.

For more information on exhibitions, purchase of art, art classes, or becoming a member, call (860) 434-7802.

Sunrise Service Welcomes Easter

The sun breaks across the eastern horizon from Griswold Point early this morning.  Photo by Emily Fisher.

The sun breaks across the eastern horizon from Griswold Point early this morning.

Worshippers gathered at Griswold Point in Old Lyme early yesterday morning for the traditional ecumenical sunrise service organized by the First Congregational Church of Old Lyme to celebrate Easter.  The weather cooperated as the photo above by Emily Fisher demonstrates clearly.