my city was gone
I had free morning in Cleveland so I borrowed my sister’s car and drove to the Cleveland Art Museum. It has a world-class collection but, unfortunately, most of it was in storage because of a massive renovation project. They’re building a new wing and most of the museum is still closed off. There was a special exhibit of artistic luxury goods from Fabergé, Tiffany and Lalique that I didn’t really care about. Just a handful of galleries from the permanent collection were open.
Most of the paintings I wanted to see were all packed away. I began visiting the Clevo Art Museum decades ago—soon after I got my driver’s license—and seeing those paintings feels like visiting old friends again.
None of the modernist paintings were on display, but I did see Stag at Sharkey’s by George Bellows, which is one of my favorites in their collection. I think he mixed testosterone into the pigment for this one.
Also on display was one of J.M.W. Turner’s The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, a nightmare drawn from the event he witnessed.
I left the museum and drove down Euclid Avenue into downtown Cleveland. Euclid is the main artery into the city and many of the businesses were closed and boarded up. I have a strange tendency to become emotionally attached to a city (see any of my posts about NYC) and it made me sad to see the city of my youth in such dire straits.
I had meant to take I-71 back to the hotel but the freeway entrance was closed and I somehow wound up heading down W. 25th street. It was such a mess. I passed a building with a sign out front that read Plasma Services and there was a long queue of people waiting to get in that stretched out the door.
Most of the paintings I wanted to see were all packed away. I began visiting the Clevo Art Museum decades ago—soon after I got my driver’s license—and seeing those paintings feels like visiting old friends again.
None of the modernist paintings were on display, but I did see Stag at Sharkey’s by George Bellows, which is one of my favorites in their collection. I think he mixed testosterone into the pigment for this one.
Also on display was one of J.M.W. Turner’s The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, a nightmare drawn from the event he witnessed.
I left the museum and drove down Euclid Avenue into downtown Cleveland. Euclid is the main artery into the city and many of the businesses were closed and boarded up. I have a strange tendency to become emotionally attached to a city (see any of my posts about NYC) and it made me sad to see the city of my youth in such dire straits.
I had meant to take I-71 back to the hotel but the freeway entrance was closed and I somehow wound up heading down W. 25th street. It was such a mess. I passed a building with a sign out front that read Plasma Services and there was a long queue of people waiting to get in that stretched out the door.
14 Comments:
very sad... media-wise, there's a sense that Cleveland is a renaissance city. But i suspect there's simply a wider gap between 'wealth' and 'poverty', and you're seeing some of that...
when i go home, all i see are new strip malls and chain restaurants. very, very sad, but in a different way...
My hometown is like a foreign place. Even my mom's neighborhood has changed quite a bit.
You can go home but it might not be there.
Plasma Services?
daisy: I think the “renaissance city” campaign was played out a few years ago.
annie: Do you think it ever occurs that someone goes home after an extended absence and they find it BETTER than when they left? Surely, this has happened.
nurse: If you are completely broke, you go to a plasma service center and sell your blood/plasma. If you are lucky enough to have one of the more rare blood types, you can actually be paid quite a bit of money.
I shudder to think what the area I grew up in looks like now. I suppose I would rather keep my memories intact then go back and see something like that.
Every time I'm up in the Rust Belt it looks more and more desolate. The town I was born in (Niagara Falls, NY) is pretty much dead with the exception of the tourist draw that is the Falls themselves.
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