I visited New Orleans last week. The big easy is a melting pot of cultures and offers so many of my favorite things—great food, history, and an incredible variety of musical genres and artists. Despite three days of muggy August heat and on and off rain showers, I managed to skip just enough of my conference to see some of the gritty, palpable texture and cuisine that makes New Orleans so special.
Who can deny the influence of the distilled spirits in New Orleans. The debauchery of Bourbon Street is an institution to itself, and a trip to Pat O’Bryans was unavoidable, but thanks to the suggestion of a friend, I ate at the Napoleon House, a 200 year-old landmark and one of America’s oldest and most historic bars. The building’s first resident, Nicholas Girod, New Orleans mayor from 1812 to 1815, offered his home Napoleon during his exile in 1821. Napoleon never made it, but I thoroughly enjoyed a leisurely lunch in the cozy courtyard of this New Orleans icon. And it would have been wrong of me to not try the Pimm’s cup and muffaletta. Right?
In a place somehow more oft associated with bead-happy exhibitionism, urine and vomit scented gutters, and Katrina and an oil soaking from BP, art seems a distant concept. But along Rue Royale and St. Charltres, I found a number of excellent galleries. I haggled with the director of the Sutton Galleries over a wonderful oil painting. I met Joe Dunn, a talented landscape photographer, and his wife. Joe suggested a visit to A Gallery for Fine Photography—what a treasure trove. On the walls of this well-stocked gallery, owned by Joshua Mann Pailet, I found gelatin silver prints by Helmut Newton, Ansel Adams, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Herman Leonard, just to name a few.
Finding inspiration for shooting is tough when the heat index is pushing 110 degrees. But a trip to New Orleans was just what it took to send me home ready to put the Nikons to work.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
In the Big Easy
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