Walks: Mostly Hood
Distance average: 3 (cold, windy, grey) miles
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| Ed Rusha, Standard Station, Amarillo, Texas, 1963, oil on canvas |
July 4 and America's 250th Anniversary are on the horizon, and the WSJ's art critic, Judith Dobrynski recently reminded American History major and art lover, Ciwt, there are certain paintings that particularly capture our spirit. Here is one, taken directly from her column. Ciwt will add some of her own choices as holiday arrives. If you're interested, stay tuned... Maybe you have some favorites of your own.
For better and worse, the automobile shaped American culture—encouraging the mobility that added vigor to the economy, creating the romance of the open road, prompting leisurely Sunday drives and offering drivers an identity marker. Americans grew car-obsessed. Ed Ruscha took ordinary photos of gas stations along Route 66, then painted "Standard Station, Amarillo, Texas" (1963), at Dartmouth's Hood Museum in Hanover, N.H. A spare image betraying Ruscha's roots in advertising, the station glows brightly in fluorescent lighting, beckoning drivers but also hinting at the ensuing blight of strip malls, shoddy motels, billboards and other adverse effects of the automobile. ... Judith Dobrynski, Wall Street Journal, 6/22/2026
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