August 2008: Countrypolitans (The Design Issue)



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Our Features


ON THE COVER

Hurricane Solution #3
Acrylic, 70” x 42” x 1”
by Terrance Osborne

“I’m drawn to rustic things,” admits Gretna artist Terrance Osborne, whose luminously colored acrylic-on-wood relief paintings celebrate the architecture, the resilience, and the “What the hell” spirit that is Louisiana life. Osborne’s paintings incorporate raised wooden reliefs, cut out with a jigsaw, so every house and boat and mailbox bursts from the background in a startling flood of colors.
“I love color; I like to think I’m a pioneer,” says Osborne, although he’s quick to credit painters Richard Thomas and William Tolliver, Michaelopolis and John Singer Sargent as influences. “That guy was a master,” says Osborne of Sargent. “You know the idea that Michaelangelo would look at a piece of stone and see the image inside? I think that Sargent saw the image and just had to put sunlight on it. I call it ‘painting with sunlight.’ I just do what the sun says.”
Osborne has been painting hurricane and water-related subjects since long before Katrina darkened these skies. “You live around the Gulf, hurricanes are on your mind,” he remarks, noting that right after the storm, he did Katrina-related pieces, mostly as a reaction. “But after a while I got tired of seeing that stuff, and I think everybody else did too. So I decided I would poke fun at it. If we have to live with it and be reminded of it, why not be reminded in the best way?”
Giclées of Osborne’s works are available at around thirty New Orleans-area retailers. For originals, he also has a home-based gallery and a Web site: www.galleryosborne.com or (504) 232-7530.
38 Liquid Assets
by Herpreet Singh

43 Two Tales of Recycled Dwellings
by Anna Macedo

48 Repurposed Relics
by Paige Dampf

Our Regulars

6 Editorial Reflections
by James Fox-Smith
51

The Good Feast

New Orleans’ Newbies
by Brenda Maitland

New Harvest on the Horizon
by Jamie Renee White

62 Visual Arts
The Legacy of Charles
& Ethel Hudson
by J. Richard Gruber

Art Melt 2008
Of Art and Arms:
Victory for a Modern Knight
by Jamie Renee White

66 Really Listening
Country Music (and the lost art of family dining)
by Alex Cook

68 Antiquarians
The Accidental Historian
by Ruth Laney

70 Lawnchair Gardeners
Horticultural Heresy
by Ed O’ Rourke
and Leon Standifer

72 Folk Wisdom
The Not-so-Eensy-
Weensy Spider
by Lucile Hume

74 Weekends Away
Coastal Activism
(or Marshland Memories)
by Sam Irwin

76 B & B Listings
A Resource Guide