Archive for the ‘Society of the Fifth Cave’ Tag

My last Cave meeting, for awhile. . .   4 comments

Cave Meeting, October 9, 2005 at Bernhardt Winery – Image by kenne

When I think back over the 27 years I have lived in The Woodlands, high among my memories will be the heated discussions that took place at the Society of the 5th Cave book club meeting. Today we had, what will probably be my last meeting, at least till a meeting is scheduled for Tucson. Even though we are moving in a couple of weeks to Tucson, once a Cave brother, always a Cave brother unless you choose not to belong — my choice is for life.

Last December I made a video of one of our meetings, which now turns out to be timely since I forgot to take my cameras today. As a result, I share again the video of the December 22, 2009 meeting.

Too all my Cave brothers, I salute you — till we meet again.

kenne

Posted June 6, 2010 by kenneturner in Books, Friends, Life, Photography, video

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Art In Black and White   Leave a comment

(Truman Capote — Karl Bissinger Photo)

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ART IN BLACK AND WHITE –SEEING THROUGH THEIR EYES, NOT WITH THEM

I belong to a book club, “The Society of the 5th Cave,” which meets monthly.  This month our book selection was Portraits and Observations – The Essays of Truman Capote. If you enjoy reading prose with superb style, as illustrated in this early morning walk in New Orleans:

“…I stopped still in the middle of a block, for I’d caught out of the corner of my eye a tunnel-passage, an overgrown courtyard. A crazy-looking white hound stood stiffly in the green fern light shinning at the tunnel’s end, and compulsively I went toward it. Inside there was a fountain; water spilled delicately from a monkey-statue’s bronze mouth and made on pool pebbles desolated bell-like sounds. He was hanging from a willow, a bandit-faced man with kinky platinum hair; he hung so limply, like the willow itself. There was terror in that silent suffocated garden. Closed windows looked on blindly; sail tracks glittered silver on elephant ears, nothing moved except his shadow.”

I love it, “…nothing moved except his shadow.”

However, this posting is not so much about Truman Capote as it’s about photographer, Karl Bissinger, who pasted away three days ago (November 25, 2008). Bissinger photographed many artists, actors and writers in the 1950’s, among them, Truman Capote.

Gore Vidal has written on the Bissinger image below (from left: ballerina Tanaquil LeClercq, novelist Donald Windham, artist Buffie Johnson, Tennessee Williams, Gore Vidal and Karl Bissinger): “So study this picture, and see what optimistic people looked like as they began what they thought would be lifelong careers, and in some cases indeed lasted as we lost more and more of a country that is no country without Karl Bissinger to make art of it.”

kenne

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— Karl Bissinger