Thursday, December 31, 2015

Holiday Lights 2015 & Philadelphia



For some it takes booze and booming sounds, fireworks filling the sky with colorful animation or a 12' ball, containing 2,688 pieces of crystal and 32,256 LED lights, dropped in Times Square to wrap up the old and welcome in a new year.

For me it's a dose of Christmas lights, a great restaurant meal, and a stroll through the city.

Here are some photos of Christmas lights taken on Monday evening, December 28th, in South Philly in the vicinity of Smedley Street. For the past several weeks our temperatures have been unseasonably mild thanks to El Nino. It's been mostly 60ยบ even in the low 70's, but this day definitely feels like Winter!







Here's a peek at Ela, rated one of Philadelphia's top 50 restaurants, located at 627 S. 3rd Street in Queen Village. Lucky for us they were open on a Monday, a table was available without a reservation, and Michael and I were able to enjoy a delicious prix fixe, 3 course dinner, for $30.00 per person!



Afterwards, we took a walk down Broad Street, a.k.a. Avenue of the Arts, where activity flows and changing lights accentuate great architecture.

They say the neon lights are bright on Broad Street
They say there's always magic in the air
But when you're walkin' down the street
And you've just had enough to eat
The glitter shines so bright and you're somewhere...

*Adapted from and sung to the tune of "On Broadway"








Tonight, New Year's Eve, Michael and I will be at home with a few DVD's and some munchies. With 2015 nicely wrapped up, we're ready to welcome in 2016... if we can stay awake until midnight when the ball drops in Times Square.

I'm interested.  What 'rituals' take you from the old year into the new?

To listen to The Drifters perform "On Broadway" go here.


Here's wishing you and yours
A Very Healthy, Happy, and Prosperous 2016!

From "Here and Next"


Saturday, November 14, 2015

Philly Photo Day 2015 & Philadelphia: A World Heritage City


On October 9, 2015, Philadelphia Photo Art Center (PPAC) held its annual "Philly Photo Day" inviting anyone and everyone to...

POINT... a camera or cell phone in the Greater Philadelphia Region.

CLICK... and capture one moment of one day... Friday, October 9th.

SEND... the uploaded image to PPAC.

This year 1,412 images were received, printed, and are now on exhibit at The Crane Arts Building, November 12, 2015 - January 2, 2016.

1400 N. American Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10 AM - 6 PM
Phone: 215. 232. 5678 (call for holiday hours).

Here's a selection of photographs from the show...

Photo: John Carlano

Photo: John Stritzinger

Photo: Mechelle Lavelle

Photo: Mark Mcdowell

Photo: Thomas Galante

Photo: Joe Trachtman

Photo: Stephen Perzan

Photo: Brian Krase

Photo: Jill Sherman

Photo: Thomas Myernick

Photo: Mariann Reh

Photo: Danny Schweers

Photo: Aaron Bilese

Photo: Susan Liedke

Photo: Marian Kelley

Photo: Liz Demartino

Photo: Meredith Kleiber

Photo: Melvin Chappell

Photo: Crystal Martin

Photo: Kay Moon

Photo: Joonyup Park


Here's my contribution, a segment of a sign above Alert Moving and Storage, located a few doors down from Rieker's German Market in Fox Chase, where we were headed for some house-made soup, sausages, and spaetzle.

Photo: Dyan Titchnell


Here my husband chose to photograph this oddity, a doll's shoe nailed to a   joist inside the building he's rehabbing in a section of the city called Lawndale.

Photo: Michael Titchnell


To view the entire "Philly Photo Day exhibition go here.

And More Good News! On Friday, November 6, 2015, Philadelphia was named the first World Heritage City in the United States, joining such cities as Paris, Florence, Jerusalem, Prague etc.

"This is the start of a new and exciting chapter in the city's history," said Philadelphia's Mayor Michael Nutter. "As we celebrate this milestone, the next step is to focus on the future and how we can optimize this World Heritage City recognition to attract more people to visit, invest, work, study and live in Philadelphia."

To learn more of our city's recent recognition, check out this article in The New York Times here.

And tying in with "Philly Photo Day," Katie Scot Aiton gives 11 photographic reasons why Philadelphia deserves to be a World Heritage City here.


Congratulations to Philadelphia and to all the people who make this city great!



XOX... Dyan



Wednesday, October 14, 2015

PARK(ing)Day 2015 & 'POPE'MANIA

                 Photo: Conrad Stojak                                Photo: Chris Whetzel


First... Happy New Year to all those of Jewish faith!

Although I'm not religious, I'm always ready to welcome in a new year... especially after this year began with the unfortunate passing of my mother nine months ago. In Numerology the number 9 stands for completion, the wrapping up of things while preparing to begin anew. So sorry its taken this long to put pen to paper and fingers to a keyboard, in updating this blog.

Hopefully, you're still HERE with me and ready for what's NEXT...

PARK(ing) Day Philadelphia 2015!

When some 50 parking spaces are transformed into mini-parks or 'park'lets for passersby to learn something, have fun, or just relax.

Only today, Friday, September 18th, I'm more rushed than relaxed.

I had hoped to spend all day leisurely exploring this event, but because the city is moving towards shut-down-mode for the arrival of the Pope and The World Meeting of Families next week, my dental appointment planned during that time was rescheduled for today. Yup... PARK(ing) Day.

So now I'm racing against time... hoping to see as much as I can before my appointment, then more afterwards, but all before 4 PM when most mini- parks for pedestrians revert to metered parking for vehicles only.

First stop... "Wonderland Park" by Langan Engineering with Alice welcoming everyone to a game of croquet and tea with the Mad Hatter.



Then it's ... "Circus Park" by Johnson, Miriam & Thompson (JMT) where people pose behind cutout posters or dip into a plastic pool.


Next... play Tic Tac Toe and Jenga or make your own games from repurposed materials with help from Gilmore & Associates.


And here... Wulff Architects demonstrate how to transform a tiny backyard into a garden oasis with hanging plants and benches made from concrete blocks and pressure-treated wood.


It would be nice to see more, lots more, but now I've got to hoof it... to 1608 Walnut Street, where my dentist is located. Once inside the Medical Arts Building, I run for the elevator and push the button for the 11th floor. When the doors open, I exit and turn left, down the corridor towards the last door while looking over my PARK(ing) Day map and plotting my next adventure.

A sign on the door reads "Knock Hard. Door Is Locked." I think, "that's odd," but comply. A woman I don't recognize peers out from behind the door... 
a door made of solid wood. My dentist's door is glass and this hallway seems stuffy and stale.

I'm distracted... and on the wrong floor!

I apologize, re-enter the elevator and travel up two more floors to where the hallway smells sweet, like toothpaste.

An hour or so later, my teeth are sparkling clean and I'm back on the street talking with Applied Mechanics, a theatre group that creates interactive plays. I question the 'lone turnstile to nowhere' and I'm told... "It's audience participation... pass through the turnstile and be counted." Once through, I'm handed a white slip of paper with "221 #turnstile" hand-written in orange marker. Done!


Next it's Center City Kehillah, a Jewish organization here to wish everyone a Happy New Year and an opportunity to make a wish and have it posted. I pass on the wish part (too many to post) but accept a kind gift of Laffy Taffy and honey, tokens of a "sweet and happy new year."


And I'm happy to be able to relax at this "Garden Library" by Groundswell Design Group, also the creators of Spruce Street Harbor Park. How clever... hanging books, barrels as tables that offer protection from passing vehicles, and colorful chairs for sitting with a book or conversing with others. I'm told the books were purchased from a local used bookstore and I'm free to take home any publications that interest me. Wow!


And Double Wow! Look who's mingling among the hanging books... the Pope!


A crowd forms and now everyone wants a picture with his holiness despite being made of cardboard and propped up by a person who just arrived on a bicycle.

It's 'POPE'MANIA! And all the frenzy has me on my feet moving to 16th Street and JFK where I hope to catch a few more mini-parks before they're all gone.

Too late... there's nothing here at Love Park except for tourists and something green shooting up from behind the LOVE sculpture.


Electric-Green water! Curious, I shoot Love Fountain from every angle including one leading out of the park onto the Parkway with a glimpse of the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the distance.



I can't believe how time escapes me... I mean REALLY, REALLY, escapes me... not just missing a good deal of PARK(ing) Day, but September's gone and it's now OCTOBER!!!

The Pope arrived in America, stopping in Washington DC, New York City, and Philadelphia and touched the lives of almost everyone, everywhere! Thankfully our city was ready for him.

The Philadelphia Museum of Art installed the Spanish version of Robert Indiana's LOVE sculpture, AMOR, at the top of the art museum's steps to welcome the Pope in his native language. It will remain for several months in time to announce the opening of the museum's upcoming exhibition of International Pop Art.

Photo: Kimberly Paynter

At Dirty Frank's bar (13th and Pine Streets), artist David McShane added Pope Francis to a mural of some twenty "Franks," which include... Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, Ben Franklin, Frank Perdue, Frank Zappa, even Frankenstein.

Photo: Audrey Rose McManus

Photo: Audrey Rose McManus

Throughout Center City, banners lined the streets.

Photo: Emma Lee

And here's the Pope waving goodbye before heading to Philadelphia International Airport on his way back to Rome.

Photo: Jewel Samad

Before leaving our city, Pope Francis was asked by Time Magazine's journalist, Elizabeth Dias, "We are so curious... this was your first visit to the US. What surprised you about the US and what was different to what you might have expected?"

"It was my first visit," the Pope replied. "I'd never been here before. What surprised me was the warmth, the warmth of the people, so lovable. It was a beautiful thing and also different: in Washington the welcome was warm but more formal; New York was a bit exuberant. Philadelphia very expressive..."

"Expressive"... what a great description for a city full of creative people.

Thanks to all those expressive and creative individuals responsible for making PARK(ing) Day Philadelphia 2015 such a success!

And thanks to the Pope for choosing to visit and bless our city!

Philadelphia... there's so much to LOVE/AMOR.

And on one last LOVE note... The Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Association for Public Art partnered to bring "AMOR" to Philadelphia and said there's a possibility of keeping the sculpture here permanently should the city show enough love for it.

Enough love?... We're the "expressive" City of Brotherly Love!!!