bowlerman
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,294
- Location
- South Dakota
Not a great pic, and from yesterday, not today... "Porked out" St. Regis.
The large painting is by my uncle, Nat Ramer. He was born in 1902 and died in the late 1980s... a WPA artist who worked for fifty years from a studio above Max's Kansas City on Park Avenue South (I don't think it's still there). This abstraction was from his early masonite period 8^). The small painting was given to us by a Serbian neighbor when he moved years ago.
The brothers and sisters of my paternal grandmother were quite an interesting group. They emigrated from the Ukraine in 1905. I wish they wore hats... I would share more pictures. One went to Spain with the Abraham Lincoln brigades and died fight with the loyalist forces. The others all lived to ripe old ages. The youngest, my Aunt Sylvia, was very premature for that era and spent the first months of her life in a dresser drawer. She is the only one still living, turned 96 this summer.
Awesome hats.
Alan and David-- those blacks are so simply striking.
Thank you for the hat notes and interest in my uncle's work. I'll have to share some additional pictures when I visit my Dad at Thanksgiving. he has some really nice canvases. Everyone in the family fights over the figurative paintings from the depression era, but his later abstract work is great.
Jeff, sorry for the poor indoor lighting... this hat is a quite remarkable spruce color.
The large painting is by my uncle, Nat Ramer. He was born in 1902 and died in the late 1980s... a WPA artist who worked for fifty years from a studio above Max's Kansas City on Park Avenue South (I don't think it's still there). This abstraction was from his early masonite period 8^). The small painting was given to us by a Serbian neighbor when he moved years ago.
The brothers and sisters of my paternal grandmother were quite an interesting group. They emigrated from the Ukraine in 1905. I wish they wore hats... I would share more pictures. One went to Spain with the Abraham Lincoln brigades and died fight with the loyalist forces. The others all lived to ripe old ages. The youngest, my Aunt Sylvia, was very premature for that era and spent the first months of her life in a dresser drawer. She is the only one still living, turned 96 this summer.
Al-- great trio, love the Silver Belly Optimo and the Millard, but I think the salient one is Optimo's triumphant tungsten-- wow!
Al - love your Optimos, but I especially like the Millard Hirsch - that is a spectacular hat.
I love your expression on the photo with the brim up.
The Imperial Stetson