Cultural Tradition: One Reason to Love Tucson

There are many stories written in Tucson, and one of my favorites focuses on the cultural traditions rooted here. In the nooks and crannies of Tucson’s diverse communities are artisans who share (through festival, cultural entrepreneurship or demonstration) their traditional art forms that are cultural expressions reflective of folk life, folk art.

I enjoy writing about tradition bearers who have the responsibility (and joy!) of keeping their culture alive. Their work mixes function with beauty. Many arts brought creative expression to everyday tools (as in my grandmother’s case, when her kitchen towels became decorated with intricate lace work).

Saturday I visited the “Kermes” or Turkish Bazaar at the FID Center and saw old friends from Tucson Meet Yourself tradition-bearer demonstrations. There old and new tradition bearers formed a creative display and community circle of function, art and tradition.

There was Mustafa and Mine, demonstrating the beautiful marbled art form of Ebru. And there was Cuneyt whose Turkish calligraphy technique mimics the scripts of Arabic via his use of broad nibbed pens. Both Mustafa and Caynet create special art on delicate paper — and I purchased a small piece of their work. Traditional “hat” calligraphy with Ebru style art.

I love the cultural messages of these bazaars and festivals, so much a part of the Tucson fabric. At these festivals I usually run into Loma and Jim Griffth, the king of Sonoran folklore and founders of Tucson Meet Yourself. Of course they were there, drinking Turkish tea and sharing stories with many generations of the Turkish community. All like family, as it is in the folk arts area of Tucson Meet Yourself.

The interweaving of good food, fun, community place-making and indigenous traditions brings joy to my heart. See you October 12 -14, 2012 for more community folk arts and Tucson Meet Yourself.

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Finding our own way, connecting our heritage

Reading opens so many doors, yes? Letters tell family stories; books reflect cultural experiences that hit home. These days I search for writings that open doors into my Italian heritage and mysterious family roots. My childhood, although rich with gatherings and foods reflective of my Italian origins, lacked a foundation in Italian language and specific family lineage documentation. Why? Like so many immigrants of the early 1900s, my grandparents saw America as new opportunity (in my case, as starting anew after devastating Reggio Calabria earthquakes.) They thought it best for future generations to face forward. How ironic I now dream about a return to that character, culture and knowledge these gentle, wonderful people left behind.

I recently visited the birthplace of my grandparents, in the Calabria region of Italy, and will have stories to tell about my family and the silk-throwing traditional arts (sericulture) that is part of my family history, in posts to come.

For now — It’s sad to read about the Tucson Mexican-American Studies mess, and most recently about the Tucson Unified School District’s rejection of a reading by author Ana Castillo. These students want to read books that reflect their personal cultural story. It’s what I would have wanted to help me experience and nurture my heritage roots.

I’m happy author Castillo will visit Tucson anyway, and give a free reading on Friday, May 4, at the John Valenzuela Youth Center 1550 South 6th Avenue, South Tucson, 6:30 PM. So many in the community have stood up to sponsor and promote this event. Cultural enrichment should be meaningful to the heart, not to the politics. If my grandparents had encouragement from the school system or local government to embrace heritage, perhaps I would be further along in understanding my roots. So, author Castillo, I look forward to your visit, to letting children know their roots, and to hearing how words can help heal the spirit.

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Tucson Writer Ramble Through Paris

I went walking recently to explore place-making in Paris. There were discoveries of neighborhood markets, locavore foods, artisans involved in beautiful traditions, old books, brasseries with hearty red wines and profound nooks of history. Just returning to Tucson, where I’ll collect my notes and scramble to adjust to deadlines and home routines. Watch for future posts to include tips and details about the adventure.

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Tucson Thrift Stores & Sewing Secrets

Staring at me, on a sundries table of a Tucson thrift store, were several of these perfectly packaged sewing and needle kits, circa 1950s Japan.
I also scored some beautiful glass beads from “West” Germany and needle kits from England. I am posting some pix for the retro-loving designers among us.

Seeing the beautifully packaged needles and the buttons from a bygone political era stirred my middle and high school sewing memories. You can read more here.

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Tucson Ad Fed Lunch Learning: Social Media Stories Shared

It was the week of SXSW, a perfect backdrop to this social media session in Tucson. The local chapter of the American Advertising Federation conducts these free meet-ups for members. Is Social Media growing up? Is it listening well, entertaining us and connecting us in ways more wondrous than ever before? We Tucson AdBag participants wanted to know.

SXSW, Tucson, Social MediaSo we talked about trends, platforms and processes. We reviewed resources which bubbled to the surface of this great tech-music-interactive conference and festival. I led the discussion and gave the group some takeaways about trends (in mobile, tech, privacy issues and content curation). Here’s a graphic compilation of what we discussed. If you’d like to know more, please email me!

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Book Love in Tucson

The World is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page. ~St. Augustine
Books are everywhere this weekend in Tucson – e-versions, used, just published, collectible, manga, anime, digitized and paper. It’s all because of a treasured Festival worth a visit: the 4th Annual Tucson Festival of Books.

Each year I browse the exhibits, attend workshops and find some real gems of importance to the writing world. Conversations about books and the digital universe go hand-in-hand at the country’s fourth largest book festival — so I also post and tweet, connecting with authors and marketers the electronic way. Nooks, Kindles, iPads and mobile devices are everywhere in the tapestry of authors tents and books.

Last year I spoke at the Festival about how communication, reading and media have been forever influenced through social networking, and about about how organizations or businesses can build their own online influence. This year I am moderating a Saturday Go Viral panel session, 11:30AM in UA Student Union’s Santa Rita Hall, focusing on book marketing and social networking.

It will be great to see you, but if you’re immersed in other author talks or book signings — no matter! Enjoy the power of words this weekend.

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Tucson Boneyard Project, Scene & Heard Last Night

Art is interactive space. It stirred appreciation, music, style and community, as well as discussion, last night at the Pima Air and Space Museum. The artful exhibit is on through May and is curated/created by Eric Firestone.
More images are on my other Cowgirl Blog.

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Arizona Centennial Celebration & Tucson Gem Show Fever

It’s the Arizona Centennial – what better way to celebrate then through the 2012 Tucson Gem, Mineral, Fossil, Rock and Bead shows’ madness underway now through February.  This great event has been around since the mid-1950s, when two rockhounds from the Tucson Gem & Mineral Society decided to celebrate Tucson’s enthusiasm for rocks and geological delights. What was a small exhibit in a school auditorium has become the world epicenter (for lovers of nature’s beautiful gems, rocks, and minerals).

Alas, to get a handle on all the shows and to find the nooks and crannies you’ll most enjoy, you’ll need to visit a number of websites to map your route. I start with the founder show, The Tucson Gem and Mineral Society. This show culminates several weeks of gem show frenzy (Febrary 9 – 12) and is probably a best best if you just want a quick look at the excitement. But if you’re interested in beads I’d also look at the To Bead True Blue show schedule. I also check in with the African Art Village and The Tucson Gem Show Guide to identify exhibits, speakers, vendors, Native American village and other eclectic offerings I’ll want to explore.

The natural geological wonders, fossils, trade beads and the folk arts clustered around the show themes always have been fascinating to me. Beads especially are symbolic of cultural tradition, ornamentation, religion, art and commerce…and I still prize the ones I selected and purchased last year from Bead Trader and historian Steve Ellis. I am interested this year in getting more beads revered as trade items here in the southwest, including the Bohemian hand-faceted Russian Blue beads, the Feather beads Venetian hand “trailed”), the Black Skunks also known as eye beads and worn for protection, and the hand-made Venetian glass Gooseberry bead, later 1800s, also beloved by Native Americans.

All the beautiful natural elements (or historic hand-made items like trade beads)  transcend time and relate important stories about our world’s natural wonders, our cultures, our economy and our arts.

Can any rock hound out there help me identify the beautiful mineral-embedded rock that sits in my front yard? It was there when I purchased my home…and most every day I look at it, admire the beautiful/colorful swirls it houses, and wonder where it came from. I pray it traveled here easily and fairly (I have nightmares about taking from mother earth just for the sake of adornment or material pleasure). But even if it was stolen from its natural place, I honor it and hope it knows it has a respectful new home. Mother Earth gave us great natural wonders to admire and explore. I hope you enjoy what you find at the Tucson shows scattered around the Old Pueblo this month.

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Tucson, Arizona sunset: January 8, 2012

Just wanted to post a pix of an incredible sunset. It’s from last night, one year after the terrible tragedy in that Tucson Safeway shopping center where six people died and so many other lives were forever changed. Mark Kelly, astronaut and husband of Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, spoke last night at the memorial which helped a community heal and turn the page. He noted that while the unspeakable can happen, we all can take comfort in powerful constants that the universe presents to us.

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Tucson Road Trips: Fodder for 2012 Inspiration

Are you ready to pause, listen and look around as you scurry through 2012?

For me, trekking through Arizona has been a way to help me slow down, enrich and clarify my personal as well as professional life. Whether looking out the window of an historic railway, visiting a sustainable farm in Patagonia, or climbing to an arch along Navajo highway — the world around me has been invaluable resource to  refresh the soul as well as help hone the writer craft. I just needed to stop, listen and look. Five examples of journeys that have encouraged my creative spirit:

  1. A visit to the imposing mountain Baboquivari… where a rambling dirt road taken past the lovely Himdag Ki museum leads to what the O’odham people call the stony ground. I didn’t climb to the top of this mystical spire but I hope to in 2012. The quietness, interrupted only by birds and rustling lizards, is magic for the soul.
  2. Colossal Cave: In once great ranch land where cattle still roam, there is a beautiful outpost that hides a treasure of a cave. In monsoon season the tourists are scarce, and lazy horses or burros slap tails against the flies. The wind rustle through dried grasses. It’s all like a summer desert song that reawakens creativity.
  3. Coronado Trail Highway 191: We zig zagged the car past the mines and funky towns of Clifton and Morenci, and drove up through the glorious Coronado Trail just a week before the horrific fires in 2011. We were surrounded by green blankets of forest and moss, saw packs of bighorn sheep and couples of elk. The quiet majesty of this area was breathtaking. Still is, its power to nurture the spirit undiminished by the late spring firestorm.
  4. Navajo and Hopi Land: Past Flagstaff off Highway 89, following route 160, there are offshoot roads that take you to the land of Dine and Hopi. Here you find wide open spaces cut by redstone arches,  expansive colorful canyons, monuments, petryglyphs and strangely-formed monoliths that spiral to the sky.  It is a universe of nature, beauty, history and stillness like no other in Arizona.
  5. Salt River to Petrified Forest: Above Globe, Highway 60 takes you through high desert and a scenic bridge that leads through a canyon full of Apache history. Passing this, then through White Mountain vacationer towns like Show Low and Snowflake, you find more unique Arizona beauty along the Colorado Plateau in a forest of a different kind. The wind rips in the Petrified Forest, where temps get to zero in wintertime. But it is a strange land of fossils, petrified woods and strange formations, carried here and molded millions of years ago.

Each trip brings amazement at natural wonders, new respect for ancient ways….and a cleansing of the spirit as technology slipps away and the here-and-now speaks loudly.

In 2012, take the time to break away. Speak to yourself, not your Facebook page. Did you enjoy this moment? See — It is gone already!

Resources for writers:
From CopyBlogger: 10 Terrific Writing Blogs
From New York Times: The Joy of Quiet
Useful for Entrepreneurs: Blogs and Twitter Accounts For Entrepreneurs to Follow

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