We
spent the last week in New Orleans, there for my mother’s memorial service,
family things, remembering, visiting, trying to absorb the facts that my mother
is gone, the house I grew up in (essentially) sold, and the New Orleans family that was large
and boisterous when I was growing up seems smaller, quieter and definitely scattered.
We
did some wandering, too, to the old neighborhoods, the Lower Ninth Ward where
my mother and her siblings grew up, the suburb I grew up in, the business
district where my father had his business for so many years, and the French
Quarter. We spent a few hours wandering through art galleries on Royal and
Bienville streets.
Maison Royale,
just across Royal Street from the Royal Orleans Hotel, was actually a combined
jewelry store and art gallery. We wandered in, and quickly discovered that we
could quite likely not afford even the cheapest item in the store. The clue for
me was the first painting I saw, one by Maurice Utrillo from his “white
period.” It was not a print or a copy. Next to it was a small painting by Toulouse-Lautrec.
In the next room was a painting by Camille
Pissarro. The Pissarro was listed for $2.7 million.
Not
all of the galleries are in that bracket. We walked into the Vincent Mann Gallery on Royal
Street and happened upon a story very close to my mother’s life.
The
gallery has been operating since 1972 and specializes in French Neo- and
Post-Impressionism. It’s owned by Jacob Vincent Manguno
(the g is pronounced like a j), who for commercial reasons shortened his gallery’s
name to Vincent Mann. He was born in 1925 in the Ninth Ward, lived on Caffin Avenue
(where my mother’s church was), had boarded for a year at Holy Cross High
School (a block from my mother’s house), lied about his age to join the
military in World War II, and was a member of the Army Air Corps (now the U.S.
Air Force).
We
learned all of this because we were taken with one of his own paintings,
entitled “Duet” (pictured above), and discovered that the elderly man sitting
at a desk and working on a computer was none other than the artist and gallery
owner.
He
was a delight to talk with.
He
didn’t know my mother or her immediate family, but he was familiar with the
family names of some of my aunts’ husbands. He told us stories about some of
his adventures, about walking the Ninth Ward, living on Caffin Avenue, how so
many German families lived in the area (my mother’s family was French on her
father’s side and German on her mother’s).
After
several emotional days with my mother’s service and burial, this was like
opening a door on the New Orleans of her youth.
Painting: Duet by Jacob Vincent Manguno,
casein on canvas, 2013.
I can see why you'd be taken with that painting. I am, too.
ReplyDeleteHow bittersweet that must have been to visit and reminisce.
One of the first artworks I ever purchased, sometime in the late 1970s, was a Leonor Fini original print from a gallery in the French Quarter. I would guess that gallery is long gone.
My deepest sympathies on your great loss, Glynn. I have always loved your stories of your mother and father and life in New Orleans.
Unfolding moments
ReplyDeleteglad that you shared
it's so much to absorb
to feel
the past
the present
streaming in
by light
by night
flight and places
in time
loss
and gain
all measured
somewhere
and we realize
all treasured
will be parted
and nothing we
can do
but to Love
also...
ReplyDeleteVery glad that you were careful
where you put the apostrophe on
the word aunts' before the word husbands.
And cool, how the painting took you in to the artist.
Those unexpected moments and insights into our parents' past can be so healing and comforting. In my prayers, Glynn . . .
ReplyDeletePrayers of comfort in your loss.
ReplyDeleteWhat a treasure you encountered in this visit to the gallery.