Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label architecture. Show all posts

Friday, August 10, 2007

Ah, Mitchell Stadium

Mitchell Stadium
Bluefield, West Virginia
(Image from VirginiaPreps.com)

Listen up chiefs - I have another update for you kids on my hometown of Bluefield (West Virginia and Virginia), or more specifically, on one of Bluefield's greatest landmarks, the relatively reknowned Mitchell Stadium. Ahh.

The fact of the matter is that Mitchell Stadium, built back in Bluefield's hayday (well before Old King Coal died, so to speak) has aged pretty damned well. That said, some serious renovations are going on in the old house right now, to be finished in time for Friday, August 24th's high school kick-off, the granddaddy of 'm all, the Graham-Bluefield game (aka the Bluefield-Graham game). This decades old rivalry between the West Virginian and Virginian denizens of the East River Valley, should be even more visually stimulating than ever before. Why? Well, there is the new Shott Field, an artificial turf field, is incredibly cool-looking, emblazoned as it is with both a portrait of the two Virginias at mid-field as well as the tactfully neutral maroon and white "Bluefield" written at both ends of the field (maroon, for those of you know, is a major color for both the Graham G-Men and the Bluefield Beavers, and white is found in the uniforms of both, traditionally as piping and stripes for Graham and as stripes and stars for Bluefield). Furthermore, the rear of the stadium, opposite the main gates, has been improved with beautiful native stone walls (Bluefield and our neighbors, such as Bramwell and Tazewell, are mildly well known for our native stone buildings and walls) in the old, glory-days Bluefield style, and though I didn't see it, a blue vinyl fence is going to be installed around the field itself. There are also rumors that new gates will be installed at the front gates of the field (I've heard they're going to be blue, but I haven't seen any confirmation of that yet) as well as, and get this, a jumbotron (again, I have read plenty of rumors but haven't seen anything definitive).

Yeah. All this for a high school football stadium in the dead center of Appalachia. Eat your heart out Texas (just kidding - I don't want to get into that spitting contest).

Okay, I know this may not be huge news for everyone, but today, while I was in town for a baseball game (after a bachelor party with no less than 10 preachers - don't ask), on the recommendation of my friend Catfish, I drove up on the mountain above the stadium - sadly I didn't have a camera with me, but wow, I was impressed. I felt compelled to throw this out there on the old internet. So, after my brief ramblings, I want to share some links I've found on old Mitchell, its renovations, and of course, a couple on the Beaver-Graham game. I'll be there, by the way (assuming Sarah and I can get away from Knoxvegas), and I hope you can be too - it is an experience that rivals the finest college experiences - you're just going to have to trust me.

Presto:

The Bluefield Daily Telegraph: "Dirt churned at Mitchell Stadium"

The Bluefield Daily Telegraph: "On schedule: Mitchell expected to be ready for 'The Game'"

cougarfootball.net: "Welcome to the Big Time, Pulaski County Cougars!
PC defeats Graham in preseason action"


VirginiaPreps.com: "Mitchell Stadium: New and Improved"

WVRSN: "Be a Good Sport, Charleston"

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Appalachia and the Federal Art Project

Image of WPA sponsored mural Mining (1942) in
Mount Hope, West Virginia by Michael Lensen

(From Melissa May Dobbins' excellent
page
on the New Deal in West Virginia)
Despite producing something that is intrinsically meaningful, whether it be music, drama, literature, sculpture, or two-dimensional images, art essentially remains a luxury, something to be consumed either by elites or by the masses with their sponsorship. . . just one of those facts of life. The implication of this is that the lifestyle of artists has always been a hand-to-mouth sort of existence, even in the best of times - they flourish (or fail to do so) utterly at the whim of societies economic, political (especially the guv'ment), or social elite (especially religious institutions). Of course, when the times are flush, artists of all genre tend to do alright (extra capital means capital available for adornment and enrichment), but when they are bust, well, artists are among the first to have to abandon their entire way of life or risk, well, being thrown out on the street or starving to death.

Well, once upon a time Appalachia in particular and the Union in general suffered under an economic decline of catastrophic proportions. The causes of this decline are complex, varied, transnational, and ultimately not particularly relevant to this conversation, but let's just say it was bad enough that economists tell stories of it around campfires that end with, "and that's when the stock market raised its hand - - - and it was a claw!"

Chilling, eh? Well, this period of American (and global) history is generally known as the "Great" Depression. It was bad and it was long. A lot of governments around the world succumbed to very, very bad leaders who promised their people that they'd fix everything if only their people would give them, well, absolute power - we call them fascists. Our government responded not by developing a full-scale command economy, but by applying the logic of automechanics to our economy - if the engine won't start, try giving it a jump. Both reactions, however, were founded on a simple economic principle - if unemployment has dropped so low that consumption has collapsed, feeding a cycle of economic deprivation, the fastest way out (according to its supporters) is for the largest economic entity to engage in a set of works across a very wide set of economic activities that 1) employ as many people as possible in 2) creating infrastructure around which new economic activities can accumulate, rather than just provide services whose effect is short-term (pump it into services exclusively, rather than providing them as a support net, and when state debt grows too high, the economy just tanks again - e.g. Venezuela as soon as the oil runs out if current policies hold).

Most of us are familiar with several of the more large-scale products of this "new deal" - interstates, dams, a tremendous number of new public buildings and parks, and so forth. What you may not know is that during the Depression the Federal government often engaged in supporting more modest works. Specifically, I'm talking about the Federal Art Project, managed by the Works Progress Administration. In essence the FAP was an effort by the Federal government to employ full-time 5,000 artists - mainly painters and sculptors - in the creation of artwork for the people. The product of the FAP was far from modest - almost a quarter of a million artworks were created literally in every conceivable venue in our nation - if you have a post office, federal building, courthouse, jailhouse, school, or post office in your home town that hails from the 1930s, the odds are more than excellent that the mural or sculpture you walk past in the hallway is a product of that effort. Kind of makes you want to stop and take another look-see, doesn't it?

Okay, all that said, I've decided to survey the net for sites that make account of FAP products (surviving or otherwise) in Appalachia. It should be said there are tons of sites, all worth a gander, on the FAP in other regions as well and if you're bored one night but don't want to just fry your brain on mediocre sitcoms, well, they're worth a few Google searches. Also, if you know of an FAP piece in your hometown and you want it posted up, well hell, go take a pic and shoot it to your friends here at HS - we'll try to get it posted for you. In the meantime, enjoy.

"New Deal Art During the Great Depression" from the National New Deal Preservation Association - Midwest Chapter
: Okay, overall this is a great site, lots of pictures, some information, and a decent link set. . . . what you need to see, however, is the is comprehensive list of post office murals you can check out on a state-by-state basis. On the quick, though: check out sub-sites of Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.

"Legacies of the New Deal" from the Library of Virginia
: Provides an overview of WPA works, including but not limited to the FAP in the Commonwealth. Not a ton of information or images, but what is available is well done.

"New Deal Art Mural" from New River WV: Specifically? This site gives us very high quality images of Mount Hope's own FAP murals. . . worth a look to see what a patient photographer can provide us with.

"Mysteries of the West Virginia Building: The Structure at Historic Jackson's Mill Holds Many Secrets" from West Virginia University Alumni Magazine: A wonderful article with excellent images, it details the works of William Grauer.

"The Story of the Murals" from the University of Virginia, Charlottesville's American Studies Program: Self-explanatory.

"New Deal Murals in Kentucky Post Offices" from the Janice Mason Art Museum: Photos of, well, those wacky murals.

"The WPA Guide to the Old Dominion" from the University of Virginia, Charlottesville's American Studies Program
: A tremendous collection of essays and imagery on Virginia's diverse WPA experiences. . . a definite must see.