A Burgeoning 'City of Art'
The Crescent City shows its artsy side through sculpture, a citywide installation and activist project through the winter.
The Crescent City shows its artsy side through sculpture, a citywide installation and activist project through the winter.
Held October 27 on the grounds of and inside the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge, the Louisiana Book Festival was a wonderful way to spend a sunny, chilly day.
This Saturday, October 27, Louisiana's State Library in Baton Rouge and the Louisiana Center for the Book host the Louisiana Book Festival - a free literary celebration with 148 authors and more than 100 programs.
by Erin Z. Bass Last week, Lafayette/New Orleans artist George Rodrigue, best known for his paintings of the now iconic "Blue Dog," released his latest print, "The Emerald Coast." It depicts the blue waters, white sand beaches and a row of striped umbrellas that is instantly recognizable to Southerners as Destin, Fort Walton and the surrounding areas of Florida. Blue Dog of course lounges under an umbrella. Rodrigue's wife, Wendy, says George began working on the Emerald Coast way before the oil spill, so the print is not associated with it, but fans on his Facebook page see the print as an opportunity to purchase a beautiful depiction of our coastline. "We all should buy one so we will remember what the coast looked like before the oil," says one fan. Wendy does say that George considered an oil-spill related piece and stayed up nights creating some (one is pictured below.) She explains on her blog why we won't see any of those for sale. "In the past month, the shrimp industry, a coastal parish government, environmental organizations, and even the oil industry approached him for a print benefiting their cause. This is a political monster he cannot address, and his efforts