At Dayton, OH, we participated some in the celebrations. It was also an opportunity to sketch in the museum.
Here are some of the sketches done so far:
Dusenburg Museum
B 25 at Grimes Field, Urbana, OH
Air Force Museum, 1918 flight suit
Maid in the Shade
Axis Nightmare
Then we drove through Kentucky and Tennesee. First stopping at Berea, KY for shopping and then at Sevierville, TN at the Smokey Mountain Knife works for more shopping. Then we drove through the Great Smokey Mountains National Park over the mountains to Georgia.
Plein Aire painters in the Smokey Mountains
In Altanta we visited the Atlanta Fine Arts Center on a Thursday night. The night they have a free jazz concert. They had an electric scooter available which made it more comfortable for me. It is a great museum. The main drawbacks were the loud amplified music and the big crowd on the main floor for the concert.
At Columbus, GA was the Civil War Naval Museum and the Museum of the Infantryman at Fort Benning. Both worth the time to visit. At the Civil War Naval Museum was the added bonus of a car show!
Car Show
Remains of the CSS ironclad Jackson
The Museum of the Infantryman
At Pensacola, FL is the Naval Air Museum. Another very interesting place. I got a chance to do some sketching here also.
Driving west brought us to Mobile, AL and the Battleship Alabama museum. There was also a display of aircraft, the USS submarine Drum and various tanks.
While Don went all up and down the ship, I stayed on deck and sketched.
Our destination was Houston, TX. We went to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Where they had an annoying photo taking rules, some of the permanent collection could be photographed but not others. And their security staff was unfriendly and intrusive. (trying to enforce those lousy phototaking rules!)
The same subject done in terracotta and marble
Houston skyline
Courbet landscape at the Fine Arts Museum
The next day we visited the Menlil collection. We had wanted to see the Byzantine Chapel but that had been returned to Cyprus. Since this was a private collection, no photos were permitted, but I was allowed to sketch. The collection started out with a nice selection of Paleolithic art, ancient and medieval art and African art. Then they started to collect "contemporary art" which sucks! Most of it is dull and meaningless. And not worth your time to look at.
A sketch of a Roman statuette of a bronze bull
The principle reason to come to Houston was the Battleship Texas. It is the only remaining Dreadnought style battleship. It is docked next to a pleasant park.
On the way back east we stopped in Beaumont, TX and toured the Basilica of St. Anthony of Padua. The church was restored only a few years ago and it is beautiful!
We took lots of photos of the stained glass, the mosaics and paintings.
We crossed back over the Mississipi River at Baton Rouge again and drove north to Vicksburg and drove through the batttlefield park and toured the museum at the hull of the USS ironclad gunboat Cairo. A conversation with my mother reminded me that a great-great uncle of mine (a Bendickson) died at Vicksburg. From Vicksburg we drove north through the Mississipi Delta. This is very flat land and went through some thunderstorms to Memphis, TN. After Memphis, we spent all day driving through Missouri and Iowa back to La Crosse. The most direct route took us off four-lane highways and onto two-lane state roads.
A couple of the many memorials at the Vicksburg Battlefield Park
The hull of the USS Cairo