Local, Near and Far: Our journey of exploring the world.

Month: March 2015 (Page 3 of 4)

Magnolia at the Modern

When I moved to Fort Worth a few years ago, I had the hardest time finding where I could watch independent films, documentaries and old movies.  I couldn’t find anything…so I gave up.

Months later, David and I went to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth  to do research for a class I was teaching on art, beauty, and comparing traditional and modern art.  While visiting The Modern, I realized the museum also housed a movie theater, Magnolia at the Modern .  It shows the exact films I was looking for, and is conveniently located in Fort Worth’s Cultural District

Inside the Theater

Inside the Theater

Our first viewing was on a cold Sunday.  Before the Academy Awards, the Magnolia at the Modern features many of the films and documentaries nominated.  We enjoyed a series of short documentaries.  These films were incredibly thought provoking and engaging.  It was such a great way to engage the world in a different way as each of the three films we saw were from different countries.  As we plan our activities, we often check the films showing at the Magnolia.

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The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

If you love contemporary art, you will love the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth. The Modern is one of three art museums in Fort Worth’s Cultural District. Picking up where the Kimbell’s art collection ends, the Modern features art work from 1940’s to the present.

The Galleries - Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

The Galleries

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Kimbell Art Museum: Fantastic Art & Architecture

Today, we explore my favorite destination in Fort Worth, the Kimbell Art Museum!  The Kimbell is the most well-known of the three art museums in Fort Worth’s Cultural District.

Rebekah and I have visited the Kimbell Art Museum more than thirty times.  Always fresh and new, the museum exhibits traveling collections, hosts lectures, shows movies and offers concerts.

The Exterior of the Kahn Building - Kimbell Art Museum

The Exterior of the Kahn Building

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Fort Worth’s Cultural District: A Variety of Options

Founded in 1849 as a frontier outpost, Fort Worth was where “civilization” ended and the Wild West begun.  Once a simple military fort to protect settlers from Indian raids, the small town has emerged into a sophisticated city.  And the sophisticated city boasts a fantastic cultural district!

Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth - Exterior of the Modern in the Cultural District

Exterior of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

Located west of downtown, near the West 7th District, the Cultural District brings class and culture to Fort Worth.  Most of these attractions are within walking distance of each other.  So find a place to park (for free), and start strolling.

Exterior of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in the Cultural District

Exterior of the Amon Carter Museum of American Art

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An Introduction to Rebekah

I talk with my hands.  I love to tell a story often by reenacting a scenario as if I am in a One Act Play.  I might even use props or the occasional sound effect.  So how does an animated and incredibly verbal person start to tell stories through written word?  Well, I am not sure, but I suppose we will learn together.

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The Guadalupe River

Looking at my life, some people may say I am a stereotypical Texan.  I was born here and am still growing up here.  I spent my childhood on the Gulf Coast, went to school in the Panhandle, lived 11 years in Central Texas, and now call North Texas home.  On our family pecan farm, at the age of 7, I learned to drive on a 1951 Ferguson tractor.  While the tractor is still running to this day, I graduated to a 1973 Chevy pick up at the age of 12.  I have been attacked by mockingbirds, chased armadillos at night, and been known to enjoy a hot summer day sitting in a lawn chair in the middle of the Guadalupe River.  I love traveling, but it is even sweeter to get to come home.  My Mom always says, “It’s a good thing you want to come back home; it means you like it here.”

When I was a child, every other summer my family piled into a van, ready to have an adventure for a couple of weeks.  We stopped at historical sites, museums, and parks.  I just though vacations were the greatest. I learned so much and then those experiences helped me at school, making connections to all sorts of subjects.  In college, I traveled to Bolivia for two months.  When I look back at key moments in my life that influenced and changed me, many of them resulted from my Bolivian experience. Traveling challenges me to think about the world differently.  There are countless people with beautiful stories, each pursuing a meaningful and purposeful life.

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Rebekah hiking the Barton Creek Greenbelt in Austin

Looking back, I have traveled to 30 states, 14 countries, 4 continents and always have a plan for another adventure.  Whether traveling to the town next door or across 10 time zones, meeting new people and learning about their culture, art, traditions, music, food, experiencing plants and nature, what brings pride to a community and their history is a joy to me.  I think it creates empathy and understanding that is powerful and life changing.

I hope you join us as we travel from Texas to beyond and I hope we can inspire you to travel and experience new things too.

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