MoCA’s “Looking For History”: Challenging Traditional American Narrative

“06880” culture correspondent Robin Moyer Chung writes:

MoCA\CT’s 250th anniversary exhibit, “Looking for History,” is thought-provoking, masterful — and kind of stressful.

The Newtown Turnpike museum chose 3 accomplished artists for the show: Michael Borders, Ellen Harvey and Rick Shaefer. (Should it matter that Harvey is British, and Shaefer grew up in Europe?) Borders’ exhibit arrives August 13.

According to the website, the exhibit “challenges the traditional American narrative. Rather than a purely celebratory look at the American past, this show is a striking reflection on memory, loss, and community identity.”

I agree: It’s more striking than celebratory.

Rick Shaefer at MoCA\CT, with one of his works. (Photo/Hanyue Wang)

It’s also an interesting exercise in opposing dialogues about toxic nostalgia.

According to Harvey, “nostalgia can be flattened and used to manipulate people.” The happy memories of a privileged few is harmful when propagandized to a larger society.

In Harvey’s “The Disappointed Tourist” exhibit, over 300 of her vintage postcard-like paintings are pieced together like a quilt. Each pays homage to someone’s favorite place that no longer exists.

These are not simply happy recollections. They are deliberate antidotes to toxic nostalgia.

Harvey believes that “nostalgia belongs to everyone,” and everyone deserves a special memory of their own.

While she embraces the positivity of nostalgia, Shaefer’s adjoining exhibit, “Colossi,” forces us to confront the toxic underbelly.

With political overtones, frenzied lines and sly wit, “Colossi” is thrilling in its scope and detail. The brutalist images mix cultures, temporalities, historic tropes and deities.

“The New Colossus” depicts a group of white older men (using likenesses of titans Walt Disney, Robert Moses and Albert Speer) consulting specs for an enormous wall amid a mass of construction equipment, airplanes, and swirling … angels?

Rick Shaefer’s “The New Colossus.”

MoCA\CT executive director Robin Jaffee Frank says, “So you’ve got to ask yourself: What’s the purpose of the wall? Who are we walling in? Who are we walling out?” It seems the answer to the latter is everybody but white men.

Alongside Shaefer’s canvas monuments to industry and power are massive drawings of refugees, seething with urgency and trepidation. These desperate and doomed figures will certainly be denied entrance to the titan’s wall. and the privileged narrative within.

Yes, it was fun locating Harvey’s Westport paintings: The Remarkable Book Shop, Cedar Brook Café, Bloodroot and Allen’s Clam House. I got a kick out of someone pointing out Shaefer’s own image in one of his works.

But I’m a fun seeker. And that’s not always the point.

Ellen Harvey’s “Remarkable Book Shop.” 

(Robin Moyer Chung covers culture for “06880.” If you enjoy her work — or anything else on this hyper-local blog — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Then & Now: #20

There is no shortage of demolished Westport homes — or their replacements.

In the 20th edition of this feature, photographer Dave Matlow takes us north out of town, on roads off Main Street and Easton Road, then nearly to Norwalk on Cranbury Road.

Three were single-story homes. One was a split level. Their replacements are taller and wider.

Off we go …

Warnock Drive, May 2014 …

… and July 2026.

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Cranbury Road, August 2020 …

… and July 2026.

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Fragrant Pines Court, April 2008 …

… and July 2026.

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Brooklawn Drive, January 2008 …

… and July 2026.

(“06880” regularly covers Westport real estate, history … and much more. If you enjoy features like this, please click here to support our work.)

Roundup: Power Outage Update, Levitt Pavilion, Verso University …

The good news: Eversource has restored power to more than 90,000 customers since Saturday night’s storms. Almost all the remaining 34,000 — about 2.6% of all Connecticut customers — will have electricity by Tuesday night, “most sooner” the utility says.

The bad news: The percentage out is higher in Westport.

And much higher in Weston.

As of 7:50 a.m. today, 627 Westport customers — 4.9% of the town — remain without power.

In Weston, it’s 1,262 customers: a whopping 32.1% overall.

Click here for Eversource’s interactive map.

Damage on Hazelnut Road, off North Avenue. (Photo/Tommy Greenwald)

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Woodstock came to Westport last night. And man, it was groovy.

Back to the Garden 1969 — a Woodstock tribute band — packed the Levitt Pavilion. Channeling every band from The Band, The Who and Jefferson Airplane to joe Cocker, Santana and Sly & the Family Stone, they had the crowd dancing and flashing peace signs.

Going down to Yasgur’s farm. (Photo/Susan Garment)

But the highlight was Michelle Pauker. The 2013 Staples High School graduate (and Staples Players star) joined the group 6 months ago. Her Grace Slick and Janis Joplin performances were every bit as good as those legends were, nearly 60 years ago.

And … it was her 31st birthday.

She celebrated it in style. With, of course, a little help from her (Westport) friends.

Michelle Pauker, singing Janis Joplin’s “Piece of My Heart.” (Photo/Miggs Burroughs)

As Sly & the Family Stone say: Dance to the music! (Photo/Susan Garment)

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Verso University — the Westport Library’s lifelong learning and education initiative — does not take the summer off.

Their July/August offerings range from vibe coding and songwriting to beer tasting. Here’s the full list:

Mah Jongg Open Play in the Library Café (July and August, Thursdays, 6:30 to 8 p.m.; $5).

Vibe Coding: Build a Website with AI (July 9, 16, 23 & 30, 6:30 to 8 pm; $40).

Fairfield University Art Museum Curator’s Tour (July 15, 1 to 2:30 p.m.; Quick Center for the Arts/Walsh Gallery & Ballarmine Hall Galleries; $5).

History of American Beer/Beer Tasting/America 250 (July 17, 3:30- to 5:30 p.m.; samples from Fox Farm Brewery included; $10).

Women Laughing Film Screening & Panel Discussion with Liza Donnelly & Roz Chast (July 20, 7 to 8:30 p.m.; $5)

Book Event: “A Daring Enterprise,” moderated by Daniel Gross (July 22, 7 to 8 p.m.; free)

GarageBand Music Lab for Tweens (Monday-Thursday, August 3, 4, 5 & 6, 10:30 am to 12:30 p.m.; $25). Need equipment? Email jconnon@westportlibrary.org.

Moss & Mingle Creative Workshop (August 5, 6 to 8 p.m.; all material provided, plus wine and light snacks; $15).

Songwriting: 3-Evening Intensive with Jack O’Neill  (Thursdays, August 6, 13, & 20, 6:30 to 8 p.m.; $25).

Mah Jongg Instruction (Beginner: Tuesdays, July 7, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.; July 14 & 21, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m; Advanced Beginner: Tuesdays, July 7, 2 to 5 p.m.; July 14 & 21, 2 to 4 p.m.; $125).

Writing Sprints (Online) (Tuesdays with Tessa Smith McGovern, 12 to 1:30 p.m; Wednesdays with Alexandra Soiseth, 6 to 7:30 p.m.; free).

Click here for details, and registration.

Beer here! Or at least, at the Westport Library …

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In its century of existence as Connecticut’s first state park, Sherwood Island has maintained much of its natural look.

Including — as shown in today’s “Westport … Naturally” image — its weeds.

(Photo/Wendy Levy)

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And finally … in honor of the Westport Library’s Verso University class “GarageBand Music Lab for Tweens” (story above), here are 3 of the best garage bands ever:

PS: “06880” connection: ? and the Mysterians played at the short-lived Nines Club discotheque. We know the former ice skating rink today as the Westport Tennis Club.

(Upcoming events, weather, music — “06880” has it all. We rely on support from readers like you. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you. Now keep on dancing!)

New Public Works Director No Stranger To Town

Today, Westport welcomes a new Public Works director.

Larry Roberts takes over from Pete Ratkiewich, the highly regarded, now-retired 35-year veteran of our town’s roads, transfer station and all other infrastructure.

It should be a seamless transfer. Roberts has over 3 decades’ experience, in facilities management, emergency communications and public safety. Most recently, he served as Weston’s director of public works

A Westport native, he knows this town well. He traces his current position — in a roundabout way — to how he learned to fly here.

At Staples High School.

Larry Roberts, Staples High School Class of 1985 …

Back in the day, Wilson Hopkins taught an Aeronautics course. Roberts earned his pilot’s license before graduating in 1985.

That led to Embry-Riddle University in Florida, where he majored in aeronautical science and minored in airframe mechanics. He knew how to fly planes — and how to fix them.

For 10 years, Roberts flew for Business Express Airlines. He married Sandra Pasarelli (Staples ’86), moved to Weston, and became a volunteer firefighter.

Realizing that “flying is not the best occupation for an expectant father,” Roberts pivoted to a new career: firefighting.

He was hired by Greenwich, and rose through the ranks to deputy chief. His background in mechanics helped him oversee construction of several new firehouses there.

After 20 years, he retired. Weston hired him, first as director of their communications center, then as head of public works and facility management.

Several major projects had been funded, but not begun. Over the past 5 years, Roberts’ department built 3 bridges; paved 27 miles of road; reconstructed Lyons Plain Road, and renovated a public water supply system.

When Ratkiewich announced his retirement, 1st Selectman Kevin Christie named him to the interview committee. There were several good candidates, Roberts says, but none panned out.

So Christie asked Roberts if he’d be interested in the job himself.

He met Christie and other department heads. “I was impressed with their professionalism,” Roberts recalls. “And they all seemed happy.”

He applied, and was interviewed — this time on the other side of the table. His tenure begins today.

… and Larry Roberts today.

His learning curve will not be steep. “I’m in Westport virtually every day,”” Roberts says. “I know the infrastructure, the people and the relationships. I read ‘06880.’

“I know the town well. Maybe not as well as Pete (Ratkiewich), but not many people do.”

Right now, the DPW is working on about 80 projects. They include the Ned Dimes Marina and nearby retaining wall at Compo Beach, the Sherwood Mill Pond tidal gates, Long Lots Elementary School, Parker Harding Plaza, and sidewalks.

Roberts will spend time learning about them, and about the department’s strengths and areas for improvement.

“”I’m not the type to come in and make big changes,” he says. “If something is needed, okay. If not, that’s also okay.”

Sidewalks and marinas are a far cry from the planes Larry Roberts first learned to fly at Staples.

But he’s ready to soar, in the town where it all began.

(“06880” covers Westport’s government, beaches, roads … and Staples High graduates. If you enjoy our 24/7/365 work, please make a tax-deductible contribution to clicking here. Thanks!)

 

Pic Of The Day #3364

Cedar Point Yacht Club sailors (Photo/Melissa Makris)

Lamont: Power Restoration May Take “Several Days”

Last night’s brief but intense storm caused numerous power outages.

They persist today.

At 4:30 this afternoon, there were still 809 customers — 6.3% of Eversource’s total — without power in Westport.

Weston fared worse. 498 customers remain out (12.6%).

Though Eversource has brought in crews from Canada, Governor Lamont says that full restoration in Connecticut might take “several days.”

His full remarks:

Last night’s severe storms left thousands of homes in the region without power, and while utility crews immediately began working on restoration, they believe that repairs in certain areas may take several days due to the scale of damage across the area.

The utilities have called down additional crews from Canada to help restore power in Connecticut as soon as possible, and our administration will do anything in our ability that can help expedite power restoration.

Additionally, the state’s emergency response team remains in contact with every affected town and stands ready to send additional support the moment a municipality requests it.

Connecticut has been through storms like this before, and we get through them by looking out for one another. Stay safe, and we’ll keep you updated.

Amid the cleanup, Tommy Greenwald sent a photo, from his driveway off North Avenue.

But, he noted — channeling Francis Scott Key — “our flag was still there.”

Here’s another downed limb, this one at Assumption Cemetery on Greens Farms Road:

(Photo/Carrie Kuhn)

The Westport Fire Department offers this advice for generator safety:

  • Always operate generators outdoors, never inside a home or garage.
  • Keep generators at least 20 feet from doors, windows and vents.
  • Never refuel a generator while it is running or still hot.
  • Install working carbon monoxide alarms in your home.

A few additional things residents can do, according to state officials:

  • If you rely on medically necessary equipment and lose power, or if you have an emergency, call 911.
  • Stay clear of any downed power lines. Always assume they are live and dangerous; report them to your utility right away.
  • For real-time updates on state road closures, visit org. Obey all signage when approaching road closures. The Connecticut Department of Transportation and municipalities are coordinating with utilities to clear roads of downed trees and power lines.
  • Check on elderly neighbors, family, and anyone who may need a hand.
  • For non-emergency help, contact your town’s local officials. You can also visit 211ct.org or call 211 for more information.
  • Sign up for emergency alerts at ct.gov/ctalert.
  • Keep monitoring weather alerts over the coming days, as additional rainfall could bring a risk of flash flooding. Never drive through a flooded road.

Hoop Dreams

For decades, the Compo Beach basketball courts have attracted players of all ages and abilities.

Fathers teaching their daughters to shoot. High school varsity athletes and wannabes. Guys whose glory days are in the rear view mirror.

The other day, this crew — Cornelius, Srihan, Amir, Jacob and the rest — took over one of the courts. In their late teens and 20s, they organize games via group chats. Ben Meyer snapped some of the action.

They’re not the Knicks. But they’re not half bad at all.

And — here’s the most important thing — they have a ball.

(Photos/Ben Meyer)

 

Photo Challenge #601

There are only a few pay phones left in Westport.

But there are enough so that not everyone dialed in correctly with last week’s Photo Challenge answer.

The image showed the relic behind the bar at Romanacci’s train station restaurant. (Click here to see.)

Dave Eason, Rachel Sara Halperin, John McKinney, Michael Calise and Andrew Colabella all nailed it. Incorrect responses included Sherwood Diner and Dunville’s.

This week’s Photo Challenge shows — obviously — the Jeff Shoup Walk. But where is it?

  (Photo/Bob Mitchell)

If you know, click “Comments” below.

(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Roundup: Power Outages, Staples News, American Flags …

Last night’s brief but powerful storms brought down tree limbs — and power lines — all over Westport and Weston.

And across the state.

Dramatic lightning at Compo Beach. (Photo/Meredith Holod)

At 7:30 this morning, Eversource reported 778 Westport customers — 11.6% of the town’s total — without service.

Another 455 Weston customers (6.1%) lacked power.

The map did not offer restoration times for most outages.

Statewide, the total number of customers without electricity was 71,965 (5.5%).

Last night, “06880” reader Tracy Porosoff sent this report: “We were at the Levitt Pavilion, and saw the lightning from Norwalk before it got to us and closed down the concert.

“Roads were full of branches and debris. Seems like it’s going to be a messy storm.”

She sent this photo too, of a non-functioning traffic light at the Compo Road South/Greens Farms Road/Bridge Street intersection:

(Photo/Tracy Porosoff)

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The Staples High School Class of 1961 was the first to spend 3 years at the then-sparkling new North Avenue campus.

More than 6 decades later, they’re still trailblazers.

For their 65th reunion, Peter Kelman organized a unique virtual event. In late June, nearly 50 alums gathered via Zoom.

For over 2 hours, they shared stories, memories, insights and more.

To keep things from going off the rails, Peter instituted some simple rules. There was a 2-minute time limit for each speaker (he suggested timing them beforehand), and 6 specific topics:

  • Pre-school and elementary School years
  • Junior high years
  • High School years
  • Post-high School lives
  • Remembrance classmates who died
  • Current lives as octogenarians.

There was even tech help available, for men and women whose Staples days included slide rules and blue book essays, not computers and AI.

For security reasons, the video is unlisted. “06880” readers can view it by emailing Peter (phkelman@gmail.com), with details on why you’re interested.

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Westporters of a certain age remember Linda Blair.

She was a 14-year-old Staples student in 1973 — and had been working as a model and actress for years — when she was chosen from 600 others for the role of Regan in “The Exorcist.”

She earned a Golden Globe Award, was nominated for an Oscar — and received death threats for her “blasphemy.”

What’s she up to now?

For one thing, she’s old enough for AARP. (As are, to their surprise, many other people.)

The June/July issue of AARP magazine has a short update.

At 67, she has survived pneumonia and sepsis. She’s devoted her adult life to the rescue, rehabilitation and “rehoming” of dogs.

She runs the Linda Blair WorldHeart Foundation from Acton, California.

Fun fact: When she made “The Exorcist,” she was too young to watch it in a theater.

Read the full story below. (Hat tip: Douglass Davidoff)

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Several readers have expressed disappointment at the lack of patriotic decorations on Westport homes. Even with a house décor contest underway, flags and bunting is hard to find.

One place to see it: Compo Hill.

Rick and Totney Benson are flying the colors at the exact site where, 249 years ago, colonists and the British battled in one of our town’s most historic events.

The view coming up Compo Hill …

… and at the top, on Buena Vista Drive. Rick participated in the OpSail tall ships event 50 years ago, during America’s bicentennial. (Photos/Rick Benson)

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The 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence — written, of course, with a quill pen — is a great connection to today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo.

Jerry Kuyper collects these feathers on his Rayfield Road property. As the image shows, that’s a self-evident truth.

(Photo/Jerry Kuyper)

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And finally … on this date in 1852, Frederick Douglass delivered his “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” speech at a meeting organized by the Rochester Ladies’ Anti-Slavery Society in Rochester, New York.

(The Independence Day holiday continues. So does our “06880” blog. We’re here 24/7/365, because that’s what hyper-local blogs do. If you like our work, please click here to support us. Thank you!)

On Our 250th Birthday, Saluting America’s Greatest Invention

As America celebrates its 250th anniversary, every media outlet has tried to find a different angle.

The Wall Street Journal came up with our nation’s “most valuable inventions.”

They noted many: the light bulb. The internet. The telephone. The iPhone. Airplanes. Refrigerators. Costco. The microchip. Chocolate-chip cookies.

But the greatest — at least, according to writer Ben Cohen — is the white line on the right side of the road.

He explains:

In the 1950s, around the time Jonas Salk cracked the polio vaccine, a metallurgist named John V. N. Dorr became the champion of a different lifesaver: a white line on the right side of the road.

For years, Dorr told anyone who would listen — and everyone who wouldn’t — about his simple way of making highways safer. A line on the side of the road, he argued, would give drivers somewhere to aim their eyes at night other than oncoming headlights. It was both cheap and incredibly effective, which made it a brilliant investment. Over time, his revolutionary stripe of paint would reach billions of people and guide drivers across the planet.

To this day, you depend on it without knowing anything about it.

John V.N. Dorr (Photo courtesy of Wall Street Journal, from the Dorr Foundation)

Of course, “06880” is “where Westport meets the world.” The WSJ story — and this one — include a very important local connection.

Dorr — whose eponymous company was based in Westport, though the story does not mention it — realized that drivers naturally hugged the center line. That led to frequent collisions, especially at night and in poor weather.

And if they couldn’t stick to the center, they swerved to the side. But they didn’t know where the shoulder was.

Dorr’s proposal: paint a line on the right side of the road.

This simple white line — shown here on Compo Road South 3 days ago — was devised in 1952 in Westport.

In 1952, he proposed his idea to Connecticut’s highway commissioner. “The man in charge of Connecticut’s roads told him to get lost,” reports the Journal.

Now comes our moment in the national spotlight. (Hat tips to “06880” readers Jonathan Rosenoer, David Smith, Joseph Scordato, Eileen Lavigne. Michelle Sagalyn, Linda Stern, and Craig and Brooke Mogan, all of whom sent a link to the WSJ story.)

The next time he suggested it, he wrote to the Westport Town Crier newspaper in 1953 and offered to pay for “a demonstration test of a few miles.”

This time, he got a more welcoming response.

“Dr. Dorr’s suggestion,” the paper wrote in an editorial, “is a dandy.”

Before long, Connecticut was testing his dandy idea on a few miles of the Merritt Parkway between Greenwich and Stamford. The study found that Dorr’s line nudged cars away from the center line, into the middle of their lanes, and narrowed the speed gap between day and night. In other words, the study found scientific evidence that a single line could dramatically alter human behavior.

John Dorr’s amazing creation, on the first road it was tested: the Merritt Parkway. (Photo courtesy of Wall Street Journal)

Dorr — by then in his 80s — began pitching his idea relentlessly: to the highway commissioners of all 48 states, engineering publications, governors, a Broadway star, even former president Herbert Hoover.

It worked.

“In less than a decade,” the Wall Street Journal says, “Dorr’s line was so popular that people wondered how they ever lived without it.”

But wait! There’s more!

The WSJ does not mention it, but John V.N. Dorr is not Westport’s only contributor to road safety.

Years before, our town was home to William Phelps Eno. Known as “The Father of Traffic Safety,” he devised the stop sign, pedestrian crosswalk, traffic circle, 1-way street, taxi stand and pedestrian safety island. He designed traffic plans for New York, Paris and London.

He did it all in Westport, in a handsome Saugatuck Avenue building near the Norwalk town line.

And — you can’t make this up — Eno did it all despite never learning to drive. (Click here for his fascinating Wikipedia page.)

So there you have it: Westport’s place, as home of America’s most important invention(s) of the past 250 years.( Click here to read the full Wall Street Journal story.)

And then — because this is Westport, and our drivers often disregard traffic lights, stop signs and everything else, including white lines — drive safely!

(“06880” is indeed “Where Westport meets the world.” If you enjoy stories like this — or anything else on our hyper-local blog — please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

William Phelps Eno was honored with a plaque at the old Westport YMCA.