Tag Archives: Camille Eskell

Westport Teachers Take Over Times Square

Over the course of a career, one teacher can impact thousands of lives.

If a teacher is lucky, years later a few former students may thank him or her for that positive influence.

If that teacher is really lucky, one of those former students may work for McGraw Hill. And choose that teacher’s name for an enormous Times Square “thank you” billboard, where millions of people can see it.

Carson Einarsen is part of the team that conceived and executed the project. And thanks to him, several Staples High School educators are really, really lucky.

Carson Einarsen (foreground), and the McGraw Hill billboard …

To fill out some empty space, Carson — a 2012 SHS graduate — added the names of 6 Westport educators who played a role in getting him where he is today.

Where he is — after studying film and TV at Savannah College of Art & Design — is part of Glass & Marker, a creative video agency.

They specialize in companies going public, replacing tired old road shows with compelling videos.

For a newly public firm, the New York Stock Exchange offers space online, in the Wall Street building — and on 2 ginormous Times Square screens.

When McGraw Hill hired the firm, they wanted something more than just graphics and visuals on those screens.

Carson’s team had a brainstorm. McGraw Hill provides educational content, software, and services for students and educators. What if — instead of touting the company itself — they used that space to thank teachers?

And what better way to say “thanks” than by using actual, real names?

… and Carson’s close-up.

Top executives loved the idea. They asked everyone in the firm to submit 1 or 2 teachers to thank.

The result — besides being the most commented-on internal post in McGraw Hill’s history — was 874 names.

Carson and his colleagues designed the graphics, and organized the columns. When space became available at the end, he was ready with his own Westport list.

Carson chose:

  • Bill Derry, Greens Farms Elementary School library media coordinator
  • John Dodig, Staples High principal
  • Camille Eskell, Staples High art teacher
  • Anne Pfeiffer, Carson’s sister Mari’s Greens Farms Elementary teacher
  • Kerstin Warner Rao, Bedford Middle School workshop teacher
  • Christine Richardson, Staples High English teacher.

But wait! There’s more!

Andrew Fishman added a name. Maggie Gomez — hia Staples math teacher — is honored at Times Square too.

5 educators’ names are on the left column.

One of the billboards ran for half an hour last week.

The other runs once an hour. It debuted last week, and will rotate through over the next few week.

Both are on the north side of Times Square — near the bleachers — near 7th Avenue and 47th Street.

“Some companies going public celebrate a financial goal, or reaching a milestone,” Carson notes.

“McGraw Hill is an educational company. For them, celebrating others worked well. It distilled the core of what they do: making teachers’ lives better, so they can better serve students.”

At the same time, the billboards show the public that the company is about more than textbooks. They’ve moved into digital technology in education.

But the heart of education remains teachers.

Each of McGraw Hill’s hundreds of employees had at least one who made a difference. Even the CEO contributed a name.

But only Carson Einarsen included 6 of Westport’s best.

(Congratulations to all our teachers. But why limit this to Times Square? If an educator has impacted your life — in Westport or elsewhere — click “Comments” below. Let’s add many more to the list!)

(“06880” often highlights Westport education — and our graduates’ accomplishments. If you like stories like these, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: De Tapas, Warming Centers, Trash Pickup …

De Tapas is closing.

The Spanish gastrobar on the Post Road next to Design Within Reach will serve its last meal on Sunday, January 28.

Owner Carlos Pia opened right after COVID, 2 winters ago. The restaurant was a leap of faith, after a career in corporate America. Click here for his compelling back story.

Then go say goodbye, and thank him for enhancing our dining scene.

Carlos Pia in his handsomely decorated De Tapas.

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Governor Lamont has activated Connecticut’s severe cold weather protocol. It remains in effect through noon on Monday. 

These Westport locations are open to the public as warming centers:

Senior Center: (weekdays, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.).

Westport Library: (Thursday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Friday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sunday, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.).

Westport Museum for History and Culture: (Thursday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.).

Westport/Weston Family Y: (weekdays, 5:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.; weekends, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.).

Westport residents facing hardships due to the cold weather should contact Human Services for assistance: 203-341-1050 weekdays, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

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Just in time for the new year: Westport’s trash pickups begin again.

Representative Town Meeting member Andrew Colabella has organized the first 2024 session for Winslow Park. It’s this Sunday (January 21, 11 a.m.).

Volunteers will pick up garbage, and remove hazards from the walking paths. All are welcome. Dress warmly and appropriately!

A little snow should not deter Sunday’s trash pickup at Winslow Park.

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Westport Police made 3 custodial arrests between January 10 and 17.

A woman was arrested for larceny and identity theft, after a complaint that 9 checks had been stolen and fraudulently deposited into a bank account.

A man was arrested for identity theft and forgery, plus criminal attempts to commit larceny, identity theft and forgery, after a check for $249.65 was stolen, altered and deposited in the amount of $17,262.37.

A man was arrested for violation of a protective order and assault on an elderly victim, following a domestic disturbance.

Westport Police also issued these citations:

  • Traveling unreasonably fast: 11 citations
  • Failure to obey traffic control signals: 6
  • Speeding: 3
  • Operating an unregistered motor vehicle: 3
  • Operating a motor vehicle without minimum insurance: 3
  • Failure to obey stop sign: 2
  • Criminal trespass: 1
  • Following too closely: 1
  • Operating a motor vehicle under suspension: 1.

Slow down!

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For over a month last fall, an exhibition by 2 Westport artists enthralled visitors to the United Nations lobby.

Miggs Burroughs’ “Signs of Compassion” — 30 lenticular photos, showing local residents using sign language to recite Emily Dickinson’s poem of the same name, and Mark Yurkiw’s accompanying Braille “prayer wheel” mantra, based on those he saw in Bhutan (including a wheelchair-accessible element) — were displayed on a 102-foot curved wall.

On Tuesday, the two men described their accomplishment — the first-ever UN exhibit not sponsored by a member nation — at the Westport Rotary Club’s weekly lunch.

Their next project: sending the exhibit to venues around the world.

Mark Yurkiw and Miggs Burroughs, at the Rotary Club meeting. (Photo/Dave Matlow)

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Speaking of art: Longtime Staples High School teacher and mixed media artist Camille Eskell is featured in a new exhibit — (Re) Work it!: Women Artists on Women’s Labor,” at the Mattatuck Museum in Waterbury.

The show explores the many types of labor that women are often expected to manage – caring for their family, participating in the labor force, negotiating beauty standards, handling emotional labor and more.

A reception for the 30 artists is set for January 21 (11 a.m. to 4 p.m.). The show runs through May 19. For more information, click here. To learn more about Eskell, click here.

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Save the date: This year’s Dream Event, benefiting A Better Chance of Westport, is April 27 (6 p.m., Westport Library).

It’s one of the best fundraisers of the year — and features inspiring speeches from some amazing young scholars.

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Four of the 6 new members of the Westport Country Playhouse board of trustees are from Westport or Weston

Dave Altman is a principal for Bernstein Private Wealth Management.

Ben Frimmer is a theater arts educator with over 30 years’ experience, and the director of Coleytown Company. He produced the  Playhouse fundraiser “An Evening with Justin Paul & Friends with Kelli O’Hara & James Naughton,” and will produce and direct “Voices for Volunteers of Fairfield County” on January 24.

Anne Keefe has served the Playhouse in many capacities since 1973, including associate and co-artistic director with Joanne Woodward. She initiated and curated the Script In Hand series. Formerly she stage managed at Long Wharf Theatre, McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey, and on Broadway, and served previously on the Playhouse board.

Jonathan Levy is a Westport native, and an attorney who built a venture capital business.

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Speaking of the Playhouse: Nearly everyone knows the name Vince Lombardi. The Super Bowl trophy is named for the legendary football coach.

Now you can learn the story behind that name.

The Broadway play — based on the book “When Pride Still Mattered,” by David Maraniss — kicks off the Westport Country Playhouse’s Script in Hand series on February 5 (7 p.m.).

Click here for more information, and to purchase tickets ($30).

Vince Lombardi

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Diana Blau lives in Westport with her husband, daughter Charlotte, son Eli and dog Jettie.

All are characters in her new children’s book.

“Beary & Tinker: Young at Heart” stars her and her husband’s childhood teddy bears.

“It’s a story about the desire to experience joy at any age,” Blau says.

Click here for more information, and to buy.

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Following up on October’s Westport Library presentation on helping families and communities prepare for emergencies, Voices Center for Resilience offers a free webinar.

“The Ripple Effect of Trauma” (January 23, 7 p.m.) explores how children experience tragedy, including building resilience.

Click here for more details, and registration.

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In a scene reminiscent of Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds,” here is today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature.

Call it “The Gulls.”

(Photo/Jim Hood)

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And finally, A.A. Milne was born today in 1882. The English author — best known for “Winnie-the-Pooh” died — in 1956.

(We’ve got the arts — and the cops — covered. If you enjoy “06880,” please consider a contribution. Just click here. Thank you!)

Harry Moritz’s Humachanical Complex

Harry Moritz spent an entire night constructing a banana-based work of art. His aim was to show the relationship between human consumption, decay, and the seldom-seen world of transportation and mechanics behind it. The piece lasted a day, before the artist dismantled it.

Most of Moritz’s work is more permanent. Using a 1940s-era lathe, plus screws, gears and bushings he creates and his own imagination, the 2010 Staples graduate is forging an identity as a sculptor.

Harry Moritz's lathe.

Harry Moritz’s lathe.

It’s a path few classmates would follow.

A painter during his high school years — inspired by teachers like Camille Eskell, Jonathan Nast and Angela Simpson — Moritz took a gap year after graduation, to travel and work.

As a Pratt Institute sophomore, he walked into a metal shop. Suddenly, he had a new home.

Harry Moritz calls this piece "Pallet Precarity."

Harry Moritz calls this piece “Pallet Precarity.”

“As a sculptor, your art supply store is Home Depot,” he says, describing his fascination with big machines that make precise things. He still draws every night. But much of his day is spent creating sculptures in which all the parts move and mesh.

Moritz calls his work “humachanical.” He examines the infrastructure that supports manufacturing and transportation, which enables society to efficiently produce and transport the objects we need.

Harry Moritz's banana art. It stayed up for just 24 hours.

Harry Moritz’s banana art. It stayed up for just 24 hours.

Moritz says he explores those processes, and their effect on the human condition. “Machines would have no purpose without humans,” he notes.

He learned a lot at Pratt. But he furthered his education at Housatonic Community College’s advanced manufacturing program. Moritz learned how to operate machines, along with math and blueprint reading.

He just landed a job with a New York lighting design and manufacturing company. That will help pay the bills, as he works in his studio building big, artistic contraptions.

Harry Moritz, in his Stamford studio.

Harry Moritz, in his Stamford studio.

Moritz is particularly proud of his lathe. He found it in Massachusetts, through Craigslist.

“It’s the machine that creates other machines,” he explains. “I’m always thinking of how to be creative with it.” Sculpture, Moritz says, “is not just about wood carving. It’s also fabrication and welding.”

(Click below for a video Harry made — that’s him, in a story about lathes.)

Why does he take this tough path?

“I need to express my imagination. I feel I have something to bring to the world.” he says. “I’m not concerned about making money with it. I know I’m lucky. I don’t have to pay rent for my studio.” (He uses his grandmother’s garage, in Stamford.) “I have a job. I’m not starving.”

Like most artists, he would like his work to be in shows and galleries. But he also sets up on the sides of highways and rivers (and, once, in Westport’s Stop & Shop parking lot.) He plans to push his “Downward Spiral” around Wall Street.

Harry Moritz admits he himself is a work in progress. He loves to travel, and though he currently lives and works in Westport, Stamford and New York, he has no idea where he — and his art — will end up.

“Right now though,” he says, “I’m where I need to be.”

(For more information, visit www.harrymoritz.com or email harrymoritz@hotmail.com).