Art, Life and Memories – Madonna and Child by Campbell Neil


Madonna and Child – Crayon on Paper – Campbell Neil – 1965

I’ve probably studied this piece of art more than any other. I was about seven when my parents acquired and placed it in the living room of the home I grew up in. The artist, Campbell Neil, was a family friend and my father’s insurance agent. He had crafted this wonderful modern Madonna and Child using crayons and paper and this was a true wonder to me at the time. After all I had crayons, the stubs of which I carefully kept in an old Maxwell House coffee can, and this moving work of art had been made using crayons just like mine.

So I spent hours upon hours gazing at this art. I often did so with that old coffee can in front of me carefully trying to replicate just some of the beauty contained in this piece. While I didn’t, except on one or two occasions, try to replicate the subject matter I did try my hand blending the colors and began moving away from the technique used by most seven year old children of making a bold outline and then carefully coloring it in.

Looking back now this may have been the first artwork I ever fully appreciated and learned from. The depth and feeling Mr. Neil obtained using his economic lines and subtle shading had a lasting impression on me.

Campbell Neil was a kind and gentle man and these traits come across in his work. I remember when my father died in 1979 Mr. Neil was one of the first people to come to the house. He came not as my dad’s insurance agent, although he was, but he came as friend. His calmness was a welcome relief from the chaos my family was experiencing having just lost our father quite suddenly at the age of 52. We knew he shared our feeling of loss and his presence was a comfort just as the artwork he had so carefully crafted and which was hanging in the living room always had been for me.

Mr. Neil himself passed away a number of years ago but I thought of him last week as I once again studied this amazing work of art. It still hangs in my mother’s living room. It’s now a different house than the one I grew up in and in a different state but having the Madonna and Child hanging there certainly helped make it feel like home.

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Mid-Century Artifact – Paradise Restaurant – Screven County, Georgia


Paradise Restaurant – C. Hamsher – 2008

While on a jaunt to visit family in Georgia last week I hit the brakes while cruising through the pecan groves on Rt. 301 in Screven County to behold this mid-century marvel. Sadly standing abandoned this wonderful retro sign and decaying building are artifacts of times past. I’d of given anything to go inside for a burger and shake.

Upon returning home I tried to track down some information on this restaurant and located a postcard which, low and behold, shows what must have been the Paradise’s original sign which must have been there in the 1950’s when the restaurant first opened.


Paradise Restaurant Postcard- circa 1960

While I love to come across places like this in my travels it also saddens me that these architectural and historic structures are going to be lost completely if they are not maintained and preserved.  As the interstate highways  took over and chains prospered at each exit the local flavor of many areas of the country has been lost. Establishments like the Paradise Restaurant flourished in the days when families packed into their car and traveled two-lane roads like Rt. 301.

I, for one, miss that time.

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The Milton Flea Market Fire – Map of Destruction

The fire today which devastated the Milton Flea Market destroyed the primary buildings which housed many of the best dealers. The two structures left standing were the covered (roofed) areas which was home to many of the more transient and part-time sellers. It remains unclear how much smoke, heat and water damage these structures and their contents sustained.

The arial view above outlines the areas impacted and spared by the flames.

The loss of this venue for collectors will be felt but not nearly as much as the loss of income realized by the dealers. For many this was a primary source of income and was what made it possible to make ends meet for others.

I hope it will be possible for the flea market to rise from the ashes and be rebuilt very soon. The community of Milton needs it – and so do collectors like me.

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RIP Milton Flea Market

The Herald Dispatch in Huntington is reporting the total destruction of the flea market in Milton, WV.

I’ve spent many a day hunting for treasures in Milton and was last there a couple of weeks ago. Many of the dealers had been selling there for years and sadly, for a number of them, it was their primary income. Insurance is generally unheard of by flea market dealers and the loss will have a ripple effect through the local economy.

It appears as though nobody was in the flea market and there have been no injuries reported.

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The Mystery Hole


The Mystery Hole 1 – C. Hamsher – 2008

A visit to  The Mystery Hole has long been an annual pilgrimage for me and my family. One of the most unique and kitschy travel destinations in West Virginia, located on Route 60 one mile East of Hawks Nest State Park, it never fails to intrigue and “mystify” upon each return visit.

Roadside tourist spots used to be common fare along highways and byways throughout the country and were at their peak in the 1950’s and saw their demise as the interstate highway system took shape in the 1960’s. While nothing compares to The Mystery Hole it is part of a dying genre.

I will not attempt to describe what happens inside The Mystery Hole. If you have been there it is an experience you have not forgotten and if you have not it is impossible to fully and adequately describe.

Suffice it to say The Mystery Hole is a spot you should not miss an opportunity to visit. 


The Mystery Hole 2 – C. Hamsher – 2008


The Mystery Hole 3 – C. Hamsher – 2008


The Mystery Hole 4 – C. Hamsher – 2008


The Mystery Hole 5 – C. Hamsher – 2008


The Mystery Hole 6 – C. Hamsher – 2008

These shots were taken on a recent trip down the Midland Trail. I’ve always felt The Mystery Hole demonstrates better than any other place I have been that the purpose of fun is to have it!

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Kanawha Falls & Gauley Bridge


Kanawha Falls – C. Hamsher – 2008


Kanawha Falls Post Office – C. Hamsher – 2008


Bus House on a Rock – C. Hamsher – 2008

A few shots from a weekend trip down the Midland Trail on Route 60 at Gauley Bridge.

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The Decisive Moment


Alberto Giacometti in Studio – Henri Cartier-Bresson – circa 1952

Today marks the 100th Anniversary of the birth of photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson. I first became familiar with the work of Cartier-Bresson through some of his subjects – Picasso, Matisse, Renoir, Calder, Giacometti and Duchamp.

In 1952, Cartier-Bresson authored Images à la sauvette, whose English edition was titled The Decisive Moment. In it, he discussed the philosophy of his art by building on a concept articulated by Cardinal de Retz, “There is nothing in this world that does not have a decisive moment”

In a 1957 Washington Post interview Cartier-Bresson discussed this concept by saying:

“Photography is not like painting. There is a creative fraction of a second when you are taking a picture. Your eye must see a composition or an expression that life itself offers you, and you must know with intuition when to click the camera. That is the moment the photographer is creative. Oop! The Moment! Once you miss it, it is gone forever.”

Oop! The Moment! Once you miss it, it is gone forever.

Words as true in life as they are in art as we each face our own “decisive moments.”

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Andy Warhol’s 80th Birthday


Banana – Andy Warhol – 1966

While reflecting on the work and life of Andy Warhol, who was born 80 years ago today, I got to thinking about Pop Art in general.

My first exposure to Pop Art was just before I turned 6 years old in 1964. My father was given a “gag gift” for his birthday of a plastic banana taped to piece of cardboard which had been framed. I remember he opened the gift and looked at it with a puzzled look on his face until the gift-giver told him it was a work of “pop art” and surely would be worth a fortune someday. The adults at the party all broke into laughter.

The “art” was promptly hung on the den wall where it stayed for a few years.

I loved that piece. I was as intrigued as a six year old could be as to what “pop art” was and what a banana on a piece of cardboard had to do with it. I even made a few of my own, browbeating my mother into buying me some plastic fruit at the old Bazaar Department Store in Huntington so could I make some similar works with plastic apples and even one with grapes.

While that being Pop Art (or even art) or not may be arguable. But what I was creating was certainly art to me at the time and I have never forgotten it.

It was a good number of years later before I ever heard of anyone named Andy Warhol. In fact, he painted his first banana in 1966. I am not sure my father and his friend had even heard of Warhol yet when the plastic banana art was created. I do remember being completely exstatic seeing my first Warhol banana. It immediately took me back to that old plastic banana taped to the cardboard from years before.

I guess it was Pop Art.

Anyway, that is where thinking about Andy Warhol’s birthday took me today. I wish Andy were still around – I’d send him a plastic banana.

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The Purple Moon’s New Website is Now Up!


Screenshot of thepurplemoon.com’s brand-spanking new website

After a few months of planning, being interrupted by little things like moving the whole damn shop, hundreds of  photographs and more than a little procrastination the new website for The Purple Moon is up and running as of today!

There are still some functions I hope to add and this still has only a portion of our inventory. All in all though it certainly is a better representation of our shop as it is now and I’m much happier with the design. The is more to come but the biggest part of the work is now behind me and the website is now live!

Stop by and take a peek.

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Getting Caught Up…

The past few months seem like a roller coaster ride – ups, downs but mainly just whipping by faster than can even be imagined.

The new shop and gallery is open and we’ve worked the kinks out at the new location. The modern lady and I have been off on some buying expeditions and there has been Festivall and ArtWalks (with another one right around the corner!) and then there is my “real” job!  Seems as though I am always trying to squeeze 36 hours out of every 24 hour day.

The upshot of all of this has been my neglecting the blog. I hope to begin remedying this situation with a few “catch-up” posts of some really cool recent finds and, hopefully, with all the major projects complete can get back to some kind of routine.

Thank you for your patience.

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