Holy Trinity 1 A Movie and a Coke , the subject of my August 31 post, was the first of three 24 x 18 watercolor paintings I did as a commission from Nick Vouras. The original Kozy Korner restaurant was an obvious choice for this painting. The subject for the second painting was equally obvious. Nick had long been active at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church on Wilmington's N Broom St. Since Nick had chaired the annual Greek Festival there several times, I chose to depict the church with festival dancers circling around the church. At the time I did this painting the church's dome was in an incomplete stage of repair, covered with a black rubber membrane and its future was not then settled. I presented the dome ambiguously, subject to the viewer's interpretation. Holy Trinity was built in the late 1940s on the site of the former Coleman DuPont residence at 808 N Broom St At the time Mary was living on W 8th St with a backyard ...
Greek Festival Week This week is the annual Greek Festival at Wilmington's Holy Trinity Church. I've painted the church twice, each one commissioned by a Holy Trinity parishioner. A line of Greek dancers at the festival were elements of both paintings. A detail from the first painting, a watercolor on paper... And a detail from the second painting, acrylic on canvas, now with ancient Greek dancers meeting the modern folk dancers... Here's the second painting in its entirety... Opa! Opa!
Delaware Ave and Washington St A Changing Scene In our last post, you saw the intersection of Delaware Ave and Washington St as it looked in the 1950s. The Atlantic gas station dates to the 1920s. The classical Greek style "pavilion," the original facility, was probably designed by the architect Joseph F Kunz, who did many service station designs for Atlantic Refining Co., many in this classical style, as told in a blog no longer available on-line. The utilitarian vitreous enameled panel structure was a later addition. In my memory, in the 1950s the Greek pavilion housed the restrooms. When the gas station was razed in 1964, the Greek pavilion was acquired by Chick Laird, a well-known local philanthropist, and donated to Tatnall School on Barley Mill Road, near the now-residence of President Joe Biden. It was repurposed as an open air structure and still stands on the grounds of the Tatnall School campus. The intersection has even more recently been rebuilt and...
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