Friday, October 15, 2010
Where Edward Hopper met the subway busker
On my way back from some field research on the North Shore's Sucker River this week, I stopped for lunch at the McQuade Harbor off Scenic Old Highway 61. If you appreciate the power of engineering to solve almost any problem, this is a great stop. Planners pulled out all the stops to 1) make the water deep enough for boats with underwater dynamite, 2) hold off the storm waves of Lake Superior with massive breakwalls, and 3) ensure no pedestrian gets run over on sleepy 61 by installing a tunnel under the highway. What had been basically just eroding shoreline has turned into a full safe harbor and recreation destination.
It is also a great stop for artists.
First, who knew that Edward Hopper based his famous painting "Rooms by the Sea" on this North Shore tunnel?
Second, the acoustics in the tunnel are fantastic. Sounds echo and fade out for at least a full second, like in a cavernous subway station. I could totally imagine a saxophone player or violinist playing, the tunnel resonating their music and projecting it out onto Lake Superior.
So grab your brush and canvas, pack up the cello or the flute, and head to McQuade for fun and inspiration. And keep your eyes and ears out for the NEW tunnel at the Split Rock River Wayside.
Labels:
Family Fun,
Lake Superior
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4 comments:
Another good one, Andrew. And who knew that you were up on Hopper!?
I only really knew this painting because someone sent me a card once with the image, and his note talked about how peaceful the image was and how it reminded him of Virginia Woolf. Now Hopper and Woolf and McQuade are all linked in my correlative mind.
Great tip! We are heading up in the last week of November. I think this will be our place to stop for lunch. We've driven by several times but have never stopped. I'm so glad you wrote about it.
Enjoy, Manisha! Pack an extra jacket or two for your lunch break!
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