Sunday, April 30, 2017

infinity and beyond


since moving to new york i have really enjoyed making semi-annual weekend trips to washington DC. it is always so much fun to visit my friend emily there and to experience the art and culture and (most of all) food of another city. i love DC and hope to never stop making these frequent visits.

it's our tradition to eat brunch and beignets at founding farmers, which is so delicious every time. emily and i kicked off our saturday there and then headed to the hirshhorn museum, where we had tickets for the yayoi kusama retrospective. you have probably seen photos of kusama's infinity mirror rooms on instagram. i looooove kusama. if you're unfamiliar, here is her fascinating wikipedia page. she is an 88-year-old japanese artist with an incredibly varied and impressive almost-70-year career. her early work in the abstract expressionist, pop art, and performance art movements was very influential to artists including andy warhol and yoko ono. her more contemporary work uses color and pattern in sculpture and installation pieces that are very joyful, whimsical, and even psychedelic. she has become very well-known for her infinity mirrored rooms that are beautiful and transcendent to experience in person.

yayoi kusama: infinity mirrors is a retrospective of her work and includes six of these infinity rooms. it was probably the most fun art exhibition i have ever attended. i couldn't stop smiling the entire time. i studied kusama in my modern art and feminist art classes at BYU and had wanted to see her work in person for years, so i really savored the experience. you only get about 30 seconds inside the mirror rooms, but stepping inside is unlike anything i've ever experienced. it was such a treat to be there. i love that kusama frequently uses pumpkins as a motif in her works (the pumpkin room is called "all the eternal love i have for the pumpkins" and all the titles of her artworks are really endearing). the use of pumpkins was inspired by her family's farming heritage and i love that because i have a family heritage of pumpkin farming. so cute. the last room of the exhibit is called the "obliteration room" and when you enter you are given a sheet of dot stickers that you can place anywhere you like. the room and its furnishings started out completely white and become obliterated by dots and color. i loved it. if you have a chance to go before the exhibit ends mid-may, do it!

after the hirshhorn, we went to see beauty & the beast at the charming uptown theater. for dinner we ate at medium rare, which is a prix fixe steak and frites restaurant we'd both wanted to try for a while. oh em gee, it was amazing. any place where you eat your giant plate of steak and french fries and they come fill it up with more steak and fries? OKAY BY ME. on sunday, we went to church and then i met up with my new friend melissa for tacos at district taco. that place is so tasty and and it was really fun to make an internet friend a real-life friend. as always, the weekend went by way too fast, but it was pretty much perfect. thanks for the memories, DC! i'm a big fan.

Thursday, February 23, 2017

para- para- paradise


*please note maddie cutting pineapple the fancy way we learned at the dole plantation

i am impressed if you scrolled through all those photos and even more so if you actually read any/all of this post. i haven't written on this blog in over a year, but have been wanting to do a better job at documenting my life lately, so i'm back at it. i spent last week in hawaii vacationing and visiting my friend maddie who moved there recently from NYC, where we were roommates. i have always wanted to visit hawaii and was so sad when maddie left the city, so we decided a trip was in order. maddie lives on oahu, in laie right next to BYU hawaii and the LDS temple. i want to get sappy for a second and say how grateful i am that we are friends and that she let me visit her. she is so thoughtful and fun and was the very best hostess/tour guide/navigator/adventure buddy all week. maddie is a total go-getter; in new york we always packed our days full of as many cool destinations and activities as possible, and i love that we did the same thing in hawaii. we fit a lot into one week! here is everything that we did:

DAY ONE
arrived in honolulu in the evening
picked up my rental car and drove to laie
dinner at seven brothers at the mill

DAY TWO
bikini beach
laie point
kawela bay (the water here was so beautiful and perfect for swimming, also this is where the cool banyan tree from lost and some pirates of the caribbean sequel is)
lunch at wailua bakery in haleiwa
sunset pillbox hike
watched the sunset at backyards beach
dinner at elephant truck (my favorite meal of the trip! the pad thai and panang curry were incredible)

DAY THREE
breakfast at hukilau cafe (it inspired the diner in 50 first dates, also has great pancakes)
rode the pineapple express and ate dole whips at the dole plantation (dole whip might be the real reason i came to hawaii)
went to see "lion"
manoa falls hike (this is the stunning waterfall you see in the photos above)
watched the sunset at waikiki
dinner at teddy's bigger burgers

DAY FOUR
pearl harbor memorial (a moving experience and the memorial is so beautiful)
punchbowl cemetery
lunch at eggs n things
malasadas at leonard's bakery (malasadas are portugese filled donuts and are SO tasty)
cromwell's beach
watched the sunset at tantalus lookout (stunning view overlooking honolulu. the number 1 rule of hawaii is to never miss a sunset!)
snuck panda express into "la la land"
frozen yogurt at menchie's

DAY FIVE (maddie's birthday! loved celebrating our february birthdays together)
scenic horseback ride at gunstock ranch (this was beautiful and so fun. i probably hadn't been horseback riding in 10 years)
lunch at giovanni's shrimp truck and kahuku farms
snorkeling at hanauma bay (neither of us had been snorkeling before and it ROCKED MY WORLD)
watched the sunset on the makapu'u lighthouse trail
dinner at papa ole's
snuck into the hot tub at the turtle bay resort
ate birthday cake!

DAY SIX
crouching lion hike (this was my favorite hike and the view was so beautiful it looked fake)
ocean trampoline at pounders beach
peanut butter rolls at papa ole's (omg get these, they are to DIE FOR)
acai bowls from haleiwa bowls
snorkeling at sharks cove (we loved snorkeling so much we had to go again)
matsumoto shave ice in haleiwa (there is always a crazy line but i loved this place, it's a must)
watched the sunset at keiki beach
dinner at north shore tacos truck
ate chocolate cream pie from ted's bakery and watched "this is us"

DAY SEVEN
walked around the laie temple grounds
breakfast acai bowls at banzai bowls (banzai bowls, can you plz open in new york? so delicious)
talked on the beach at kawela bay until i had to leave
cried all the way to the airport

every inch of hawaii is so beautiful and there is so much to do. i had the time of my life. thank you, maddie. i miss you (and your island) already.