Archive for » July, 2009 «

Chautauqua Institution’s Labyrinth

Thanks for stopping by again!

The Chautauqua Institution has a labyrinth located near The Turner Community Center, on Rt.394,  just outside the Chautauqua Institution gates.

Tucked below trees, it’s easy to miss at first. But the importance of a labyrinth, both at Chautauqua and in history cannot be overlooked or missed. new york city, labyrinth
Creative Commons License photo credit: svanes

What is a labyrinth?

A labyrinth is an ancient symbol dating back over 3000 years. The symbol relates to wholeness and combines the image of a circle and a spiral into what looks like a wandering path. This path represents a journey to our center, who we are, and will return us back into the world in which we live.

It is important to realize that everyone has a path in life. We will take twists and turns along our journey often not knowing what lies around the next bend but once we start there is only one way to go, forward.

Labyrinths are used worldwide. They can be found in medical centers, parks, backyards, retreat centers, prisons, sacred sites and churches. One of the more well labyrinths is the Chartres labyrinth, which is inlaid at the cathedral in Chartres, France. It is made out of paving stones and dates back to around 1200. VizcayaMuseum.071609 (33)
Creative Commons License photo credit: bunnygoth

The Chautauqua Institution Labyrinth was designed by Lisa Moriarty and is the Circle of Peace design. Located under trees at the north end of Turner Community Center makes it accessible and available to the community and public. The labyrinth can be used year long, unless hidden with snow in the winter. And with the winters that Chautauqua sometimes has, the labyrinth can be deeply buried.

The current labyrinth was constructed in 2005 through the combined efforts of several Chautauqua labyrinth supporters. Special Studies classes, Chautauquans and the general public use it. Labyrinths are used as a way to relax, to renew one’s spirit, as a walking path or a place to pray.

Debra Dinnocenzo, the Labyrinth Coordinator, offers an orientation to the labyrinth at 7 p.m. every Tuesday during the season. She feels that it is important that people realize a labyrinth is not a maze. There are no dead ends or tricks to it. It is one path that leads to a center. You use the same path to return, making it unicursal; the path in is also the path out. It is a “walking meditation” that affects each person differently.

Dinnocenzo presents a history of labyrinths at the orientation. She explains the three stages to the walk: “releasing” on the way in, “receiving” in the center and “returning” or taking back out what you received from the experience. “There is no wrong way to use the labyrinth, Dinnocenzo said.

After the talk, questions can be asked and people will then walk the labyrinth. Depending on the day there may be four people in attendance or 20.

Dinnocenzo said participating in the labyrinth in a group is a very different experience. You know what you are feeling but you also see other people in various stages of the walk. You are all walking towards one point but because of the way the path is laid out you often look like you are headed in opposite directions. This is much like life, we walk the same paths but each person’s experiences are totally unique.

Dinnocenzo helped chose the location for the labyrinth by Turner Community Center when it was moved from Miller Park, which is located on the Chautauqua Institution grounds. They wanted it under the trees for shade but the location of the trees didn’t seem to quite work.

They started working on finding the center of the labyrinth and as they worked out from the center, a tree fell exactly where they felt the alter should be. The alter is a term used for the open area just inside the entrance.

The entrance and alter were emphasized by the tree. It became a unique part of the Chautauqua labyrinth. labyrinth @ whidbey
Creative Commons License photo credit: ~C4Chaos

Dinnocenzo became interested in labyrinths when she took a special studies class 6 years ago from Harriette Royer called Sacred Circles. She has since walked Labyrinths all over the United States.


Chautauqua Institution Gardens

There are many wonders hidden in the United States and abroad. These places are often unknown or overlooked by many. One such place is a small town named Chautauqua. 
Creative Commons License photo credit: A Girl Next Door

It is located by the Chautauqua Lake in Chautauqua County. This is the home of a cultural community called the Chautauqua Institution. The Chautauqua community has been around for more than 130 years.

The Chautauqua Institution, which sits near the edge of the town, is a gated community with a rich history in religion and learning and astounding architecture. A small community filled with narrow streets and perched on a hillside overlooking the Chautauqua Lake further accents this setting.

And with the emphasis being on learning and developing as a person it seems only appropriate that relaxing gardens fill every nook and cranny. It’s a gardener’s haven and home to the Chautauqua Bird Tree and Garden Club.

On a walk through the streets you will see statues, fountains, sculptures and hand crafted garden art in every imaginable style and form. Unusual and rare plants also grow in many gardens. Most of the gardens are annual flowers and perennials but you will see a few vegetables tucked in garden plots and containers sitting on porches.

One of my favorite gardens from a few years ago was a “secret garden” that was decorated with old vintage hats. These hats were treated to hold up to the climate and had been made into birdhouses. The proper size bird hole diameter was cut into each hat. And then the hats were hung in a fashion that looked like they had been tossed in the wind and had landed precariously on the fence and garden wall.

Their vibrant colors and shapes hanging on the fence and garden wall just gave a feeling of fun and surprise to this hidden garden.

The Bird, Tree and Garden Club offer talks and lectures on birds, bats, gardens and conservation techniques. The club also emphasizes the importance of nature and our duty to do what we can as individuals to maintain a healthy environment.

Roger Tory Peterson, a famous bird historian and wildlife artist grew up in a town nearby called Jamestown, NY. Peterson is most well known for his bird identification books, butterfly and wildflower books.

Peterson grew up in these hills in Chautauqua and by the Chautauqua Lake. He gave several talks at the Institution grounds and was honored on his 80th birthday for his contributions to birding and nature.

If you want to experience a variety of beautiful gardens that use many styles of garden art and garden techniques you should visit the Chautauqua Institution.


Chautauqua: The Florida Chautauqua

Chautauqua: The Florida Chautauqua

Chautauqua

Chautauqua Institution, Chautauqua, NY.

Creative Commons License photo credit: colecamp

As those who attend the programs at the Chautauqua Institution know, the Chautauqua Institution in Chautauqua NY was the “Mother Chautauqua”.

Many Chautauqua’s started in the United States and Canada in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. But with the introduction of radio and televsion the popularity of the chautauqua programs declined.

There are only a few Chautauqua’s that still offer a program and one of the more well known of these is located in DeFuniak Springs, Walton County, Fla.

Below is an excerpt from Our Florida Travel on the “Florida Chautauqua, written by Diana Strittmatter.

Often referred to as an “Independent Daughter” of the movement, the Florida Chautauqua began on February 10, 1885 in DeFuniak Springs located in Walton County. The format of the group emphasized religious training and educational activities in areas of philosophy, theology, music and art. Entertainment was also established in the form of concerts and lectures geared to be educational in nature. History tells us that by 1886 visitors to the Assembly attended lectures on Julius Caesar, Cicero’s writings, Rome and Hannibal, Marius and Sulla as well as diverse topics on health, astronomy, and even love and marriage.


Several speakers took turns in giving lectures at the Florida Chautauqua but one of the first speakers was Wallace Bruce, a man who would play a key role in the direction of the Chautauqua Assembly. In 1888, Wallace Bruce was elected President of the Florida Chautauqua Association and he built his first home on Lake DeFuniak. It was through his efforts that the Hall of Brotherhood building was constructed.

To read the rest of the article click here: Florida’s Historic Chautauqua.

Being a fan of the Chautauqua Institution I enjoy learning about the other Chautauqua’s that flourished in the United States.

hallofbro-southeast

photo courtesy of florida chautauqua.com

Thanks Diana for a great article.


Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Center: Jamestown NY

The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Center is a museum in the center of Jamestown, New York. It is also located in Chautauqua County.

Ricky Lucy Fred Ethel
Creative Commons License photo credit: Frankphotos

The museum has been dedicated to the lives and careers of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.

The I Love Lucy sit-com, which aired in the 1950’s and 60’s, is fondly remembered by many generations and has left a legacy for both Desi and Lucy as excellent comedians. Re-runs of the program are aired daily in the United States and overseas.

This program used a different way of creating scripts and its influence affected the way both sit-coms and movies were made. Today this sit-com is studied in many colleges. I myself studied it in a creative behavior class.

The museum officially opened in 1996. Its purpose was to  “to preserve and celebrate the legacy of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz and enrich the world through the healing powers of love and laughter”.

The Lucille Ball-Desi Arnaz Center consists of the Lucy-Desi Museum, which houses artifacts and memorabilia of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, with a gift shop. The Rapaport Center consists of the Desilu Playhouse museum, the Tropicana Room, a gift shop, and offices, and a stand-alone gift shop.

You feel like you are stepping back in time when you view The Desilu Playhouse museum. It contains the replicas of the original “I Love Lucy” TV sets that were created for the show’s 50th Anniversary tour. There are other artifacts related to the show and its creators and co-stars, many who went on to star in other successful movies and shows.

The Tropicana Room is a recreation of Ricky Ricardo’s nightclub from the show. Ricardo’s style of music was lively and he was a success in his own right. For those who remember the I Love Lucy Show, their son also performed on the program.

In May, the museum celebrates ‘Lucy-Desi Days’. And in August, there is an annual celebration of Lucille Ball’s birthday is held in August.

The streets are shut down in Jamestown and an air of celebration fills the city streets.

The center is a prime tourist destination and Lucy fans from around the world come to celebrate the life and legacy of Lucille Ball and her acting career, which touched many people.

Lucy did not forget her home in western NY.  Chautauqua Lake is mentioned in at least one episode of I Love Lucy, in which Lucille Ball, playing the role of Lucy Ricardo.

Lucy finds a stuffed and mounted fish in a trunk in her attic and recalls that she caught it in Chautauqua Lake as a child growing up in Celoron, New York.

Lucy also performed in a play in 1930 on the grounds of the Chautauqua Institution. At this time she was relatively unknown but soon went on to make a name for herself in Hollywood.

The write-up of her performance at the Chautauqua Institution will follow in a few days.


Chautauqua County NY Directory

About Chautauqua offers a Business and Service Directory for Chautauqua County and nearby Warren County.

2004ChautauquaSunset

Creative Commons License photo credit: PixieLauren
If you have a business or service in these areas you are welcome and encouraged to add your information to the Get Listed page at the About Chautauqua site.

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Creative Commons License photo credit: M0les

Chautauqua County and Warren County offer much to the NW area in culture, arts and recreation. There are numerous lakes to enjoy and activities for all seasons.

Activites include Lake Erie beaches, wineries, museums, art galleries, farmers markets, Roger Tory Peterson Nature Center, Chautauqua Gorge, Chautauqua Institution, Lily Dale, and the Kinzua Dam in Nearby Warren, Pa.

This area is also known for its winter recreation, which includes, snow mobiling, skiing, ice fishing, skating and just enjoying the beauty of a winter day.


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