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back in Cairoback in Cairo Everyone has been asking me if things feel or look any different here in Cairo after the revolution.  When I left, there were tanks in my neighborhood, a curfew, lots of gunfire, there was no internet, and Mubarak was still president.  Now, Mubarak is gone, the police are back on the streets, the tanks have rolled out,...

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from ancient to medieval in Cairofrom ancient to medieval in Cairo On Tuesday we started our day with a cab ride to Tahrir to see the Egyptian Museum of Antiquities. We spent a few hours enjoying the Tutahnkamun exhibit, Akhenaten collection, and other ancient art and artifacts of Egypt. We then took a taxi to the Citadel. The views of the city were stunning. We...

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weddles in luxorweddles in luxor This past week has been a whirlwind!  After seeing some sights around Cairo with Ryan, my parents arrived and we left for Luxor.  We arrived in Luxor around midday and decided to check out Luxor Temple in the afternoon sunlight.  It was incredible.  The city of Luxor creeps right up to the edges of these ancient sites,...

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Mount SinaiMount Sinai Last weekend we went on a faculty trip to Mount Sinai.  After a 9 hour bus ride through barren, empty, desert, along the eastern coast of Egypt and across the Sinai Peninsula, we made it to Dahab where the best thing about our hotel was the coral reef meters from our room.  Another 2 hour bus ride through a forbidding...

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Unfinished ObeliskUnfinished Obelisk Once we got to Aswan and after a crazy taxi experience that entailed some serious driver rivalry, keys stolen from the ignition, a chase involving a tire iron, and a group of tourists, ahem, us, quietly unloading our luggage and finding another cab... (yeah, I know, OH EGYPT!) Anyhow once we got to Aswan, we decided...

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Nothing could be finer

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A couple of weeks ago we decided to take a day trip to Winstom Salem where my earliest memories come from. We got lunch with some longtime family friends and had a lot of fun visiting and catching up.   We then embarked on a whirlwind day of sightseeing.  If I could remember it, we visited it.  First up on the memory tour was Reynolda House.

When we were little, our parents enrolled us in art classes at Reynolda House because they were phenomenal parents.  All I could remember of the experience were fragmented memories of ice cream sundaes, an indoor one-lane bowling alley, water-colored t-shirts, and beautiful gardens.  Visiting the home again twenty years later was quite an experience.

The house was built in 1917 by Katherine Smith Reynolds, wife of R. J. Reynolds, as a self-sufficient country estate.  There were farms, schools, and churches built for the people who worked to keep it all running.  The house itself is filled with beautiful furnishings, incredible examples of decorative arts from around the world, and an attic full of fashion from the turn of the century through the ’60s.  There is an indoor bowling alley, shooting gallery, and pool with nearby bird cages for tropical birds to add to the over-the-top ambiance.  It also boasts an amazing, and I mean amazing, collection of American art.  All you art lovers can check out the list here.  I’d expected to see some of the great landscapes and portraiture, and even the Impressionists, but was pretty surprised to see so many modern and contemporary works too.  There was even a Nam June Paik in the basement!  Although the more recent works have been collected since the house became a museum, it was interesting to see works by Bierstadt, Peale, Cassatt, and Church as they would have been displayed for everyday enjoyment as opposed to display in a formal museum setting.

Unfortunately I couldn’t take any photos inside, so you’ll just have to check out the Reynolda House website if you are interested.

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