And I finally sold a painting! The Oaks Bluff Gazebo at Sunrise from a picture I took on Martha's Vineyard. The man who bought it, Michael McGinley got married at the gazebo on the sly 10 years ago and was looking for something to surprise his wife on their 10th anniversary. he saw my painting on FineartAmerica and contacted me about selling it. He has a great story about that marriage and I will let him tell it. I asked for a picture of them with the painting, which has not come yet, but he did send some wedding pictures. so here's the painting and one of those pictures and then his story
Jack,
Thank
you for responding to my inquiry on the wonderful painting depicting
the Ocean Park Gazebo on Martha's Vineyard. I am very excited to see
it, and experience it...and perhaps you can understand the notion that
there is a problem with photographs and memories in that it can be a
case of lacking the dimensions of the event it has captured. The still
life in a photograph leaves something out, and that is the
interpretation of feeling. The feeling is sometimes lost in a
photograph. But a rendering of the very same subject matter in a work
of Art can bring the feelings to life, and connect dots that resonate on
a deeper-level. I have numerous, arguably excellent, photographs
taken by L.A. Brown who was/is a photographer on the island. She's
photographed "the stars", and somehow we managed to finagle her into
shooting our tiny, little Wedding. Crazy. But then again...the whole
thing was a little crazy (which is part of the charm of elopement). Â
So...Eileen
and I married pretty far along in life with my having been 39 to her
35. We felt it would be more interesting to go on an adventure for our
Wedding, and not over-plan. Well, I guess what we did is exhaustively
research and plan in-advance to a degree that we knew what we were
doing, and when it had to happen. For example, we pre-arranged the
paperwork with The Town of Tisbury, booked the photographer, booked the
Minister, booked the Wedding dinner, and so on. But the one-thing we
did not book was "where the heck on that island we would do the
ceremony!"Â In fact, I think it truly made the Minister and
Photographer nervous to have no clue where they'd be working on
09/18/2008. But we were relaxed and loose, and patient as we traversed
the island for 3-days with two-objectives:Â 1) enjoy ourselves and see
"the sights", and 2) settle on a location for the ceremony. My
recollection is that we were leaning to the rooftop of our hotel (The
Mansion House at Vineyard Haven) or the garden-area of Lambert's Cove.Â
However, when we drove along Ocean Park and saw that gazebo I turned to
Eileen and said, "That's it!"Â She said the same thing to me nearly
simultaneously, and so we really cannot say who had the idea first.Â
Well, turns out you don't just get to waltz up to that historic gazebo
and have yourself a wedding ceremony. And the gazebo is a lot bigger
up-close-and-personal than it appears in photographs -- I'm guessing the
platform is at least 10 feet off the ground (and so it ruled out
climbing up in a tuxedo and wedding-dress). As luck would have it
somebody posted a concert schedule with the caretakers number on the door
and that is the number I called right-then-and-there. I spoke to
the nicest woman who heard our story, and she at first said, "They don't
allow weddings there, and the number you called is for my husband
who...hold on."Â And then I heard her shout to her husband to say, "You
need to open the gazebo tomorrow so this nice couple from Wisconsin can
get married."Â She didn't ask him; she flat-out said that he needed to
do it. I still grin at that! Anyway, there was some sidebar
conversation I couldn't make out, and then her husband jumped on the
phone and said, "Hey, sure I can open it for you if you promise that it
won't take longer than 30 minutes and it is not a big group."Â I
assured him that it was just us plus a minister, and he said, "Sounds
great, I'll see you tomorrow!"Â And so we had our site picked-out, and
at the time we didn't realize that very few persons ever get married on
the gazebo itself (not sure why, but probably it would be insane-demand
and it might expose the landmark to issues/etc.). When we then called
the photographer to say where to meet us the following day she said,
"Wait, uhhh...how'd you pull that off?"Â I said, "I guess we just
asked."Â The truth is that some folks go out of their way to help out
others, and that kindness is something that allows us to remember our
little wedding on Martha's Vineyard as unique...and it is fun from
time-to-time to share the story with others, and especially those who
have traveled to the island.
There are other things about that day, our wedding day on Martha's
Vineyard, that were memorable. For example, our dinner at Lambert's
Cove turned out to seemingly invite the entire restaurant to toast us,
and at a table nearby a group of people gave us one of their own bottles
of wine...and we whooped it up a little bit in the later part of the
evening at Sandbar on the pier at Oak Bluffs, and the same thing
happened...people came out of nowhere to buy us drinks, toast us, and
generally just make us feel part of something. In fact, a sailing team
decided to do the same thing, and buy us a bottle to take on a walk on
the beach...which is how we concluded our Wedding Day. It was an
amazing day at an amazing destination made all the more amazing by the
amazing people whom we met for the first-time that very day! Â
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