Thanksgiving

Keith Haring Balloon in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade

Debuting at this years Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade will be a 48-foot tall balloon titled Figure with Heart by the late artist Keith Haring.

The balloon is based on Haring's ink on paper drawing, Untitled (Figure with Heart), 1987 and will be part of the Macy's Parade's Blue Sky Gallery series, which aims to "inject contemporary art into a pop culture phenomenon". (Pop Art In The Sky)

The Blue Sky Gallery series began in 2005 with Humpty Dumpty by Tom Otterness, preceded by “Rabbit” by Jeff Koons in 2007.

To learn more about the artist Keith Haring visit the Library and look through our books in CATNYP, as well as go to the Keith Haring Foundation website at www.haring.com

Also take a walk down to Houston Street and Bowery to look at a recreation of a mural done by Haring in the summer of 1982. All in celebration of what would have been his 50th Birthday. So, Cheers to Keith and a Happy Thanksgiving to all…

Photographs from the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade, 1932

 731233F. New York Public Library

Check out more images here.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Hopi Thanksgiving

 69460. New York Public LibraryWhile trawling through the Digital Gallery’s large section on Thanksgiving, I found this great color postcard that was printed around 1908 or 1908. First of all, I love the word pun. For many years, I used to work out at my local gym in a tee shirt that read “Don’t Worry, Be Hopi” that I’d bought from an Indian arts shop on Second Mesa.

November is Native American Heritage Month. So we should take a moment to recall all the important contributions that our indigenous peoples have made to our society. And if you have forgotten any of them, there’s Jack Weatherford’s classic Indian Givers to remind you of their great number. Frankly, Thanksgiving and Columbus Day are not Native Americans’ favorite holidays. The story of the Pilgrims and their friendly Indian hosts sitting down for a happy meal has been roundly debunked. Yet Native cultures regularly employ their own versions of thanks giving around harvests and other gatherings.

Inevitably, our popular culture has established an “ideal” for this holiday. The image of the grateful family, with a full complement of multi-generational members, gathered around a table loaded with traditional fixings (all that starch, all those calories) often represents an unattainable or unrealistic portrait of American life. Nowadays, the most we really hear about the holiday is a media report on all the bad traffic to expect. Or how some celebrity took time to serve food at a soup kitchen. One book published in the same year as this postcard shows how the holiday became established the way we know it. And a more recent publication brings us up to date with Thanksgiving: an American holiday, an American history.

The Hopis in the postcard would be bemused by all this. They live in a beautiful and harsh environment where they’ve mastered a form of dry irrigation that allows them to grow crops. They’d always be grateful for the bounty their hard labor produced. Perhaps it’s the Native concept of “thanksgiving” we should celebrate, and not the artificial construct of gobbling down a huge, enforced meal...

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