You might not be surprised to find a building at the Kansas State Fair called "The Oz Gallery," but what sort of exhibits would you expect it to contain? The word "gallery" might be a clue, and if you guessed drawings, paintings, sculpture, jewelry, and photography, you would be right. However, the original art is not to be photographed, so I cannot share images of those exhibits, although we spent a great deal of time enjoying all of those things.
Of course, when I see antiques from the homesteading era, I always wonder if Isaac might have owned or used that particular object.
Have you ever seen ox yokes carved from wood? In 1884 Isaac Werner's neighbor, Gus Gereke, paid $175 for a pair of oxen, and many early settlers used oxen to plow through the thick prairie sod. Perhaps Gereke's oxen wore yokes like these.
There were many different kinds of exhibits in the Oz building. It was the location of Leonard the Bull, featured in last week's blog, and there was a display of chainsaw carved sculptures available for purchase. However, one display brought tears to many eyes as they walked around all the sides, studying the faces of those who had given their lives or bodies in service. Decorated in red, white, and blue, the display honored yet another generation of patriots who have fought for their country.
Were you surprised by the variety of things to be found in the Oz Gallery? Beautiful art, antiques from our past, photographs of our heroes. As Dorothy told us, "There's no place like home," and the Oz building shared many things from the hearts and homes of Kansans this year.
(Answer to the quiz: It is an antique wooden washtub for laundry day.)
2 comments:
Great pictures. Loved the old wooden washing machine. Great improvement over a scrub board. Good thing people did not have many clothes in those days (unless they were rich and had servants). Washing was a full day's work for my mom with four kids in the late 50s so I can well imagine what it was like decades earlier.
My husband remembers helping his grandmother pump water and heat it over a fire on laundry day when he was a little boy. I vaguely remember the Christmas when the appliance man delivered Mother's new "modern" washing machine to replace the old ringer washer. We had to distract Mother so she wasn't aware of the delivery. I was very small, but it was an exciting Christmas memory that has stuck in my mind.
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