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Softball: Tuckers don’t fall to Babylon without a fight
State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges
NY Magazine touts Southold, Greenport as Hamptons alternatives
Shelter Island's Theinert named to state's Veterans Hall of Fame
SCHOOL VOTE: Oysterponds school budget fails, all others pass
Cops: Man, 72, refused arrest after being caught illegally driving ATV
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Shelter Island splits from North Fork under new county redistricting plan
This week in North Fork history: Greenport landmark lost to fire
Softball: Clippers shut out by Center Moriches’ Nolan

Sports

Softball: Tuckers don’t fall to Babylon without a fight

May 16, 2012

Softball: Clippers shut out by Center Moriches’ Nolan

May 14, 2012

Auto Racing: Rogers, driving back-up car, roars from 21st to first

May 14, 2012

Education

State bill aims to decrease hazing, drinking and drug use at colleges

May 16, 2012

POLL: How did you vote on your local school budget?

May 15, 2012

School Budget Vote: It's decision day for North Fork voters

May 15, 2012

Business

New Route 58 Walmart developers apply for building permits

May 2, 2012

Baiting Hollow distillery produces LI's first whiskey

April 20, 2012

84 Lumber in Riverhead plans to close its doors

April 20, 2012

Community

Photos: North Fork theater presents 'The King and I'

May 16, 2012

Photos: Southold Drama Club presents 'The Importance of Being Earnest'

May 11, 2012

Music Video: Meet 'The Second Hands' of Greenport

May 9, 2012

Obituaries

Richard DeKorn Frank

May 15, 2012

Frank N. Sokolich

May 15, 2012

Jessica Ann Hunter

May 15, 2012

Real Estate

NY Magazine touts Southold, Greenport as Hamptons alternatives

May 16, 2012

Foreclosure of motel further stalls dredging at Case's Creek in Aquebogue

May 13, 2012

Real estate firms say first quarter sales numbers up in 2012

May 4, 2012

Opinion

Column: We can't ignore kids and concussions

May 12, 2012

Equal Time: A soccer program for all local kids

May 11, 2012

Editorial: Spinning our wheels over school budgets, candidates

May 10, 2012

Love comes alive on canvas with Orient man’s paintings

'Spring, Orient," 1997 by Skip Wachsberger

Stroll through Orient village and you’ll notice some unusual tropical plants popping up in local gardens. This summer, when the young shoots of these Basjoo banana plants are 15 feet high, they’ll toss their leafy manes and passers-by might just smile and say, “Hi there, Skip.”

Skip Wachsberger, a painter, writer and horticulturist who gave the banana pups to his neighbors, died Nov. 20, three months and a day after his marriage at Southold Town Hall to his longtime partner, Charles Dean.

“Clyde Phillip Wachsberger: Watercolors 1997-2011,” an exhibition of his paintings, curated by Mr. Dean in collaboration with Oysterponds Historical Society, pays tribute to a remarkable man.

“Friends and family came to his memorial in Orient from all over the country,” said Mr. Dean. “Everyone knew about his garden, but Skip was so modest that many were unaware of the extent of his achievements. With the publication of his book, and this show, everyone can better know his myriad talents.”

‘Clyde Phillip Wachsberger: Watercolors 1997-2011’
Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 21 and 22, 2-5 p.m., in Oysterponds Historical Society’s Swanson Gallery, Old Point Schoolhouse, Village Lane, Orient. 323-2480.

Mr. Wachsberger’s memoir, “Into the Garden with Charles,” was published privately last year as a limited edition of 150 copies. This April, publishers Farrar, Straus and Giroux will publish a trade edition of the book, with full-color reproductions of 13 watercolors by the author. Many of the original paintings are included in the exhibition.

Mr. Dean’s selections — some from his private collection, others borrowed from family and friends — link Mr. Wachsberger’s paintings to his memoir.

“Skip painted what he loved.” he said. “His garden, his family, friends and Rover [their Havenese dog] … he loved me and he loved Orient.”

Many of the modest-sized works, often no larger than the photographs that inspired them, recall snapshots from old family albums.

Mr. Wachsberger recreated the black and white images, their scalloped borders bent, black and white contrasts crackled and faded, into vivid watercolors on textured handmade paper.

“My memories color in emotions,” he wrote. “The moments I chose to paint are colored the way I remember them, or … remember being told about them, or the way I would like them to have been.”

To this end, he transformed an old photograph of himself as a toddler by framing the child in a profusion of sun-blanched grasses, backlit by summer’s searing light.

Mr. Wachsberger’s paintings are as masterful as they are unpretentious. A keen observer of details who felt keenly about the subjects he painted, he could translate an amateurish photograph into a wonderful work of art.

“Thanksgiving,” for example, portrays a young Skip, here about 8, sandwiched between his mother, his aunt and a green wrought iron lawn chair, like the ones in his Orient garden. In this revealing ’50s image of a little boy overwhelmed by forceful women, Skip’s mother carries a bowl that obscures part of Skip’s head.

Many images of Skip as a pre-teen in Florida reflect his love of the tropical plants he sought for his garden.

The paintings also hint at his early awareness of his homosexuality. “I’m probably watching a lifeguard through the rolled up magazine,” he wrote about “At the Pool, Florida.”

Mr. Wachsberger painted his many friends and relatives visiting Orient, absorbed in the vivid sights and scents in his garden, chatting on the back porch of his 18th-century home or sunning on his favorite beach at the end of Youngs Road. They include numerous images of Charles, often with him walking or gathering pebbles and rocks to add to their collection.

One hilarious painting, “Charles Crowned by Apollo in Adsworthy House Gardens,” features Charles clad in a Hawaiian shirt, greeted by a naked Apollo who places a laurel wreath on his straw-hatted head. Adsworthy House is the name the couple gave their home because they met through an ad.

“Skip loved Orient’s pristine landscape,” said Mr. Dean. His desire to see its natural beauty prevail shows in the uninhabited scenes he painted of Youngs Road, and the stilled tractors he depicted resting in their fields. Then there are his renowned botanical studies. Skip received the 2002 Garden Globe Award for his sumi ink illustrations for “Of Leaf and Flower,” an anthology he edited with Mr. Dean. He won the same award in 2011 for the illustrations in his current memoir.

Mr. Wachsberger greatly admired famed 19th-century painter and photographer William Steeple Davis, who preserved a sense of time and place. Mr. Wachsberger captured its essence in his own time.

“Almost everyone in Orient owns at least one painting by Skip, as locals own the works of Davis,” said Mr. Dean. “Hopefully, like Davis’ works, Skip’s will pass down through the generations, a reminder of this favorite son, whose legacy is in the paintings that evoke his love.”

 

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