When you rush through a museum, everything can start seeming like a non-descript blur. Oftentimes, you’ll have a better experience by spending more time with fewer pieces – instead of speeding by in an effort to see (or at least glance at) every single item.
In this spirit, Phoenix Art Museum introduced their “Slow Art” events. Pre-Pandemic, I believe this was an option you could choose instead of a gallery tour on certain days. People would gather around a specific work of art and a docent would talk about just that piece.
I’m more familiar with the program’s COVID-safe incarnation as a monthly Zoom meditation. You may have seen this as a “join in from anywhere” item on our Happenings List.
I attended one of these a couple months ago. It focused on the work of Colombian artist Oscar Muñoz, whose Invisibilia exhibition is currently on display at the museum.
You slow down, settle in, and take deep breaths. Phoenix art educators guide you in examining the work.
We looked at several of Muñoz’s self portraits, as a series and individually. The docents explained his unusual artmaking processes and shared how you could see some of them on display at the museum. The pace of the presentation was measured, allowing plenty of time for questions and contemplation.
It was a refreshing way to calm my mind and reset, while also learning about an artist and his process!
The next session is Thursday, December 23 at noon (Arizona time). RSVP is required, and the cost is just pay-what-you-can.
The Oscar Muñoz: Invisibilia exhibition is on display at Phoenix Art Museum in the Katz Wing for Modern Art through January 16, 2022.
A few years ago, I wrote (through tears), “Life can be such an off-balance mix of highs and lows, beautiful moments and heartbreaking ones all scrambled together.”
It remains true at the close of this tumultuous, challenging, disorienting – and, yes, often heartbreaking – year. There are points of light, even in dark times.
I asked a few friends to think of some good moments they experienced in 2020 and share them in the form of a top five list of things they did or simply enjoyed.
Their lovely responses (and fun photos!) are below.
These are my top five favorite makes of 2020 – a year that provided ample time for me to be creative.
1. Cornflower Yoke Cardigan from Vintage Baby Knits for my niece, Maxine Eleanor. She was born August 1.
2. No. 1 shirt from designer Sonya Philip. I learned how to sew basic garments this year. I made several of these and lived in them all summer!
3. I participated in Denyse Schmidt’s Proverbial Quilt Along. The quilt reads, “The Darkest Nights Make the Brightest Stars.” I gave it to my eldest niece Alexis, who headed off to college in August and was having a hard time with everything she’d been forced to miss due to the pandemic.
4. My best friend Meghann turned 40 in August and asked for a quilt in her colors. This is the most ambitious quilting project I’ve ever completed. My mom quilted the top with her longarm, to make it extra special. The pattern is an Ohio star.
5. I completed Morning Sky sweater in cornflower blue and have enjoyed wearing it. I really like the scalloped edge and the fit. I made it from inexpensive yarn, and it has held up nicely!
1. I went on my first meditation retreat in Stockbridge, MA a week before everything shut down because of COVID. This was on my 2020 list before 2020 arrived.
2. I went on an epic hike in Yosemite and hiked Half Dome. I was sooo lucky to be invited on this hike as going all the way to the top requires a permit that is given through a lottery system.
3. I was able to stay home for 6 weeks when COVID first hit. We did a lot of walks in local parks. I also learned how to edit videos and filmed 3 classes for Skillshare.
4. I planted two fruit trees in my backyard: a fig and a pomegranate. I will always remember that they were planted during COVID year (haha)!
5. I am joining Carve December, and I am determined to carve a stamp a day during this month.
• from Lori Meisner Cleland:
1. Socially distanced camping trips with my brother and his family
2. Discovering new (to me) music, like Gregory Porter
3. A slower pace
4. Increased support of and appreciation of small businesses
5. Seeing all the amazing creativity going on as people work to navigate this crazy year together
Photos that go with the lists are from the respective listmakers.
P.S. Dinah Liebold’s list of gift ideas that was so detailed and timely that it got its own post last week, so be sure to check that out if you haven’t already!
I found myself researching hotels recently, even though I don’t currently have plans to travel farther than the grocery store.
With COVID-19 cases on the rise, I’m certainly not advocating that everyone hit the road. But I know you might need a place to stay due to quarantining, an evacuation, family emergency, essential travel, change in living situation, etc.
So what are hotel brands in the U.S. are doing in the wake of the coronavirus?
So Fresh and So Clean
Major hotel companies have ramped up their cleaning procedures and are doing an interesting dance in order to let the public know about it. It’s like they want to say “our hotels have always been spotless, but now they’re spotless-er!”
And they probably are, in fact, more spotlesser than ever. Things people are most likely to touch, like door handles and elevator buttons, are getting wiped down and disinfected frequently. Unsanitizable stuff is being taken out of rooms. (Where are they putting all those extra throw pillows and notepads? Are they just tossing them? Are they all in storage somewhere? Listed on eBay?)
Many hotels are either using or looking into using electrostatic spraying / fogging, a technique for disinfecting surfaces by spraying them with positively-charged chemicals. (Yeah, I don’t totally understand it, either, but it’s supposed to be very thorough and good for hard-to-reach spaces.)
A lot of amenities are temporarily suspended for safety reasons. Buffets are out. Workout rooms and pools are on thin ice. Daily housekeeping is becoming more of a DIY situation.
Having Reservations
This spring, when everything was suddenly being shut down and postponed, most hotels waived cancellation fees. At this point, however, a lot of those more lenient policies are expiring. So don’t forget to read the fine print when you book!
Keep in mind:
Reservation policies I’ve summarized below apply to direct, individual bookings. (All dates are 2020.)
For bookings through a third party (Expedia, Hotels.com, etc.), you’ve got to deal with their rules. And group bookings are a whole different mess altogether.
Most rewards program levels and points expiration dates have been extended.
You can also opt to convert your unused rewards points into a monetary donation to a charity the hotel has partnered with.
As much as hotels may be attempting to follow guidelines from the WHO, CDC, and local authorities, those recommendations can change quickly. Also, the general policy for a hotel chain can still vary from one location to the next. Call ahead if you have questions.
Reservations + Cancellations: They had been waiving all cancellation fees until June 30, and then went quiet on the subject. Double check your booking details.
Checking In: Check-in and check-out streamlined to minimize contact (theoretically) using the Best Western Mobile Concierge platform – which I have not been able to find and have no clue how you access.
Common Areas:
Disinfecting the lobby and touch points throughout the hotel regularly.
Providing hand sanitizer or wipes.
Cleaning fitness centers, swimming pools, meeting rooms, and other public amenities with disinfecting chemicals, as well as electrostatic fogging, ozone generators, or ultraviolet devices, when available.
Guest Rooms:
Enhanced cleaning protocols with chemicals aimed at killing COVID-19.
If possible, guest rooms will not be entered for 24 to 72 hours after check-out. (I just keep thinking about the potential guest grossness that could be left to sit there for three days. Did they consult anyone from housekeeping on this?)
On that note, let’s move on to breakfast options….
Dining:
Most hotels are currently offering a “Grab & Go” breakfast with pre-packaged food and beverage options, like a whole piece of fruit, bottle of water, granola bar, and a pastry.
Some hotels may serve or pre-plate breakfast in lieu of a buffet. This may include a breakfast sandwich or burrito, hot and cold cereals, yogurt, pastries, and fruit.
Employee Policies:
Must use Personal Protective Equipment and follow frequent, stringent hand-washing protocols.
Workstations cleaned and disinfected after every shift.
If unwell, employees are “empowered to stay home.”
Option to Donate Your Reward Points? Yes, to a variety of charitable organizations via their Rewards Redemption Mall.
For new reservations with arrival dates through September 30, there is no charge for cancellations up to 24 hours in advance. (Does not apply to bookings with a pre-paid rate. Also several other exclusions. Definitely read the fine print when you book.)
Common Areas:
Cleaning high-traffic areas such as the front desk, fitness centers, and pool area with hospital-grade disinfectant.
Furniture arranged to encourage social distancing.
Guest Rooms: Housekeeping “on demand.” You can request delivery of additional toiletries, towels, linens, or coffee without having a housekeeper enter the room.
Dining: Offering pre-packaged breakfast items instead of buffets at many hotels.
Employee Policies:
Creating the new position of “Commitment to Clean Captain” (which I can only picture as a comic book character. Like a grime-fighting superhero!)
Every Choice-branded hotel will designate a Commitment to Clean Captain, who will be in charge of implementing new cleaning protocols at the property.
COVID-19 Outreach: Special room rates for front line workers, including nurses, doctors, FEMA employees and American Red Cross volunteers.
Quality Inn in Sylva, NC donated toilet paper and other essentials to senior centers and is currently providing shelter for people experiencing homelessness.
Comfort Suites in Carlisle, PA sponsored a blood drive.
Cambria Hotel in Bloomington, MN helped to send essential supplies to the Minnesota Nurses Association.
WoodSpring Suites in Allentown, PA donated a dozen handmade superhero masks to healthcare workers who were staying at the hotel.
Reservations + Cancellations: Cancellation penalties were waived for reservations through July 6, but no update since then.
Checking In:
Using single-use keycards for the rest of the year.
Plexiglass hygiene guards installed at some front desk terminals.
Night windows have become all-the-time windows. If a hotel has an exterior front desk window, guests should check in there rather than going inside the lobby.
Common Areas:
More frequent cleaning and heavy disinfection of high-touch surfaces.
Adding hand sanitizer stations.
Closing pools.
Limiting the number of people in lobbies and lowering the maximum occupancy for most hotels.
Removing complimentary coffee from lobbies and microwaves from the vending area. (Caffeine addicts take note! Motel 6 also doesn’t include coffee pots in rooms, so plan on getting your fix outside of the property.)
Engaging a third-party supplier to provide deep cleaning and sanitization services, as needed.
Masks required.
Guest Rooms:
Using EPA-approved, antiviral disinfectants to sanitize the most commonly touched areas of guest rooms.
Hotel staff will not enter any occupied room.
Limiting housekeeping to pre-scheduled trash removal, amenity replenishment, and providing fresh towels and sheets outside of each room.
Employee Policies:
Employees required to wear provided Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) – unless the hotel is unable to get their (ungloved) hands on said PPE. (In which case, I guess everyone is off the hook-?)
Hand sanitizer stations in the team center.
Furloughed Team Members receive a lump sum payment and can remain on the company’s healthcare plan.
Partnering with several companies who have immediate job openings to assist team members in securing interim employment.
COVID-19 Outreach:
20% discount for first responders, medical professionals, and active duty military working on the front lines of the pandemic. (Must book online and provide identification at check-in.)
Partnering with local governments in several communities to provide shelter for first responders, medical professionals, other essential workers, and those who may need to quarantine.
Option to Donate Your Reward Points? Their loyalty program (My6) seems to be discount-based rather than point-based, so I don’t think there’s anything for you to donate!
Free changes and cancellations for reservations booked March 12 – August 31 (if canceled up to 24 hours before your scheduled arrival day).
Refunds of deposits for canceled bookings may take up to 30 days to process.
Hilton Honors members canceling Advance Purchase bookings may be eligible for a free night certificate for each canceled night.
Checking In: Contactless check-in and check-out with Digital Key (at more than 4,700 properties).
Common Areas:
Continuing to use hospital-grade disinfectant.
Cleaning more frequently.
Some services or amenities (such as pool, spas, fitness centers, restaurants, daily housekeeping, etc.) may be modified or suspended.
Enhancing fitness center cleaning.
Disinfecting wipes available at entrances and in high-traffic areas.
Adjustments made to help guests adhere to social distancing guidelines.
Guest Rooms:
Hilton CleanStay Room Seal indicates that a room hasn’t been accessed since it was cleaned.
Extra disinfection of top 10 high-touch areas in guest rooms.
Reduced paper amenities (like notepads and guest directories) in rooms.
Dining: Enhancing cleaning and making other changes to buffets, in-room dining, and meeting spaces, in accordance with current food safety recommendations.
Employee Policies: Additional training, protocols, and Personal Protective Equipment.
COVID-19 Outreach:
Donated hotel room nights across the U.S. to frontline medical professionals who needed a place to sleep, recharge or isolate from their families (as part of 1 Million Rooms).
Hilton Effect Foundation has pledged financial assistance to organizations to help those impacted by COVID-19.
Atwell Suites, avid, Candlewood Suites, Crowne Plaza, EVEN, Holiday Inn, Hotel Indigo, InterContinental, Kimpton, Regent, Six Senses, Staybridge Suites, voco
Reservations + Cancellations:
New Book Now, Pay Later rate allows cancellations up to 24 hours before your stay, does not require a deposit, and is at least 5% less than Best Flexible Rate (which typically allows free cancellation until 6pm the day of arrival).
It’s valid for bookings made at least 3 days in advance from March 25 through September 1 with stays ending by December 30.
IHG Rewards Club members save more on Book Now, Pay Later and Best Flexible rates.
Checking In:
Reduced contact at check-in and paperless check-out.
Sanitized keycards.
Common Areas:
Additional deep cleaning of high-touch surfaces.
Hand sanitizer stations.
Guest Rooms:
IHG Way of Clean already includes deep cleaning with hospital-grade disinfectants.
Visible verification of sanitized items (e.g. glassware, remote control).
Reducing or changing furnishings.
Implementing new laundry protocols.
Cleaning with electrostatic technology.
Dining:
Updating approach to buffets, banquets, room-service, and catering, based on official guidelines.
Some hotels have temporarily reduced restaurant and bar service.
Contact the individual hotel for specific details on dining options.
COVID-19 Outreach:
Partner to #FirstRespondersFirst, providing free accommodation across the U.S. for frontline COVID-19 workers and access to a dedicated VIP reservation service to match local needs with nearby hotels.
Working with hotels and charity partners to ease pressure on foodbanks through funding, donating excess food, and assisting with deliveries.
Option to Donate Your Reward Points? Yes, to Red Cross / Red Crescent COVID-19 relief fund.
AC Hotels, Aloft Hotels, Bulgari Hotels & Resorts, Courtyard, Delta Hotels, Edition Hotels, Fairfield, Four Points by Sheraton, Gaylord Hotels, JW Marriott Hotels, Le Méridien, The Luxury Collection, Moxy Hotels, Protea Hotels, Renaissance Hotels, The Ritz-Carlton, St. Regis Hotels & Resorts, Sheraton Hotels and Resort, SpringHill Suites, W Hotels, Westin Hotels
Reservations + Cancellations:
New reservations for dates between July 6 and September 30 can be canceled at no charge up to 24 hours before your scheduled arrival date.
Reservation refunds may take up to 90 days from the date of cancellation to be processed.
Checking In:
Adding partitions at check-in.
You can use the mobile app to check in, access your room (instead of a physical key!), and order room service (in over 3,200 hotels).
Common Areas:
Using electrostatic sprayers and other technology to sanitize surfaces throughout the hotel.
Cleaning surfaces more frequently and using hospital-grade disinfectants.
Installing hand sanitizing stations at hotel entrances, front desks, elevator banks, and meeting spaces.
Some lobby furniture removed or rearranged to allow more space for distancing.
Guest Rooms:
Thoroughly cleaning all surfaces with hospital-grade disinfectants.
Placing disinfecting wipes in each room.
Dining:
Food and beverage operations are required to conduct self-inspections for compliance to food safety standards. Results are validated by independent audits.
Designing new approaches to buffets and in-room dining.
Employee Policies:
Voluntary transition program for employees choosing to leave the company to pursue other opportunities.
The TakeCare Relief Fund (TCRF) makes need-based financial grants available to associates who are facing financial hardship.
Forming the Marriott Global Cleanliness Council with in-house and outside experts in food and water safety, hygiene and infection prevention, and hotel operations. The council will work to develop a new cleanliness standards, norms and behaviors for Marriott properties.
COVID-19 Outreach:
Partnering with Rooms for Responders to provide hotel stays for healthcare professionals leading the fight against COVID-19 in the U.S.
Community Caregiver Program provides significantly discounted rates for first responders and healthcare professionals who want to book rooms near the hospitals where they’re working.
Some properties have been donating meals and supplies, like cleaning products, masks, gloves, anti-microbial wipes, sanitizers, and shower caps to medical and other frontline workers.
Option to Donate Your Reward Points?
Yes, to relief organizations that are active in COVID-19, including the American Red Cross, International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, UNICEF and World Central Kitchen.
Marriott has also said they’re working on an option for donating points to organizations focused on advancing racial equality and social justice that they will then match.
AmericInn, Baymont Inn & Suites, Days Inn, Dazzler, Dolce Hotels and Resorts, Esplendor Boutique Hotels, Hawthorn Suites, Howard Johnson’s, La Quinta Inns & Suites, Microtel, Ramada, Super 8, Trademark Collection, Travelodge, TRYP, Wingate
Reservations + Cancellations:
If laws restricting travel prohibit you from getting to a hotel you’ve booked, you can change or cancel your reservation without fees.
Other than that, no blanket policy for bookings made on or after June 6. You just have to check your Rate Details.
Checking In: Disinfecting wipes provided with your keycard.
Common Areas:
More frequently cleaning and disinfecting high-touch areas.
You may be required to wear masks or other facial coverings in public areas of the hotel.
Guest Rooms: Complimentary travel-size hand sanitizer for each room.
COVID-19 Outreach:
Essential workers get 15% off Best Available Rate for stays booked by September 30.
Everyday Heroes Complimentary GOLD membership upgrade for Wyndham Rewards Members who are providing essential services in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic between April 14 and September 30. (If you’re not a member, you can sign up for free.)
Option to Donate Your Reward Points? Yes, to preferred charities, many of whom are working to help those affected by COVID-19.
I took any photos requiring travel before the pandemic. The hotel interiors probably look a bit different now!
Because this virus keeps spreading across the world, carried by breath. You could inhale sickness and never know where it came from. You could exhale death and never know where it landed.
Because wildfire keeps spreading across the mountains in Tucson. Even far from the danger, we feel its burn in our eyes and throats as we breathe in the smoke.
Because violence keeps spreading across the U.S.
When you saw that an officer would block an unarmed man’s windpipe with the weight of his knee, did you feel your own throat tighten? When you saw how quickly police would turn on the people they’re supposed to protect, did you realize you were holding your breath?
When you remembered that air can still pass into your lungs, did you wonder what it means that you’re still breathing? And what we should do now?
Some raged against the injustice by smashing windows and starting fires. Some by showing up in the morning to pick up the pieces and sweep up the glass. Some by activism and art.
Over boarded-up windows, they painted the Ben’s Bells symbol – that bright green flower shape with the words “be kind” in the center. If you’ve been to Tucson in recent years, you’ve seen it. But you might not know the project’s story, that it began as a way for founder Jeannette Maré to work through the grief of losing her son, Ben. She threw her energy into spreading kindness and making ceramic windchimes.
Art is helping us navigate this perplexing time too.
There are new murals popping up around Tucson. One that feels particularly of the moment is by Camila Ibarra on the north wall of Hotel Congress. Her portrait of a face-mask-wearing Black woman with the words “Black Lives Matter” in her natural hair has this intensity, this electricity in every brushstroke.
Muralist Joe Pagac has been connecting Black artists with downtown Tucson walls. Several murals have already gone up at MSA Annex. I was walking Quijote around there the other day and got to meet one of the artists, To-Ree’-Nee’ Wolf, who was in the process of painting an extension to her mural.
A week after George Floyd’s death, there was a vigil in his honor outside The Dunbar Pavilion, an African American art and cultural center. There was a stage set up, where Tucsonans took turns at the mic, sharing stories of loved ones they’ve lost to police violence, about fearing for their children, about the need for grassroots change.
Because being Black in America – simply existing – puts you in more danger.
As nature photographer Gina Danza wrote, “Peace doesn’t come without worry, fear for Black womxn. There is never a moment where we can be fully at peace.”
We can’t let that continue to be the case.
The Enough is Enough vigil wrapped up with a moment of silence – actually 8 minutes and 46 seconds of silence – to remember George Floyd. As we lit candles or turned on cell phone lights to hold up, the speaker said, “When your arm starts getting tired, remember that at least you’re not on the ground with someone’s knee on your neck.”
Before leaving, people placed flowers and candles and handmade signs on a table in front of the stage, turning it into a kind of a shrine.
Of course, the fight is far from over.
There’s been some rain, but the fire in the Catalinas isn’t out yet. There was a short reprieve, but the virus is spreading quickly. There has been some progress, but the violence hasn’t stopped.
We need to look out for each other, make sure everyone can keep breathing.
I started doing watercolor paintings with the Sakura Koi watercolor set after I saw it at Craft Camp.
Since it’s so portable, I’ve started painting in unusual places – on my patio, at coffee shops, in the car, at the Arboretum, in church.
I might paint what’s in front of me or I might do something abstract. Unless I’m doing a painting for someone else, I don’t really care if people like what I paint.
There is something magical about the strokes of color on the paper and therapeutic about playing with shading and palettes and accepting the outcome, even if it’s not what I’d envisioned.
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