Showing posts with label Clifton and Shirley Caldwell Texas Heritage Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clifton and Shirley Caldwell Texas Heritage Series. Show all posts

Monday, November 21, 2011

NPR :: Kilgore Rangerettes

Kilgore Rangerettes
By O. Rufus Lovett
Buy It Now
The Unchanging Style Of The Kilgore College Rangerettes

by CRISTINA FLETES

For many Texans, fall is synonymous with football. But in some areas, the sidelines can be just as much of a spectacle as the actual game.

Enter the Kilgore College Rangerettes. Known for their high kicks and high glamour, the Rangerettes introduced the idea of the football halftime show to the world in 1940.

Many decades later, they remain largely unchanged in their signature style, complete with cowgirl hats, boots and a color palette to make the American flag green with envy. This throwback to a bygone era is likely what has attracted so many photographers to document them through the years.

One photographer in particular, Kilgore College professor O. Rufus Lovett, has been photographing this iconic dance team since 1989 and released a book of his photos in 2008. He explained in an email that the series was inspired by his "fascination with the small-town glamour juxtaposed with the football turf, metal stadiums, asphalt and concrete environment."

Though Lovett has trouble picking a favorite photo, he says he is fond of the image titled "Big Hair," which adorns the back of his book on the Rangerettes. For the Rangerettes, Lovett says, "hair is not only big in size but also big in terms of the drill-team culture."

See the slide show at npr.org »

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Austin American-Statesman :: Texas State Cemetery

Texas State Cemetery
By Jason Walker and Will Erwin,
with Helen Thompson
Buy It Now
2 new books serve as memorials, each in its own way

There are a million ways to remember.

We keep photos on walls and in our wallets; we hang on to childhood artwork and filled-up diaries; we honor people and moments with rituals and recipes.

Two books landed on my desk recently that approach this idea in very different yet interrelated ways. One, "Texas State Cemetery,"by Jason Walker and Will Erwin (UT Press, 200 pp., $39.95),is about, as one might guess, the Texas State Cemetery. The other, "Visual Vitriol: The Street Art and Subcultures of the Punk and Hardcore Generation,"by David A. Ensminger(University Press of Mississippi, 334 pp., $35), is about, as you also might guess, punk rock.

Both are coffee-table books, with "Texas State Cemetery" fully embracing its coffee-table-ness — heavy paper, vellum cover, gorgeous photos. Coffee-table books are like CD box sets: a deluxe package to celebrate something significant. They are memorials.

"Texas State Cemetery" is about history as much as gorgeous photos of gravestones; its authors are the director of research and the senior historian at the cemetery, respectively. As Bob Bullock, quoted on the "In Remembrance" page notes, "Kids can come out here and in one day learn more about Texas history than a whole semester in class."

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