STLTODAY.COM/LIFE • STLTODAY.COM/GO • SUNDAY • 10.10.2021 • S
ARTS + HOME + TRAVEL
Halloween haunts home all year long PHOTOS BY CHRISTIAN GOODEN, POST-DISPATCH
AISHA SULTAN
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
W
hen Mary Ann Owens turned 50, she hosted her own funeral. She was very much alive. But she wanted to mourn the end of her first five decades. She hired a band to play a funeral dirge. Pallbearers carried an empty casket. She wore her daughter’s old prom dress, a long silvery gown that gave her a ghost-like appearance. More than 80 of her friends and family paraded around Sublette Park in south St. Louis in their funeral attire. A friend gave a eulogy. Owens’ mother, a very religious woman, refused to attend the “celebration.” “That’s sacrilegious,” she told her daughter. “You’re going to miss a really good time,” Owens said. Her mom ended up attending to watch the spectacle. “We had a blast,” she recalls, of her unusual birthday party 13 years ago. Her idea of a good time has always trended a little dark — although she doesn’t see it that way. As a kid, she was fascinated by the supernatural and collected articles about the Loch Ness creature and Dracula. She was a “monster kid” who loved scary movies, sci-fi and classic and folklore monsters.
Halloween-themed décor is up year-round in Mary Ann Owens’ home. A first-floor window sign marks the entrance to Owens’ Haunted Rathskeller basement, which houses her collection of spooky paraphernalia.
Please see HALLOWEEN, Page S4
10 highlights of SLAM’s ‘Art Along the Rivers’ BY JANE HENDERSON
Mató-Tópe’s robe
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
A dynamic mix of artwork — from beautiful ceramics and glass to crazy quilts and weathervanes — joins more traditional oil paintings of this area’s great rivers in a bicentennial celebration at the St. Louis Art Museum. But the exhibition, “Art Along the Rivers,” goes far beyond fusty portraits of founders and leaders to show the flow of movement to and from this region and the creative richness of the area: • Western artists and photographers work with Native Americans, who also travel from the Plains to Washington, D.C., and back to protest contracts with the government. • Artist colonies spring up in Potosi, Cape Girardeau, University City and north St. Louis, among other places. • Iron ore, clay and other local materials are used for terracotta work, sculptures and corn cob pipes. European immigrants adapt Missouri resources to their own traditions, and more modern artists revise frontier metalwork.
Mató-Tópe, a Mandan leader, painted his own memoir on a buffalo hide robe about 1835. One scene shows his hand-to-hand combat against another tribe leader, whom he slayed. Mató-Tópe was painted wearing the robe by Swiss artist Karl Bodmer, who traveled up the Missouri River from St. Louis to Fort Clark (in present day North Dakota). Bodmer, who may have been given the robe, brought it back to St. Louis. Now, its home is in Switzerland, where it is a prized holding in Bern. COURTESY BERNISCHES HISTORISCHES MUSEUM, BERN
Please see SLAM, Page S6
Ivy League insider offers admission tips AISHA SULTAN
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
If you applied to college 20 or more years ago, you may not have any idea of the intense anxiety and pressure that peak this month for students aiming for the country’s most selective universities. The application timetable has shifted much earlier than in the past. October is the crunch month for students who want to make the Nov. 1 or Nov. 15 early application deadlines, which a growing number of students are opting to do. Last year’s record-high applications led to the lowest acceptance Please see SULTAN, Page S2
AT HOME
MADE IN ST. LOUIS
TRAVEL
DES PERES HOME IS HOMAGE TO COUPLE’S FAMILY, TRAVELS
COUPLE CRAFTS CLEVER CHIMES AND BIRDHOUSES TOGETHER
PACIFIC NORTHWEST COMBINES BEST OF CITY AND NATURE
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Pages S11-S12 STLLIFE
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