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Images are
everything at the Silver Star B&B in
southwestern Wis. (Chicago Tribune)
From: Knight Ridder/Tribune News
Service
Date: October 14, 2002
Author: Leroux, Charles
SPRING GREEN, Wis. _ Turn off a
small country road onto a still
smaller one and then, at the sign,
take a tiny road rising through the
forest. Suddenly, the road clears
the woods and there it is, across a
meadow, at the top of the hill, just
as Jean Langer saw it in her mind's
eye a dozen years ago, the Silver
Star B&B Inn. There
are bed-and-breakfasts all over
Wisconsin, all across America, in
fact, as this country increasingly
has embraced a British tradition of
charming surroundings, hearty
breakfasts, interesting, involved
hosts. The Silver Star has all that
plus something most don't. It has a
theme. That theme
appears in the sophisticated art
that hangs on the rustic log walls
of the great room and in the
hallways upstairs. It fills the
shelves of the library and leaps out
in the names of the 10 ten
guestrooms. The theme, Langer's
passion, is photography.
The inn itself is, in a sense, a
photo, a capturing of an image. In
this case the image was a mental
picture Maine native Langer had of a
ski lodge transposed to the 340
acres of land her husband, Michael,
bought nearly two decades ago.
"It was to be the kind of place
where you can kick back and relax, a
rustic place," she said. "It took me
three years to design the plans for
construction, but it came out
exactly like the original image I
had." Langer
graduated from the Maine College of
Art with a degree in photography.
The photos she takes tend to be of
urban and suburban residences that
would repulse the editors of
Architectural Digest, compositions
in aluminum siding and chain-link
fence. A collector, as well as a
taker, of photographs, Langer has
adorned the walls of the Silver Star
with contemporary and vintage
photos. She seems especially fond of
old group photos in which the then
momentousness of being photographed
shows in serious faces. At different
times in different places, she has
bought early 20th century shots of
lovely young girls. Only when she
was hanging them did she realize
that three images are of the same
girl. "She must have been the
photographer's daughter," Langer
said, doing what we all do when
looking at photos of people unknown
and long gone _ wondering what their
stories were.
A large, wonderful photo faces the
stone fireplace on the first floor
of the lodge. It shows a line-up of
huge and now antique steam tractors
then in their prime, probably caught
at a farm equipment competition.
Some of the operators sit aboard,
like jockeys on metal mammoths.
Though individually decorated, the
guestrooms have some things in
common. None has a phone or a TV.
All have private baths and a
connection with photography. The
Brady Suite honors Civil War
photographer Matthew Brady. The
Langers are in the process of
getting some Brady photos for the
room, part of a goal of taking room
identifications further than just
the names. The Szarkowski Suite is
named for John Szarkowski, former
head of the department of
photography at the Museum of Modern
Art. Szarkowski has heard of this
honor but has not yet come to visit
"his" room. The Magnum Suite
celebrates the syndicate of that
name and founders Robert Capa and
Henri Cartier-Bresson. There's the
Steiglitz-Steichen Suite
(photographers Alfred and Edward)
and the Cameron Suite for Julia
Margaret Cameron and other women in
photography, and so on.
The Silver in the inn's name refers
to the silver halide compound in
film emulsion that reacts to light
thus recording images.
Near one end of the hall, there's a
nook like library, an inviting place
to curl up with mostly old books and
magazines. There's "How to Make Good
Pictures," an early Eastman Kodak
publication; "Split Tone Printing;"
and "Joseph Suder, Poet of Prague.,"
Magazines include Zoom, Aperture,
Nueva Luz (new light) and current
issues of American Photographer.
As his wife's vision became real, so
did Michael Langer's dream. He had
grown up on a dairy farm and longed
to leave his job (property
management) and the city (Madison)
and raise their 3-year-old son,
Palidon, in the country. Now 11,
Palidon (with a slightly changed
spelling) was named for the hero of
the TV show of the late `50s and
early `60s, "Have Gun, Will Travel."
Five years ago, the Langer family
expanded with the birth of Ayla
(after a character in Jean Auel's
Earth's Children series). She was
behind the desk when visitors from
the Children Tribune arrived. She
explained, "I'm learning to register
guests." She's also learning
photography. On a trip south to the
old Wisconsin mining town, Mineral
Point, last winter, Ayla took a
photo that, it was mentioned, was
reminiscent of her mother's work.
Ayla leaned over and whispered,
"Mine's better." |