Trip To The State Of Liberty
On February 9th, we, Fermata Art Foundation, left for the state of New Hampshire, like the previous trip to the state of liberty, this time we were hit by bad weather, in the dark, icy rain beating down on us with all its might, as if trying to prevent us from reaching our destination. After a few hours of driving, we arrived at the Hooksett Public Library, where we were to hold our presentation.
The library building was cozy, library staff met us at the main door and gave us a small tour of the building. We soon started setting up the art installations in the great hall, after the technical preparation of the presentation, we had a little time left before the start, I took advantage of this time to talk to one of the administration members, Ms. Brittany Overton, who turned out to be a former journalist, I was happy with this detail because it was a nice short We started talking about journalism.
The presentation turned out to be very interesting and inclusive, I was pleasantly surprised by the fact that every time, in different auditoriums, the public always asks me all new, new questions. This speaks to the uniqueness of our individualism, it is clear that people in America are very interested in art and cultural differences. For the interested public, a 1-hour verbal presentation is not enough to form knowledge about small pearls in the Caucasus region, or even in other regions, for this, it is necessary to create a regular Georgian cultural development center in the USA where those who want to can always get additional knowledge and popularize Georgia on the entire American continent.
Before the end of the presentation, before leaving Ms. Brittany handed me a small brown envelope with my name written on it, I thanked her and said goodbye, on the way I opened the envelope, and inside the envelope, I found a thank you card written with the name of the library,
Even more euphoric and filled with emotion, this small detail gave me the greatest human joy, first of all, a big thank you to the Hooksett Public Library and the entire library staff, for this small but very emotionally humane gift.
I went home full of positive emotions, thinking about how little is needed to make a person happy.