Showing posts with label Fra Angelico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fra Angelico. Show all posts

5 August 2022

Talking Pictures

 Staircase to Heaven




It doesn't happen often, but I have just managed a fleeting visit to London.  From remote, rural Norfolk, where the clap of a butterfly's wings is a disturbance of the peace, to the mixed up confusion of the Qatari Capital of the World, where a fetid spatter of international tourists clamour with the exhausts of a million air conditioners....  it's just a disrupted train ride, it's merely a hundred miles, though it seems like a light year.....




I carry a camera.  People don't seem to notice - everyone's too busy talking on their phones or taking selfies.....  And I snap away at this and that; young:




And old:




Day (this was breakfast in Bar Italia - Frith Street, since 1949 - and the girl was trying to sip tea between visits to the bathroom - she really wasn't very well poor thing):




And night (there are a lot of very very expensive cars to be seen prowling the streets of Mayfair - and there are a lot of very very smart young women too....):




Some scenes are humdrum:




And some slightly bizarre:




But I found most delight in galleries, where framed faces from the past were eager to catch my attention.  In the wonderful Courtauld Gallery this gilded child was desperate for attention:



Mary Magdalen, by Fra Angelico (active 1417 - 1455)


And a couple of handsome young chaps seemed immersed in discussing the contents of a suspicious box one held in his left hand....



Tobias and the Archangel Raphael, from The Trinity with Saints Mary Magdalen and John the Baptist
by Sandro Botticelli (1445 - 1510)


And I love the cross talk between and embarrassed Adam and a bored Eve in the Garden of Eden:



Adam and Eve
Lucas Cranach the Elder (1526)


And there are the famous faces, too, ones that everyone knows (but not everyone hears....) From the self-harmed Vincent:




To the long suffering Suzon:



A Bar at the Folies-Bergère

Édouard Manet (1882)


To the quietly reflective younger Seamus Heaney:



Portrait of Seamus Heaney
Edward McGuire (1974)


Currently at the Courtauld, there is an exhibition of Edvard Munch's Masterpieces from Bergen, amongst which there is this scene:



Evening on Karl Johan
Edvard Munch (1892)


Then it is time to descend the staircase from heaven to the ground again:





Out into the heat and glare of the drought of London.  Parched parks:




Trees shaken by the oven breath of a southerly breeze:




And trickling slime at low tide:



The mouth of the Wandle, Wandsworth


But then I find refuge on the site of the Millbank Penitentiary, in that marble monument to the sugar cube, the Empire's Tate Building.......

Here I am welcomed by one Walter Sickert, a proto-Europhile (born in Munich, raised in London, active in France and Italy):




I knew nothing of this man, confusing him perhaps with a mash up of Whistler (his tutor), Sisley and Seurat (what do I know?) and at first I am not sure about what I see:




His portraits seem distorted and almost garish, like this 1923 painting of Cicely Hey, a painter herself, and close personal acquaintance of Sickert, who modelled for him several times.




But as I move through the rooms, he grows on me.  Pictures of Music Halls in London and Dieppe capture a world of entertainment more or less lost to the modern sofa.  I particularly like the energy of this shot of the Tiller Girls, reminding me of an old acquaintance, Pamela La Marca, once a Tiller herself, whose lively manner and homely speech enlivened many a dull parents' evening in Rome:




High-Steppers (c 1938-9)


And on the other hand, he finds art in domestic boredom in this study of a listless couple.  It was posed in his Hampstead Road studio using models Marie Hayes and Hubby (one of Sickert's assistants and models), 



Ennui (c 1914)

But most of all, I like his street scenes, bold, colourful slices of urban existence, exploring light on architectural planes. It's a familiar world.... without the noise and heat of today:




Maple Street (1916)


And with that, I'm gone. Back to the world of pierrot and parades, sunshine and shadow, empty deckchairs and the strained vaudeville of everyday modern life....



Brighton Pierrots (1915)






6 April 2022

Homage to Hockney

Hockney's Eye



Hockney's Eye is the title of an exhibition (until 29 August 2022) at The Fitzwilliam Museum and The Heong Gallery in Cambridge.  The exhibition is the first to explore the many ways of seeing in the art of David Hockney. 




Beautiful Tulips


And I am in Cambridge to see this show.  The first time I have been out of Norfolk for months....  The first time on a train this year.  And, Oh, the crowds!  I thought there was a pandemic on, but it seems as if I am the only one cautious enough to mask my face....

Oh, now I see what a halo is!




Annunciation II, after Fra Angelico

Nothing and no-one can better Fra Angelico.  The delicacy of his mid-fifteenth century frescoed Annunciation on the wall of the convent of San Marco in Florence is lace dipped in champagne to soothe a fevered heart.  Apparently the awareness of space shown in the picture signals the emergence of art from the Gothic to the Renaissance.  The wonderful thing about Hockney's take on this is that while he captures the dynamic between Gabriel and Mary his is not a mere copy nor a paltry likeness - he changes the perspective without losing the narrative, and freshens the colour to delight the modern eye.....  Cosimo de Medici may not have been impressed, but times have changed....

This exhibition is integrated with the permanent  show at the Fitzwilliam, so that Hockney's pieces are a part of the History of Art, at one with the development of representational painting.  The convention of attempting to transfer three dimensions to a flat picture is something that all artists have struggled with, before and after an understanding of perspective was developed.  





My all time favourite painting is Meindert Hobbema's The Avenue at Middelharnis, (usually on display in the National Gallery, London).  I am not entirely sure what attracts me to this picture, though there is certainly something about the relaxed attitudes of the figures here and there in sight that bring a sense of ease.  And then there is the disappearing avenue with its wavering cart tracks....  

Anyway, it transpires that this is also one of Hockney's faves, and here he is paying his respect to the Old Master....



After Hobbema (Useful Knowledge). 2017


Again, it is not a copy, nor is it a clever reinterpretation.  It is a revisiting and a way of recognising the genius of the original.  Perhaps (?) it is like playing Bach on the piano - not how it was written to be, but a way to enjoy this in the modern age?

Another examination of perspective and vanishments is Le Parc des Sources, Vichy. 1970.  Here, an empty chair invites the onlooker to join Hockney's friends in admiring the distance.




And sure enough, we are soon wondering if we may join the party.....




I wish I was there.....

Hockey himself is very present in this exhibition.  There are videos of him explaining his work - notably one on the Camera Lucida - and there are panels which show the entire process of creation on his iPad.  This sequence shows just three moments in a continuum where the artist builds an impression of a riverside:

 





I tell you I love it.  In this age where darkness falls at dawn every day, it is uplifting to be reminded that there is light in life.  It is wonderful to engage with the artist in his enjoyment of a frosty lane as captured by nine cameras mounted on his car:




And it is magnificent to see his wide angle view of the Grand Canyon, where perspective becomes almost 180 degrees and colour is rainbow simplification....  

Somehow you can taste the aridity....



Grand Canyon I. 2017

Hockney himself also welcomes you to The Heong Gallery, where he is discussing oriental art by the gardens of Downing College:






While at the end of the hall I find Viewers Looking at a Readymade with Skull and Mirrors, 2018, an extraordinary invention of mirrored stillness.....

It's a picture that brings to mind Diego VelĂ¡zquez's Las Meninas....





But that just goes to show how our eyes are connected to our brains and to our hearts.  As the exhibition notes suggest, We see things through the filters of memory and feeling....  And we are all different.

I do recommend this exhibition. When times are difficult, it is good to know there is another world..... And it is good not to dwell for a moment on which world is illusory.


*    *    *


All the artworks shown here, with the exception of Meindert Hobbema's The Avenue at Middelharnis, are copyright of David Hockney - I have taken the liberty of sharing them simply to encourage others to visit the exhibition and to admire, as I do, his art.  I have no financial or professional interest in this.

[Should anyone object to the use of these images I will immediately take them down, with apologies for my presumption.]




A shadow admires



Thank you David.....



14 October 2012

Firenze (Florence)


A Day in Florence







With recent advances in the services provided by Trenitalia, Florence is now only an eighty-minute trip from Rome.  What is more, you can book your own seats on the trains from home, on the Internet, and, with Eurostar, move comfortably and swiftly between cities.  In some ways this brilliant advance in transport may, however, be a drawback, making the world ever smaller.  It’s like the Apple or Blackberry.  It’s all so easy now; we take things for granted.  In the “good” old days, the first stop out of Rome on the way to Florence was at La Storta, where lunch at the Trattoria del Quarto Secolo might have given you the strength to make it as far as Campagnano, or perhaps Sutri, depending on whether you were travelling in style or tourist class.  Whatever else this meant, by the time you got to Florence, you were probably in need of at least five days rest, giving you time perhaps to see the major sights before moving on.  At today’s pace, you’ll do a bit of shopping in Via dei Calzaiuoli, have a bistecca alla fiorentina for lunch, and then back on the Eurostar to Rome for tea at Babington’s.



 

There are, however, variables and you don’t have to be so hurried.  Florence is a city of changeable weather, and I, for one, seem to have been quite unlucky on some of my visits.  The surrounding mountains and the nature of the Arno valley, combine to create a microclimate that can be very cold in winter or very heavy in summer.  And then, of course, it rains sometimes.  The first time I went there was the tenth anniversary of the 1966 floods, and it was very worryingly wet.  I squelched about the streets encountering shopkeepers uneasily checking their defences and entering churches that still bore the tide marks half way up the walls.  Subsequent trips have been icily cold, with winds like liquid nitrogen scouring down from the Casentino.  On other occasions it has been breathlessly hot, with brown clouds and an airlessness that gave even Michelangelo’s implacable David something of a headache.  On some occasions, however, I have been treated to perfection, and have greatly enjoyed afternoons in the Boboli gardens or on the Ex-Forte Belvedere (partially closed at present for restoration, but a delightful place to picnic and view the city below).




The weather is not a huge issue, however, for Florence is a very internal city – indeed perhaps this is because of the weather.  Massaccio’s Adam and Eve, bitterly ashamed of themselves for their stupid disobedience (or simply annoyed that they got caught?) care not a fig leaf for the climate, as their punishment is fixed within the Brancacci Chapel, roofed over by the strength of Santa Maria del Carmine.  From another point of view, perhaps, one of the delights of Florence for many visitors is to take hot chocolate in CafĂ© Rivoire on Piazza della Signoria (though my preference is for un espresso at Gilli’s on Piazza della Repubblica) and it’s the internal glitter, the antique but well-maintained opulence, that is the attraction.  Exteriors, by and large, in Florence (despite notable exceptions) don’t count for much.  Just look at the facades of San Lorenzo or Santo Spirito for confirmation – they just aren’t there.  The streets don’t really lend themselves to views; it is after all a cramped Roman settlement at a prestigious bridging point.  Buildings have risen on the original grid plan and the streets have become deeper and darker.  It is very hard to match outsides with the glories within in this proud and self-contained city.  Try to imagine what lies within the rough-hewn fortress of the Palazzo Medici-Riccardi for instance, and then go and view Benozzo Gozzoli’s Journey of the Magi (1459-1463) within.  The contrast between the vibrant colours and the exciting swirl of people and animals on the interior walls and the rugged, chipped and impregnable walls outside is, to use a local word, impressionante.  Despite, of course, the irony that the walls within depict outside scenes.  Almost as if the whole of life is an illusion.




Or a piece of theatre, which is coincidentally what I stumbled on in the vicinity of the Piazza della Signoria one cold and rainy December afternoon.  Some hundred or more mature citizens of Florence had got themselves into medieval costumes and, with a variety of weapons and musical instruments, were parading in a stop-start, heavy, slow procession.  Trumpets blared a tune, followed by martial drumbeats, and then, at someone’s imperceptible signal, the four characters in charge of the trundling cannon, set fire to the charge and all were deafened to a standstill.  And then it started again.  Police in escort, ladies and gentlemen, hand in hand.  Striped pantaloons, red shoes, steel helmets, halberds, pikes, and flags – the works.  As the crowd pressed in, the rain began to intensify, the whole troupe approached the Palazzo della Signoria, and, then….  it broke up.  Tourists had their photos taken arm in arm with five hundred year old gentlemen; the party was over.




I asked a frightened looking policeman what it was all about.  He hesitated, twitching like a rabbit with a stopwatch.  Una manifestazione,” he explained.  Scusi, devo andare.”  Leaving me feeling like Alice in a slightly awkward Wonderland.




And so, if it’s a phoney world, why go there?  Why does half the world knock on the door?  Could it be that this is perhaps the only place in the world where you can see a fur coat on a bicycle?  Could it be that this place has perhaps the greatest concentration of pictorial and sculptural riches anywhere in the world?   As with so much, some of it is a matter of opinion.  Some will argue that Michelangelo’s David is overbearing and disproportionate and that Cellini’s Perseus (and Donatello’s David) are too pretty and posy.  But the arguments will continue, because of personal opinion, and informed opinion at that.  Those that prefer Fra Angelico have plenty to see.  Those who enjoy the brightness and mannerist exuberance of Pontormo in Santa Felicita cannot complain, while those who love Domenico Ghirlandaio have only to go to Santa Trinita if they cannot get into the Refectory of Ognissanti (recently elevated to be a Benedictine Abbey, after the Franciscans moved on). 




Or, indeed, look inside Filippo Brunelleschi’s dramatic and elegant Ospedale Degli Innocenti in the busy Piazza Santissima Annunziata.  Within, apart from the offices of UNICEF, aptly housed in this ancient Foundling Hospital, you can find the masterpiece of Domenico Ghirlandaio, the Adoration of the Magi, as well as the beautiful Madonna col Bambino degli Innocenti. by Sandro Botticelli, which was painted between 1465 and 1467.  Or, again, slip into the Palazzo Davanzati,  one of the few remaining medieval Florentine houses, a palazzo signorile, which dates back to the 14th century; it is an extraordinary, wonderfully decorated and furnished building, recently reopened after extensive works.  Internally, at least, Florence is a feast.  Enough to feed a thousand art history schools.




Externally, however, it does have a few glories.  There’s marble enough to interest the lapidarian, from Santa Croce, to Santa Maria Novella, to the Duomo to Giotto’s exquisite Campanile up to the gem on the hill of San Miniato del Monte, (which is as good inside as out).  And when up on the hill, rest awhile and gaze back over the town and its coursing river.  You can see why the Romans needed it, and why everyone else since has kept it on the map.  You can perhaps understand why Dante loved the place so much, and why, for a while at least, it was capital of the new Italy. 



And when you have done musing, wander down the hill again and try one of the Hostarie in Via San Niccolo, or walk on back to the central market and sniff out the Trattoria Gozzi, where, despite the demise of the imposing Sergio himself a few years ago, the enduring standards of friendliness and honesty are practised by his son.  It’s only open for lunch, but their food is procured daily from the adjacent covered market and prepared in traditional Tuscan ways.  Ribollita, aqua cotta, pappa del pomodoro; excellent red wine, first class meat.  Its welcoming interior lit by bright chandeliers that reflect off the Della Robbia (type) ceramics on the walls.  Only now, I notice, the chandeliers are burning energy efficient bulbs, a faultless piece of modernisation, that perhaps matches the practical resourcefulness and famous intelligence of the Florentines.




And if that was the lunch, an eighty-minute nap on the train back to Rome will do just nicely!







Trattoria Toscana Gozzi Sergio
Piazza San Lorenzo, 8r, Florence, Italy
(no website)