Sticks, String and Stuff

2013-05-22 20.56.06This week in drawing class we were back using ink and non conventional materials, experimenting with mark making while seeking to capture a still life.

In practice, what that meant for me, was ink, a stick, the remains of a pampas grass frond,  a two pronged twig, a leaf and a knotted piece of plaited string.  I’d found everything apart from the string in the road outside; but I was particularly pleased to use the plaited string, as I had kept it from a couple of terms ago when I found myself plaiting quite a lot of the stuff in order to make a three dimensional  drawing from the string and some bendy strips of wood.

There were animal skulls with curly horns and a guitar in the still life, but true to form, I was the one fascinated by the lacy table cloth and the peacock feather fan; it’s all in the patterns.

Not Dressing Up for The Radio

From the back of the Radio Theatre

From the back of the Radio Theatre

In the early days of broadcasting by the BBC the story goes, the radio announcers had to wear evening dress, bow ties and dinner jackets, to read the evening news.  Somehow it must have been thought that the discerning listener would be able to tell if the gentleman inside the crystal set was improperly attired.

Some time between then and now, standards have changed.  If the audience can’t see you, it doesn’t matter what you wear.  It makes a certain sense, sitting in a sound proof room in a huge building somewhere, what does it matter what you wear?

I’d never really thought about it, until I went to a recording of the Radio 4 satirical programme The News Quiz a couple of weeks ago, where it was clear that the notion of informality for the radio, even when in front of an audience of 150 or so, was now the accepted norm.  All four panellists and the host were dressed in broadly what might be described as t-shirt and jeans, and probably not even their ‘best’ such combination.

It’s not a judgement, merely an observation, but it surprised me.  It perhaps shouldn’t have, because now I come to think of it, on the couple of occasions I’ve been to stand up comedy events, the performers have all been dressed as if they’ve stopped in on their way to the supermarket to tell a few jokes.

The News Quiz is a 30 minute programme, for which, on the night I was there, they recorded nearly 90 minutes of chat, and it was during the not very funny longueurs in the middle of the experience that I started wondering about why it was that the audience, looking largely like people who had come to Broadcasting House straight from work, were significantly more smartly dressed than the performers.

It’s clearly the fashion.  Perhaps it’s still the tail-end of the revolt against the ‘old fashioned’ comics of the 1960s and 70s who told mildly offensive jokes dressed in wide lapelled velvet jackets and stick on bow ties, who were swept away in the 80s by the punk aesthetic of determined offence-giving through curled lips, while  in ripped clothing.

But now when the same performers are on one of the plethora of TV shows that gives them a living, they are made up and titivated for the bright lights and camera….. I developed a theory, although it might already seem obvious to you (some of the recording was really rather dull and long winded…..):

Standard of smartness  must have a directly proportional relationship to the number of people who are going to see you, and each job or profession has its own base level.  So, for example, if you work in a professional advisory role, the base level is sitting at your desk talking on the phone, so ‘casual’ clothing is appropriate, but meeting one customer or client in a day would mean you would dress smartly;  if you’re a comedian, one room full of people is the base level, so jeans and t-shirt is the uniform, but if it’s on television, where people you can’t see can see you, then smarter attire is called for.  The key determinant in each calculation is clearly the base level at which no effort is required.

Being in a Radio 4 audience is relatively straightforward: join the mailing list and take your chances in the ticket lottery (and it’s another free thing to do in London).  You could come up with your own theories……..

The Cloud Leopard

I have recently started following the Sequins and Cherry Blossom blog which talks about Japanese related events in London, and it was thanks to a post there a couple of weeks ago that I heard about the exhibition of Kusama works at the Victoria Miro gallery.  Since seeing the Kusama show at the Tate early last year, I’ve thought a lot about her work, especially the compulsive covering of surfaces with dots, and the endless repetition evident all of her work.

The remarkable thing about the new work on display, is that it is all about love and happiness, and it’s a life affirming message from someone in her 80s who has had a life not without difficulties.  There are bright sculptures, made of stuffed material shapes, painted in contrasting tones with the signature dots and eyes; their pointy edges and spottiness made me smile.  They did, as the gallery notes suggested, look as if they had jumped out of the accompanying canvases, making their forms three dimensional and dancing across the floor.

2013-05-20 08.48.20From there, maintaining the Japanese flavour, we headed down to Craft Central in Clerkenwell to see The Cloud Leopard by Nahoko Kojima.  It is an incredibly intricate piece of work.  Cut from a single sheet of black paper and suspended from the ceiling it gives an extraordinary impression of a big cat creeping across the air.  From some angles the lines from which it is suspended are invisible, and it looks like it is floating.  How the artist managed to work on a two dimensional sheet of paper, which when suspended creates a coherent three dimensional shame is a wonder.

The artist apparently currently has a life size polar bear as her work in progress to be revealed later this year.  I shall certainly be looking out for it.

The morning’s outings were complete with a lunchtime concert of chamber works from three members of the Bach family and Telemann, at St Anne’s Lutheran church in Gresham St in the City.  As it was my first experience of a lunchtime concert like this, I hadn’t realised that it was all right to sit and eat your lunch while you listen, so I sat, feeling a touch peckish, watching other people eat sandwiches and salads out of boxes while we listened to the music.  The Ten Commandments on panels behind the musicians reminded me not to covet my neighbour’s lunch, however.  I had thought there would be more City types in suits, but the audience looked to be mainly comprised of retired people, or others like me who had wandered in on a day off.

Another low cost day of entertainment in the city.

A Means of Escape

IMG_0072This photo is from the rather dusty archives, but I remember exactly where and when it was taken.  Mexico, Progresso to be precise, November 1994.

It was my first trip to Mexico, and after a few hectic days in Mexico City we had flown to Merida, where we hired a car with the intention of driving across the Yucatan peninsular, from the Gulf of Mexico to the Caribbean.  This was the first day of having the car, and we took a day trip north out of Merida, to the coast at Progresso.  It still bore some of the scars of hurricane damage from a couple of years before, but there were wide sandy beaches and the ocean, and the first lunch, of grilled fish, we had really enjoyed  since arriving in the country.

This was the moment I really felt like I was on holiday, that I had escaped from normal life for a while.  It helped that the sun was shining, and that we had, with no planning whatsoever, hired the perfect little red car; a car so distinctive, and so unlike the usual anodyne hire car, that just seeing it in a photo reminds me of a whole holiday.  And look, it was still shiny.  By the time we had completed our trip, it was covered in dust, but had been the envy of many of the people,  we had encountered along the way, especially tourists on group coach trips denied our ability to escape from the crowds.

‘A Human Being Died That Night’ at Hampstead Theatre

2013-05-17 17.00.23The play begins in the lobby outside the small Hampstead Theatre downstairs.  It is here that Noma Dumezweni, as Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela, is giving a presentation on the human capacity for evil and the possibility of forgiveness based on her experience of interviews in Pretoria Central Prison with Eugene de Klock.

As she talks, she leads the audience into theatre, and in near darkness we file past floor to ceiling bars, inside which sat a man, dressed in an orange jumpsuit, shackled by the ankles to the floor, before taking our seats.  It is a very dramatic beginning, and creates a feeling of intense claustrophobia in the small space.

As part of her work with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Goboda-Madikizela interviewed de Kock, who was then serving a sentence of two life sentences plus 212 years for crimes against humanity, for his role as one of the main assassins of the South African Apartheid regime.

As a psychologist she wanted to understand why, after a hearing into the death of two black police officers, de Kock had asked to speak directly to the widows, to ask for their forgiveness.  It seemed entirely contrary to the terrible acts he had committed in the past; was there still a human underneath all that brutality, and could she overcome her distaste for the man, to find out?

The question that hangs over the whole play is whether is his apparent remorse is genuine, or a game he is playing in an attempt to have his sentence reduced.  The paradox is that he gives the appearance of being a fundamentally moral person, albeit one who believed in the apartheid regime.  He wrong foots his interviewer from their first meeting, by standing to greet her when she enters his cell, and treating her throughout with an old fashioned politeness.

Through all the terrible admissions what clearly angers him is that officials higher up in the regime, from whom he took his orders had avoided imprisonment by pointing the finger of blame solely at him.  While acknowledging his responsibility for his own wrongdoing, he believed he was part of a bigger machine, and that there were others as responsible as him, who refused to acknowledge it.

‘I was a veteran fighter.  That’s how I saw myself.  But at the end of the day Pumla, all that I am is a veteran of lost ideologies.  Once you realise that, you lose your innocence.’

It was a mesmerising evening.  Matthew Marsh, as de Kock, was tremendous, accent perfect,  suggesting both the power and strength that allowed him to be so deadly, but also the twisted convictions that drive him, which, once they were gone, left him powerless but with a clear eye to the consequences.

It’s not something I knew anything about before watching the play, but found it a compelling examination of the idea of what can possibly constitute real remorse and forgiveness; and where a belief in a twisted morality and imperative can lead.

The play is on until 15 June.

For Free in the City

2013-05-15 15.46.45Continuing my project to try out new and, where possible, inexpensive or free, things in London, to challenge that assumption that everything here is expensive, I spent a day this week in the City.  Were it not for the rather nice lunch I had(!), I could say that the day cost me nothing other than the public transport fares.

I started out at the Museum in the Bank of England.  Until I visited the Sir John Soane Museum last year, I hadn’t known that there even was a museum at the Bank, but then subsequently on walks along Threadneedle St towards the Tube station, I’d noticed a sign on a wooden stand by one of the grand doors indicating that the entrance to the Museum was around the corner (in Bartholomew St), and each time I would remind myself that I’d like to visit.

Inside, a chronological history of the Bank leads you through the evolution of the building, from small beginnings on Threadneedle Street, through the building of the Soane edifice, to its subsequent remodelling in the 20th century.  I was entranced by some drawings of the construction work in the 1930s, such detail and precision in pen and ink drawings, showing the huge hole in the centre of the exterior walls which seem to be the only remaining sections of the Soane design.  Digging big holes in the City is clearly not a new phenomenon.

The Royal charters signed by King William and Mary are there too; huge scrolls filled with elaborate and densely packed writing, which at first was impossible to decipher, both for its arcane language and ancient script.  We debated for a few minutes whether it was in Latin, until some of the words came into focus as English.

I had a go at lifting up a gold bar (secured within a perspex box and observed by no less than four security cameras), and examining all the security features of a £50 note under a brightly lit magnifier.  And in between, absorbed the history and evolution of the bank from a purely commercial enterprise with an initial capital of £1.2m to its current role as effectively one of the organs of State. There was also a fair amount of pointing at old bank notes, with exclamations of  ’I remember them’ together with the realisation that there was a £20 note in circulation in the 1970s and very early 80s that we had never seen, such a large amount of money was it at the time.

There were interactive displays explaining inflation to children, and a booklet to explain Quantitative Easing to everyone else.  I took one, because, if I’m completely honest I don’t really understand it, and, after reading the booklet, I’m still not sure I do….

From the Bank, via the aforementioned lunch, we made our way to the Guildhall Art Gallery, to discover that in fact it is called ‘The Guildhall Art Gallery and Roman Amphitheatre’.  If I’d spent any time thinking about it I suppose  should have known that there would be art in the City; after all where there is wealth, art usually follows, but my assumption would have been that it was all kept behind closed doors in private collections.

The Guildhall apparently has a very large collection dating back to the 15th century, only a small part of which can be displayed at any one time. As a collection it must truly reflect changing tastes and fashions of the wealthy burghers of London over the intervening centuries.  In amongst the pieces currently on display there were things from both the Victorian and mid twentieth century which were not at all to my taste by artists the curators must clearly be hoping will come back into fashion soon.

A temporary exhibition highlighted the depth in the collection of Portraiture, which was fascinating, including Tudor ladies in the finest of laces, each strand and twist of which was painstakingly replicated on canvas, as well as a Holbein of Henry VIII.  And there was a nice synchronicity in that the lady custodian  pointed us in the direction of two full length portraits of our old friends William and Mary, grantors of the Charter to the Bank of England, which have been in the Guildhall collection since they were painted at the end of the 17th century.

And I mustn’t forget the Roman Amphitheatre; in truth, a few remains of stone walls and two glass cases of artefacts, but displayed very effectively in a darkened basement of the Gallery, atmospherically lit to give the opportunity to appreciate some of the scale it might have been.

The day began with me feeling rather ignorant that I’d not known it was possible to visit these places, and I finished it feeling a little better educated; and you can’t say fairer than that.

‘Automatic’ Drawing

2013-05-15 20.46.20This was an interesting week in drawing class.  We were drawing with no plan, and looking at nothing.  It was all about letting the mood take over; and given the baroque background music the teacher played during the evening, lots of curls and swirls emerged.

Armed with only a piece of paper on the easel, some charcoal, ink and white paint in plastic cups and a couple of paint brushes, we had to stand as far away from the drawing as possible and fling a few lines onto the paper, and then fill in and improve it.  At various junctures during the class we had to move around and do what we thought would enhance our fellow classmates’ works, and at one point we were all applying ink from a brush taped to a three foot bamboo pole.

It was all very messy and quite good fun, although really all I did was make a mess.

And don’t you go trying to see anything in either of these.

2013-05-15 20.18.24

On A Misty Morning

2013-05-06 11.28.30

This is the pier in Hastings.  The day before had been warm and sunny, and something about the cooling over night caused the length of the coast in East Sussex to be covered in this morning mist on Bank Holiday Monday.  It was considered significant enough an event for the mist air over Brighton to be featured on the local television news (which might say more about the quality of the news, and our love of discussing the weather, especially over Bank Holiday Weekends, than it does about the rarity of the meteorological event).

The pier has been through a few trials and tribulations in the recent past.  Over the ten years I have known Hastings it has grown more and more shabby and less and less of it has been open for access, and then, a fire nearly destroyed it a couple of years ago.   I believe there is now a plan, and some money, to restore it.  I hope so, as seeing it, even in its sadly bolted and barred, dilapidated state, on a morning like this, adds so much to the appreciation of the landscape and the sea.  The waves lap against the shingle beach, but we want to see more, to reach out; we want to walk out over the sea and hear and feel the water lapping under our feet.  There is something about the idea of a pier as a place of entertainment and promenade that feels integral to our seaside heritage.

With thanks to Ailsa for suggesting beaches as a theme for this week.

The Estorick Collection

2013-05-08 11.03.45I discovered the Estorick Collection thanks to the information accompanying my recent subscription for an Art Pass.  And then, when I saw where it was, just off Highbury Corner, I couldn’t believe that I’d never noticed it before.  It comprises a collection of modern Italian art, with Futurists works as its core.  On the day we visited it was in a changeover period between special exhibitions, so we were only able to see four of the galleries.

It’s a small collection, but well displayed in the rooms of a tall thing Georgian House in Canonbury Square.  We had the place pretty much to ourselves, with plenty of time to look at the works and to discuss them, and then to launch into those conversations about random connections between otherwise unconnected things that always seem to be inspired by looking at art.

What with the paintings, a nice cafe and a small courtyard sheltered by the surrounding trees, it’s a good place to spend a couple of hours of anyone’s time.

2013-05-08 12.57.43After our taste of European culture we went for a walk along the towpath of the Regent’s Canal.  Walking the length of the canal at some point is on my list of things to do when the weather and my energy levels permit, but this week we settled for a stroll of half a mile or so from the point the canal emerges from the Islington Tunnel along towards Hackney.

With the overhanging trees, the lunchtime runners and the cyclists ringing their bells to announce their presence, we might have been somewhere far from inner city London.  What is it about a body of water which improves an environment?  Were it not for the water it would be like walking along a road in an industrial estate, but with it, there it was possible at times to imagine we were in the countryside.

We were in search of lunch at the Towpath cafe, and we were rewarded, by being able to sit outside to eat, even if it was a little breezy, overlooking the newly built blocks of flats which now jostle along the banks of the canal alongside the remnants of the light industrial buildings which predate them by decades.  On the way back, we stopped at another cafe for a cup of tea.  It’s all very civilised and I can recommend it as a fun way to spend an afternoon.

An Odd Angle

2013-05-01 19.32.49I do enjoy finding a new and unexpected perspective through which to see the city around me.  I’ve frequently remarked on how many places it is possible to see the Shard from, even places where one would have thought it must be obscured.  The area around London Bridge and Borough is entirely dominated by the shadow of it rising improbably high above everything else, and because the school where I’ve been learning to draw under its looming presence, I’ve spent a good deal of time looking at it as it was finished.

From this angle in Red Cross Street it makes all the tall buildings in the City of London, on the other side of the River look rather small and insignificant.  That’s the Gherkin and a sun kissed Tower 42 peeping out over the railway viaduct.  If all that construction continues, soon, those previously iconic structures will be dwarfed by everything around them, and we’ll forget how tall they used to look.

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