Having managed to get as far as London once there is now absolutely no holding me. The National Gallery last month and now, this month, the Courtauld Gallery, tucked away amongst the buildings of Somerset House, just off the Strand.
The Courtauld is one of those small galleries, of which there are several dotted around the capital, where you turn a corner and suddenly come across one of the world's great paintings, like this one by Manet. If you'd asked me where I thought this was I would have hazarded the National or the Louvre or the Prada. I wouldn't have expected to find it tucked away down a London side alley.
I had actually gone to see the Toulouse-Lautrec and Jane Avril exhibition. Jane Avril was one of the dancers at the Folies-Bergeres who Toulouse-Lautrec used as models for the posters and pictures he created for the theatre. We normally see her dressed in bright colours, legs flying, as she entertains the punters in the can-can. This was the picture that took my attention, though, showing the dancer in a much more somber mood as she leaves the theatre in the early hours of the morning almost unnoticed in her classic blue suit. There is something so contained about her in comparison with the abandon she displays in the more well known paintings. She looks separate, lonely. This is the canvas I could live with.
I had as much pleasure though from looking around the rest of the gallery. As well as the Manet they have some wonderful Van Gogh and Degas as well as an interesting collection of paintings by Rubens and it was the Rubens which brought home to me gaps in my knowledge that I know I have to do something about.
Where each of the individual creative arts is concerned I have a reasonably good understanding of the time line through from the medieval to the modern day. I know where Rubens comes in relation to Degas or when Mozart was composing in relation to Brahms. What I don't know is how they relate across the artistic boundaries. So, I find it amazing that Rubens was painting this picture of Moses and the Brazen Serpent at the same time and in the same place as Shakespeare was writing The Tempest. It isn't that I thought they were from different time periods, I just have no real understanding of how they relate at all.
Well, there is no point in simply bewailing my lack of understanding, is there? I need to do something about it and I'm going to, but that is for another post.
Oh, and before any of you ask, yes, of course I went to Fortnum and Mason for afternoon tea. This time I replaced the scones with a slice of Raspberry Yoghurt Cake but unfortunately I can't find a picture of this magnificent confection. I should have taken one before I demolished it. Anyway, I can definitely recommend you treat yourself, just be prepared to explain the bill to your bank manager next time you see him!
Showing posts with label Making Connections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Making Connections. Show all posts
Friday, 1 July 2011
Sunday, 1 May 2011
Making Connections ~ The Other
A librarian friend of mine is convinced that books talk to each other because she so often finds that a subject she has been reading about in one will then find echoes in whatever volume she picks up next. Well, I certainly wouldn't want to disagree with her. In fact, one of the reasons that I first took up blogging was precisely because I wanted somewhere that I could explore those connections as and when they arose, although then, as now, I was interested in connections across all disciplines rather than just in books. My weekend decision to do a bit of weeding and try and get back to reading for more than just escapism prompted me to think about that early resolve again and so this is going to be the first of what I hope will be a series of posts about making connections and the 'added value' such thematic 'echoes' can bring to the enjoyment of a book, a play, a piece of music or a work of art.
Over the past few weeks I've gone back to some of my earliest dramatic roots and have been re-reading the Greek Tragedies. One of the issues that has come up time and again has been the problems that the 5th Century BCE Athenians so obviously had with anyone who was in some way 'other'. You might have thought that this would be predictably with someone who was foreign, but far more often it was with someone who was female. Pity then poor Medea, who being both foreign and female was on a hiding to nothing before she ever set foot in Greece. OK, so what she did, killing not only her rival for Jason's love but also the children she, herself, had borne him, was perhaps not the ideal way to endear herself to the populous, but nevertheless she just didn't stand a chance.
What happens to Medea, especially the way she is set aside by Jason when he wants to take another wife, and the attitude expressed towards her, epitomises the often expressed regret of the Greek male that women had to exist at all. In a strictly patriarchal society and one which saw women as inferior beings, it was a source of great concern to the men of Athens that it was unavoidable that they had to consort with women in order to perpetuate their family through the production of a male heir. You get the feeling that if it hadn't been blasphemy to say so they would have told Zeus he'd got it wrong somewhere. All babies should spring fully formed out of their father's heads as Zeus's own child, Athena did - except, of course, such children should always be male. They might be able to get rid of a foreigner, but the dreaded woman they had to keep about them.
Coincidently (or not, as the case of the whispering books may be) I've also been doing a lot of work on The Taming of the Shrew this past few weeks. It's proving quite a frustrating play to study, mainly because wherever you look for academic discussion you find only two subjects being given any great attention, the relationship between The Taming of the Shrew and The Taming of a Shrew and the question of how you interpret what happens to Kate in that final scene, where it seems she capitulates completely to Petruchio's mastery. I might come back to the first of those issues at some point because I think the answer to why there are two very different but clearly related plays probably accounts, to some extent at least, for the disappointment brought about by the second, however, the interesting aspect of my study in relation to this particular set of connections was the extract I came across from Jack Holland's A Brief History of Misogyny printed in the programme for an RSC production of the play.
For men, women are the original 'Other' - the 'not you'...woman presents a...complex problem for those who designated her as 'the Other'. She is 'the Other' that cannot be excluded. Racists can avoid interaction with the despised group. But intercourse with women is in the end unavoidable, even for misogynists...intimacy with her is as unavoidable as it is essential. The very maintenance of human life and society depend upon it.
And there we have it again, this idea that there are some instances of 'otherhood' that you can avoid, but the 'otherhood' of gender is inescapable. I'm not certain, by the way, that this is a particularly helpful approach towards understanding what is going on in either A Shrew or The Shrew as texts, but clearly there was one RSC director who thought that it might provide a way of approaching the play when it came to trying to make sense of it on the stage.
Then along came instance the third, Julia Spencer-Fleming's second book in her Clare Ferguson series, A Fountain Filled With Blood. Spencer-Fleming is one of those crime writers whose works I shall not be throwing into the compost bin. Not only is this second book definitely better than the first, but she is also a writer who offers you subjects that require some serious thinking on the part of the reader, demanding that they consider their own position in relation to whatever issue she has chosen to raise. I suspect the fact that Clare is an Episcopalian Priest is not purely coincidental.
In this book the people who have been assaulted, and in one instance killed, are all homosexual. Clare is convinced that this is not a coincidence and that the fact that they are hate crimes should be made public. Russ Van Alstyne, the local Police Chief, disagrees, arguing that to do so could cause unnecessary panic. However, eventually he admits to Clare that this may not have been his only reason for refusing to publicise the sexuality of the victims.
"I guess I'm afraid that, deep down, all my reasons for not issuing a general warning or going to the press with the gay-bashing idea are because of ... who the victims were. Because I don't, you know, feel comfortable around gay guys."
"Bur Dr. Dvorak was - is - a friend of yours. That doesn't make any sense."
"We were friends at work. I knew who he was and what he was, but it never impinged on our relationship. He never talked about Paul, just like I never talked about my wife. The fact that he was gay was like having a friend at work who's Jewish, or vegetarian. You know about it, but you don't have to think about it, because what you do together never intersects with that other part of the person's life."
Here then is the other side of 'otherness', the 'other' you can pretend doesn't worry you because you can avoid ever having to face what marks that person out as different. (Or for that matter, what marks you out as different. Difference works both ways, although we rarely manage to recognise the fact.)
It makes you think, doesn't it? How many prejudices do we deny simply because we've never been put into a position where we've had to intersect or interact with the people who embody them? If we found ourselves in Russ's position could we be that honest? Unless I hie me to a nunnery, I have to acknowledge the gender 'other', but other 'others'? I'm not so sure.
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