Paris: details #3

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Sculptures everywhere in Paris,
an abundance of art in everyday life,
feasts for the eyes and the soul…

Paris: details #2

Some time ago already I had finished the posts about our London and UK portion of our spring trip. Since then I’ve been trying to find time to get back to writing about our week in Paris before this year is out. This online travel journal is a great place for me to gather together my impressions and images of this fabulous trip so I’m delighted that readers are also enjoying it. Oh, where’s my travel diary? For now, just a few photos…

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London: details #6

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Continuing the photo series of street furniture in London’s Muswell Hill neighbourhood…

I love Thomas Dudley, Dauntless Ductile who sounds like a character in a children’s storybook.
See also:
London: details (#1)
London: details #2
London: details #3
London: details #4
London: details #5

visiting Tate Modern

On the morning of our last day in London we went to the Tate Modern to see their collection of modern and contemporary art to balance out the older works seen previously. With us were our daughter and granddaughters who were again taking part in another childrens’ tour.

First the building fascinated, starting with the sloping pavement down into the entrance which seemed rather formidable and unattractive at first. The slope continued inside the building, in what is called the Turbine Hall which apparently is an exhibition space but was bare that day. It was a lively gathering place for groups of children and youths, we smiled at a young child chasing a runaway toy down the slope. The huge bookstore next to it looked like it had a rich collection of books though we were not buying. We were first attracted by a fascinating video in the lobby from which we learned that this building in its earlier incarnation was a a power station.

The collections are arranged thematically rather than chronologically which made for some interesting and thought provoking placements of artists. The large open bright spaces of the rooms suited the modern works and never felt crowded except the odd time a guided school group went through. It was exciting to see the famous pieces and also meet some unknowns. Occasionally I was disappointed that there were sometimes only one or two pieces representing certain artists. Again, we took no photos so I’m relying on the Tate’s website to link to a very few of the highlights.

Marlene Dumas’ work excited me for this was my first time seeing it live

Frances Bacon and Anish Kapoor are both favourites of mine

Several Picassos including this sculpture

Roualt was a favourite of mine in my art student days

David Smith’s sculptures I like

Cornelia Parker is an artist new to me, I loved her full room size installation. The photo does not do it justice but do check out the ‘additional view’ for a detail.

Anselm Kiefer is a powerful artist whose work I’ve seen and admired in Germany but I think we missed this room!

In one room, I was suddenly captivated by a window with a perfect view of the Millennium Bridge with St. Paul’s (below left). It almost looked like a piece of framed art like the other works on the walls, a clever architectural detail, I’d say.

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Afterwards, we parted from the family and walked across this beautiful bridge and it’s amazing view of St Paul’s Cathedral, as well as the view back of the Tate Modern (bottom). We had no time to stop but kept on walking, even getting lost for a bit, for our wonderful lunch meeting with Mr. and Mrs. B. More walking about London followed, a kind of last look, then back home to pack and get ready for our journey to Paris the next morning.

visiting the National Gallery

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On our last two days in London, we really packed in the sights and gallery visits. I wrote about the morning of our second-to-last-day’s visit to the Annette Messager exhibition at the Hayward Gallery, after a ride on the London Eye. After lunch, we walked over to The National Gallery which sits so majestically on the top of the grand Trafalgar Square, shown above with St. Martin in the Fields on the right. This is another free institution though the traveling Picasso exhibition in the Sainsbury wing of course was not.

Our granddaughters and their mother joined a children’s tour they had been signed up for while husband and I went about on our own. It was exciting to recognize many many famous art works from the 13th to the early 20th centuries. I can’t remember all my favourites now though I did at first start to write them down but that took too long! We did not take photos (I think it was not allowed) but the National Gallery’s website has the entire collection online so its great to be able to go back and review the collection. Just a few of our favourites:

Jan Van Eyck’s The Arnolfini Portrait – I adore the North European artists
Leonardo da Vinci’s Sketch for The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne – I love his drawings
Hans Holbein the Younger’s The Ambassadors – some fascinating details in this
Turner’s The Fighting Temeraire – I think one of the first Turners I’ve seen in real life.

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The Impressionist Collection is gorgeous as well. I was thrilled in particular to see the Finnish artist Akseli Gallen-Kallela’s Lake Keitele (above). Many years ago when I was researching Finnish art I fell in love with Gallen-Kallela and especially his work inspired by the Kalevala. He became a significant figure in my BFA Honours thesis.

The interiors are gorgeous with rich brilliant colours on the walls in most of the rooms but I was quite shocked to see mud-coloured ones for the impressionists! As is usual with most huge museums, it was a bit confusing navigating the rooms so as not to miss anything. And as usual, looking at a lot of art exhilarates then exhausts me so, sadly, we did not get to the Picasso exhibit.

Oh, and the children, even the three-year-old, loved their tour, a compliment to their excellent guide! We were then rewarded with delicious treats in the cafeteria to restore some energy for the trip home on the tube and bus. The bus trip that late afternoon rush hour was extra slow and long because it was diverted the long way around due to a water main break near home, sigh.
(Next: visiting the Tate Modern)

London: details #5

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More details underfoot and on garden walls in London’s Muswell Hill neighbourhood
See also:
London: details (#1)
London: details #2
London: details #3
London: details #4

Annette Messager

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Annette Messager: Casino – image from Art Knowledge News

After our London Eye ride, we walked over to the nearby Southbank Centre and left the granddaughters to play with their Opa. Elisa and I went into the Hayward Gallery to see the Annette Messager: The Messengers exhibition.

Since this was a 40-year retrospective of the French artist’s work, we first met numerous tiny sketches, scribbles and cutouts covering walls and floors, and my thought was ‘gosh, if I’d kept every tiny scrap of everything I ever did in my life, I’d need a warehouse to store them.’ She obviously has one, for she’s amassed a huge body of work. It is fascinating to see the development of the artist’s work over the decades, from her interest in stuffed toys, animals, birds, children’s stories, photographs and drawings of children and women’s faces, human parts, and increasingly, broken parts, like the stuff of nightmares or physical abuse and violence. Good thing we did not take the children in for some of it would have been too disturbing for them.

Elisa, also an artist, commented that so many of Messager’s installations of hanging pieces reminded her of the work of one of her favourite artists, Christian Boltanski, who so happens to be Messager’s partner. For the both of us, the most moving installation had to be Messager’s Casino, first shown at the Venice Biennale in 2005. We sat there in front of it for long minutes, breathing in time with the seeming breathing action of the installation itself, almost like being inside a rich red living being, or something underwater slowly moving to the rhythm of ocean waves. It also made me think of a human embryo in the mother’s womb.

I generally like to view an exhibition without too much reading of print material until afterwards in order to respond with my own sensitivities and art experience. Sometimes Messager’s complex work is hard to understand but to me that’s the power and mystery of good art, the leaving of openings for the personal responses of the viewer. Reading about it later has enriched the experience for me.

I was excited at this opportunity to see this artist’s work as I’d first read about Annette Messager at Threading Thoughts about two years ago and found her work even then very exciting, disturbing and compelling. Olga is always a very articulate and understanding reviewer of the many exhibitions she visits. Unfortunately for us, she removes her older posts so we don’t have the link anymore, but I’m grateful to that introduction to a most powerful artist.

Here are some quotes by the artist, from the exhibition brochure in print and online:

For me, it’s a ‘natural’ gesture to rip bodies apart, cut them up… I always feel that my identity as a woman and as an artist is divided, disintegrated, fragmented, and never linear, always multifaceted…always pictures of parts of bodies, fragments and closeups… I always perceive the body in fragments.

I only wanted to use materials that you would be likely to find in a home, an attic: a ball of wool, coloured pencils, fabric, as if there were a kind of sequestration in the desire to be an artist.

I like to tell stories. I like clichés. Children’s stories are monstrous. Psychoanalytically, our entire society is encapsulated in fairy tales. I’ve always been interested in them and they are often one of my points of departure.

It’s been three months since I saw this exhibition. I took no notes or photos so some of my memories are a bit blurry, so apologies for that. I’ve talked about some of my impressions and responses more than specific descriptions about the work. There is a wealth of information online about the artist and her work, far better than I can write. If it interests you to learn more please see some of the links provided at the bottom.

We were unable to get into the bookstore for just as we came out of the exhibition rooms there was an announcement that everyone was to exit the building. Fire? Terrorism? No explanation was given. Ah well, I was saved from the temptation of buying more catalogues or art books of which I have far far too many. I do have a small brochure but the illustrations are limited, hence I’ve had to go online to find a photo to post here, but the photos do not do justice to the experience, especially the Casino one shown above.

There have been been comments here of how many museums in London are free, but this one was not. Elisa’s Southbank membership did not allow guests free entry as she’d thought so I paid up, grateful for the seniors’ discount for 60 plus, something that seemed more common in the UK than in Canada where you usually have to be 65.

LINKS:
Annette Messager’s art of magic in The Guardian, includes reviews and a great slide show
e-flux
about Annette Messager in Wikipedia
Google Images

London Eye

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A ride on the London Eye with daughter and granddaughters.
It’s touristy, it’s expensive, it’s scary for height-phobics like me.
An impressive work of engineering and what fantastic views to satisfy the human eye.
A hazy cloudy day, not so perfect for photography.
Little girls had no fear leaning on the sloping out glass of the pods.

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the Greenwich tour

Back to my travel diary and our last few but extra busy days in London….

Our ‘Londoner’ daughter had once taken one of the walking tours of London and enjoyed it so she suggested we all take the Historic Greenwich tour because it combined a boat ride on the Thames as well as the walk. We thought the children would particularly enjoy it.

A bus and tube ride to the meeting point by The Tower started that sunny Sunday in early May. A surprisingly large group showed up but our expected guide did not because his tube was down that morning. Soon a replacement came, a pleasant and energetic fellow but we were to learn, not as knowledgeable and often rather difficult to hear over the large group. So, I don’t have all the names and facts of what we saw. Check out their description and interesting video on their website.

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The half hour boat ride was very enjoyable as we passed under the Tower Bridge and past a mix of older and modern architecture. Coming in to Greenwich we could see the unique clock of the Royal Observatory. We were guided around immense classically designed buildings, many former royal homes like the Queen’s House, with delightful glimpses of art work like Hans Holbein’s portrait of King Henry VIII. We were entertained by stories of the romances, scandals and foibles of the royals of the day. Our tour ended with a watch of the movement of the timeball on the observatory up on the hill beyond the green green park.

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Afterwards we were on our own for we learned the return trip was not included. We wandered around the town including the flea market, had an ice cream to cool us as we weaved through huge crowds of visitors; I don’t remember now what special event was on in the town that day. Way way past lunch time, kids and adults starving, we found a pub and had good old English fish and chips and ale! We eventually found the train back into London and our tube home, very tired, both happy and a just wee bit disappointed. The children were amazingly well behaved for such a long day and what must have been at times a boring tour for them. Opa’s pocket full of trail mix was a life saver!

Photos by my husband, again, and just a small selection from a great number.

more blog friends

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Thoughts about meeting blog friends are still on my mind. I recently wrote about one meeting among several such meetings on our trip.

We had one more meeting on our last day in London. Barrett Bonden of Works Well and his wife kindly offered to come into London, suggesting lunch in a modest Indian restaurant on the Strand. BB made the place sound rather intriguing and an adventure, the site of an earlier get together he’d had with other bloggers. Shabby chic, reasonably priced good Indian food and excellent company it was!

Just like on his blog, BB is a man of dry wit, humour and erudition who teasingly challenges me with tough questions, often on his blog or mine. The four of us had a delightful time, like old friends do, thanks to blogging. Sadly we forgot to take photos in all the excitement.

Coming back to the present, on Monday this week I also met Hattie of Hattie’s Web. A resident of Hawaii, Hattie was making her annual visit to the Vancouver FolkFest, staying with her cousin here. She and cousin Bettie came over for a quick visit. Again, how easily we got into conversation, quickly filling in the blanks as if we’d known each other a long time even though usually I’m shy. After a bit of a tour of our home and some of my art on the walls, Bettie showed me a few of her beautiful quilted and stitched textile pieces using recycled mens’ silk ties.

Hattie has already mentioned our meeting and posted a photo (my bad hair day!). Of course, I forgot to take any. Wonderful to meet them both. Next year again?

Meanwhile chaos reigns on the home front this week and next. Our house is being reroofed so it’s noisy, dusty, messy and distracts me no end. Memories of years of renovations revisit me. However it will be a relief to not have leaks when the monsoons return in November.