tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-273122632024-03-19T13:11:03.303+00:00Come Into The Garden...I keep my quill concealed in my boot, just as villains do their daggersAnnahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.comBlogger370125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-2716368455734135312014-04-22T23:07:00.001+01:002014-04-24T15:46:12.447+01:00Helene<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">'I personally can't think of anything less sacrosanct than a bad book or even a mediocre book.'</span><br />
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;"><i><br /></i>
As I've been working a day a week in a bookshop (a bookshop that also sells secondhand and antiquarian books) for a good few months, I thought it was about time to revisit <i>84, Charing Cross Road.</i></span><br />
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;"><i><br /></i>
The letters between New Yorker Helene Hanff and the staff at the London bookshop Marks & Co, chief buyer Frank Doel in particular, conjure the charms and peculiarities of antiquarian bookselling and all the quaint eccentricities of this bibliophilic world. The twenty-year correspondence is of course fascinating for all the day-to-day details of post-war life, the specific titles requested and then provided, and touches such as books being wrapped for delivery in the pages of old unsalable books. But it is Helene that brings such life to these letters. She is glorious and I would love to be her greatest friend or, indeed, be her.</span><br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">Helene lives in moth-eaten sweaters and slacks, uses orange crates as book cases, has a sharp tongue and the most genuine love for books. She sits at her typewriter in her apartment and writes requests for titles from London rather than schlepping the however many blocks to a characterless bookstore that can't provide her with what she wants. Through these letters, she charms the booksellers (and also, in time, their families) at Marks & Co with her enthusiasm, humour, parcels of fresh eggs and foodstuffs (she is alarmed to see that a man named Cohen works at the bookshop and writes a hasty note after sending a large ham - 'ARE THEY KOSHER? I could rush a tongue over. ADVISE PLEASE!'), and commentary on the books they send her.</span><br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">She also teases with gusto: 'What do you do with yourself all day, sit in the back of the store and read? Why don't you try selling a book to somebody?'. (I have to say, on my days in the bookshop I do mentally clock up whole libraries of books I would love to just settle down with in the basement armchair... But the trill of the till brings me back to retail reality.) And she is well aware of her haranguing: 'Poor Frank, I give him such a hard time, I'm always bawling him out for something.' But she gets away with it because she is generous and warm and awesome. I agree with absolutely everything that she writes.</span><br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">'I do love secondhand books that open to the page some previous owner read oftenest. The day Hazlitt came he opened to "I hate to read new books" and I hollered "Comrade!" to whoever owned it before me.'</span><br />
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;"><br /></span>
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">'I love transcriptions on flyleaves and notes in margins. I like the comradely sense of turning pages someone else turned, and reading passages someone long gone has turned my attention to.'</span><br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">And of the Book-Lovers' Anthology that Frank sends her: 'I shall sprinkle pale pencil marks through it pointing out the best passages to some book-lover yet unborn.'</span><br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: inherit;">One of the most lovely things about browsing through and selling secondhand books is discovering the notes, tokens and messages of previous owners between the pages. A favourite find is a black and white photograph tucked in the front of a 1961 edition of <i>The Toad in the Greenhouse</i> by Deenagh Goold-Adams. The photograph captures a<span style="background-color: white; line-height: 18px;"> toad looking out from its perch and the reverse bears the legend 'Deenagh's toad', and the book is inscribed to the author's cousin.</span><span style="background-color: white; color: #333333; line-height: 18px;"> </span></span><br />
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I bought a secondhand book from the shop the other day that was part of the haul from a house call to a local book-lover who also happens to be a former Booker Prize winner, now in her eighties. As I was reading this copy of <i>The Secret History</i> by Donna Tartt on the bus, a cheque from the previous owner's chequebook, written out for £30 and dated some time last year, fell from the pages. Thankfully it was not signed...</span><br />
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Helene is not a fan of novels, which is one thing we do not have in common. Yet she redeems herself by admitting to a love of Austen: 'You'll be fascinated to learn (from me that hates novels) that I finally got around to Jane Austen and went out of my mind over Pride & Prejudice which I can't bring myself to take back to the library till you find me a copy of my own.'</span><br />
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And she cannot abide carving, culling and faffing around with texts: 'I will have hideous nightmares involving huge monsters in academic robes carrying long bloody butcher knives labelled Excerpt, Selection, Passage and Abridged.' I experienced a similar horror on discovering that an essay I sweated over in my second year at university was pretty much entirely meaningless as the references were completely incorrect and mangled - I had unwittingly been using an abridged version of <i>Villette</i> and, wholly unknowingly, been missing out on vast swathes of narrative and beautiful Bronte prose. Devastating. </span><br />
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She is more ballsy, witty and well-read than me. But am I like Helene? Let me count the ways. She spills coffee over dollar bills and, after a quick sponge down, hopes for the best. She revels in John Donne (and his antics with Anne More). And, best of all, on receiving a beautiful book of love poems: 'I shall try very hard not to get to gin and ashes all over it, it's really much too fine for the likes of me.' Story of my life. </span>Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-72980052770249595592013-09-24T21:48:00.000+01:002013-09-24T22:14:53.837+01:00So MuchTo my knowledge I have never ventured to, or stayed in, Shropshire. Until Friday that is, when I travelled through Housman Country...<br />
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<span class="emphasis" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Clunton and Clunbury, </span></div>
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<span class="emphasis" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Clungunford and Clun, </span></div>
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<span class="emphasis" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Are the quietest places </span></div>
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<span class="emphasis" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">Under the sun.</span></div>
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<em>A Shrophire Lad</em>, A.E. Housman</div>
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Well, the cluster of Clun-dubbed places may be quiet, but I was destined for the buzz and bustle of Much Wenlock. I was there for a bookish event held along the road from the local independent bookshop at a pottery. A working pottery, which also quadruples as a B&B, event venue and bar. It is guarded by the most dark and gentle German Shepherd I have ever encountered who goes by the name of Shadow, and is run by a jolly woman who asked us on our arrival at 3.30pm if we would like tea or something stronger, as she had just had a tipple herself. Her partner at the pottery has a cider press in the garage and makes his own cider using home-grown apples.<br />
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The event itself was a great success, with people travelling in from surrounding villages and towns to come and listen to the two editors of a lovely little literary quarterly talk about how they modestly started up their project around the kitchen table over many bottles of wine more than ten years ago. It is now thriving and growing, with mad office dogs wreaking havoc among hundreds of boxes delivered by a broad-accented Yorkshireman named Bryan from the traditional printers at the crack of dawn on a regular basis. Many more charming eccentricities that are part of their working life were touched on too. The audience listened and drank and asked questions and got cosy by the fire. Anybody who had arrived alone was welcomed in and seated by the wonderful owner of the local bookshop, who knows everyone's name and whether or not they have a dog. 'This is Jane. Jane this is Sylvia. Sylvia has a spaniel, Jane has a schnoodle. You may have seen each other out dog-walking.' And the bar did a great trade. One of the woman working behind it clocked that there wasn't enough wine left in one of the bottles for a full glass so took it upon herself to quaff it.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3BJFXQp92DK4YBdRNXXdtznBz7clA0UYOwVzbzUML2cAu-8_1DEfNccvKM0XfeMFBb4EePvJHLgKOOnALx9qfTeOBVm7rvEqQQibOHhJQnsUS7FAWXYbLc5J0AmD9d6eU1ntV/s1600/IMAG0182.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj3BJFXQp92DK4YBdRNXXdtznBz7clA0UYOwVzbzUML2cAu-8_1DEfNccvKM0XfeMFBb4EePvJHLgKOOnALx9qfTeOBVm7rvEqQQibOHhJQnsUS7FAWXYbLc5J0AmD9d6eU1ntV/s400/IMAG0182.jpg" width="265" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">A Much Wenlock door - take note of the terrific sign</td></tr>
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So, as I say, the event was splendid, but I was interested in exploring the village the morning after the night before. It is an other-worldly place of crammed-to-the-rafters junk shops, markets awash with fresh veg (soil-clumped potatoes and carrots with masses of thick green tops), home-made pie shops that do a nice side-line in sparsely bristled salty pork scratchings, and the most beautiful 17th century buildings decked out in time-worn timber. One such building is the bookshop. It is gorgeous. Bunting made from comic books hangs in the children's section and <em>The Guardian </em>is spread invitingly on the large round table upstairs. The owner runs this bookshop almost single-handedly and is enthusiastic, passionate and pro-active, with the likes of poetry festivals, children's activity groups and literary events spilling from her imagination into the community. She read <a href="http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/205636.The_Dean_s_Watch" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #ead1dc;">The Dean's Watch</span></a> by Elizabeth Goudge as a child and was captivated by the description of the fictional bookshop with its wooden beams. She decided then that she would like to be a bookseller when she grew up. It was only a little while ago, when standing on the upper floor, beneath beams and between second-hand books, that she realised that she has the bookshop she'd wished for. </div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_F-mskDUIU-3BEpfgMMNFu0sjw_Kjq9vWul5THF69NlNVz2V73XxNeucDEOAABntGWO1YerUBENUUFF7R6yS6YSFR6gKqhAHGpyzV5gLLlqTNTZAyB0xkIuFgPY4TFf7ElXdx/s1600/IMAG0186.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_F-mskDUIU-3BEpfgMMNFu0sjw_Kjq9vWul5THF69NlNVz2V73XxNeucDEOAABntGWO1YerUBENUUFF7R6yS6YSFR6gKqhAHGpyzV5gLLlqTNTZAyB0xkIuFgPY4TFf7ElXdx/s320/IMAG0186.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Dream bookshop</td></tr>
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We had a good long mooch among the shelves that morning. I picked up a paperback of my favourite novel. My mother had bought a copy for my chap when he was new to our world (she never, ever lends out her own copy) and he was so taken with it that he foolishly passed it on to friends to read and it was never returned. So we were, appallingly, without this oh-so-necessary novel in London. The second-hand copy I picked up is signed and dated by one who once owned it. The date is the year of my birth. The bookseller gifted it to me. I am so happy.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Just inside my favourite novel</td></tr>
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Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-81728523265105920682013-09-01T18:29:00.000+01:002013-09-24T23:18:32.523+01:00Letters IIWe receive so many bonkers and lovely letters and emails from our appreciative, enthusiastic and very jolly readers at both the small publisher and independent bookshop for which I work so consistently that sometimes I worry that I do not pay all of them their deserved attention. I fear that I could end up taking these bibliophilic outpourings for granted, and this absolutely must not happen.<br />
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We have postcards and greetings cards and photographs and drawings and long beautifully handwritten letters posted to us every week, and it is the most cheering thing to slice all these words free with the silver letter opener. So cheering that we have made space on the daily-use-database for a 'corner of good cheer'. This corner holds snippets of delicious comments from our readers - funny, eccentric and heartening.<br />
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A letter arrived at the bookshop all the way from Australia the other day. I will transcribe it here (changing the name) as it pretty well made my heart shatter into a million pieces at the end of a long day unpacking and packing up books in a manic tap-gun delirium.<br />
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<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">Dear S Fox,</span><br />
<div class="MsoNormal" style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: center;">
<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">Your
‘gift to a friend’ offer.</span></div>
<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">
</span><o:p><span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;"> </span></o:p><br />
<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">
I wish to thank you most sincerely for your above service on
behalf of my dear friend in <st1:country-region><st1:place>Scotland</st1:place></st1:country-region>.
The book was <i style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal;">Island Summers: Memories of
a Norwegian Holiday</i>, chosen by me for its vivid evocative value. That it achieved
its purpose is apparent from the response I received and partly quote here in
some detail in spite of testing your patience:</span><br />
<span style="font-family: Courier New;"></span><br />
<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">
</span><em><span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">On the basis that you are the only Edward in my life I am assuming that the exciting parcel that I received today with a card saying, ‘With love from Edward’, is from you. If I am wrong I am stuck!<br /><br />The book was gift wrapped in thick, dark green paper and tied with a narrow, scarlet satin ribbon. Very elegant. The book itself has a very pretty cover – a seascape in pale blues and pinks – and smells gorgeous. Did you order it online or choose it yourself in their London bookshop? I shall be very cross if you have been in London without telling me…<br /><br />I can’t wait to start it, but I’m going to force myself to put it on one side till I am able to savour it. This week is going to be hectic and I want to relax and enjoy it. Very many thanks for the kind thought…</span></em><br />
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</span><br />
<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">You see, as you well know, books mean many things to many
people. Your thoughtful action has brought two hearts, about as far distant as
it is possible to be on this planet, together as one.</span><br />
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</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">Yours sincerely,</span></div>
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</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: "Courier New", Courier, monospace;">(Dr) Edward Swinton</span></div>
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Oh boy, that last line just about kills me.</div>
Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-6588445339083745712013-08-06T20:36:00.000+01:002013-08-06T20:41:46.609+01:00Inconceivable<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRt3uGplkd7fys_O84bPnCadOqdLbvsPi7e3R8NJT6OjyJtfHQzyLuPSgdL9qUjD8fVMlQKcXB6uO4rJIx6MVe_etH8cd2D3xVfuXtFEObwKx3IuGZVgoz68SSwcIcKMSiu3sK/s1600/DSCF6743.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="283" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgRt3uGplkd7fys_O84bPnCadOqdLbvsPi7e3R8NJT6OjyJtfHQzyLuPSgdL9qUjD8fVMlQKcXB6uO4rJIx6MVe_etH8cd2D3xVfuXtFEObwKx3IuGZVgoz68SSwcIcKMSiu3sK/s400/DSCF6743.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Party Favours</td></tr>
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These pencils are tokens I took away from a party in Beckenham on Saturday. Not just any party. The party I have been waiting for most of my life. A party which had as its perfect theme (drumroll please): <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wf56dhNklbI" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: black;">The Princess Bride</span></a>. My favourite film. A bit because of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC6dgtBU6Gs" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: black;">this</span>.</a> A bit because of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoSHmVkjmuA" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: black;">this</span>.</a> And a lot because of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3W5GDkgf2w" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: black;">this</span><span style="background-color: white;">.</span></a> I carried an actual sword with me on public transport for the occasion, that's how much I love this film. I know every word. And I now have pencils to prove my ardour for the story and script. <br />
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My camera is far from top-notch, so I will provide clear text.<br />
<br />
WESTLEY & BUTTERCUP<br />
INCONCEIVABLE!<br />
DREAD PIRATE ROBERTS<br />
AS YOU WISH<br />
MY NAME IS INIGO MONTOYA<br />
HAVE FUN STORMING THE CASTLE!<br />
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Man, I can tell you I had awesome fun storming the castle. I brought Miracle Max's chocolate-covered miracle pills, jelly-sweet shrieking eels, Buttercupcakes and half a bottle of absinthe. The absinthe went towards the 'Iocane Potion' cocktail I invented then drank a great deal of. It was all as I wished. Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-51535253248680956542013-07-22T21:27:00.001+01:002013-07-23T16:31:05.077+01:00Common DeadI must admit that I only really know South East London because of the bookshops. Through work, I speak to the good chaps at both Herne Hill Books and Dulwich Books every so often and package off boxes of books to those distant climes. However, I am always prepared to venture further afield by various buses to discover a good cemetery. So on a summer's Sunday we packaged ourselves off (by way of hot top decks) to West Norland Cemetery. I would recommend visiting these beautiful burial grounds, designed to mimic paradise and rather successfully to my mind, any time you can make the trip, but we specifically went on Sunday so we could Feast for the Common Dead.<br />
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The artist Jane Millar has curated the <a href="http://www.westnorwoodcemetery.com/curious_trail/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #ead1dc;">Curious Trail</span></a> which is comprised of of 21 works exhibited within the walls of the cemetery, using the architecture, landscape and historic burials as reference points for the artwork. These in themselves are completely fascinating, especially by the likes of Steven Ounanian who unveils a new technology that makes it possible to speak to the dead. He custom made a contraption he calls TELEX-666. This device has electrodes attached to it which plug into the cemetery earth and enable the listener to hear conversations and existential diatribes occurring underground. <br />
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Chris McCabe's work entitled <em><a href="http://chris-mccabe.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/curious-unearthing-poets-at-west.html" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #ead1dc;">Clotted Sun: An Anthology of West Norwood Poetry</span></a></em> also particularly interested me. He found details of ten poets buried in the cemetery and researched their poetry. To provide them with another chance of readership he engraved a phrase from one of their poems onto stone and returned it to them. He also had the stones photographed and made into a limited edition book. This is on display at the Columbarium, together with the engraved stone for Sydney Carter who wrote 'The Lord of the Dance' and was cremated at West Norwood. <br />
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I could go on and wax lyrical about each and every artist involved. They are very much worth the journey alone. But, as I say, we were there for more ceremonial reasons. For exuberance and remembrance and cake.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Cemetery Map</td></tr>
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Sunday's Feast for the Common Dead was a grand picnic held by the Living for those bones and souls who were anonymous, untraceable or simply poor and easily forgotten. The tale begins at Enon Chapel, off Clare Market, in the 1800s. Due to high death rates, lack of space, and the hoards not having money to pay for pomp, circumstance and headstones, twelve thousand bodies were buried, or not even buried, beneath the rickety floorboards. Piled up, filling hundreds of coffins, hacked into bits to make bodies fit, the dead were crammed into a 30' by 60' basement. Not all twelve thousand were present (and rotting) at one time, with corpses being disposed of in rivers and similar when the nooks and crannies between the decomposing dead were simply too small. But these thousands all passed through this underground lair, beneath the chapel which was transformed into a dance hall for a spell, the living dancing over the dead then fainting at the smell. <br />
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To cut a long - and fairly gruesome - story short, these representatives of the Common Dead are now at peace in the common burial plot in the cemetery. Dr Ruth Richardson, a medical historian, has steeped herself in this sorrowful tale, researching the lives of the twelve thousand and is passing on the uneasy knowledge. So we joined her and Jane Millar and poets and singers and the general joie de vivre of living breathing people in sunshine to feast for those now resting in the earth. There was a cake the size, shape and spitting image of a coffin, constructed with marble cake and cocoa icing and studded with silver chocolate nails. The artist and grower Elizabeth Myers had created a grave-shaped plot near the common burial area, and grown produce similar to that of a 19th century charcoal burner's cottage garden, and some of this produce became ingredients for the picnic fare. A band, complete with ukulele, played the Jeff Buckley version of 'Hallelujah' and, wonderfully, Pulp's <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuTMWgOduFM" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #cfe2f3;">'Common People'</span></a>. I don't feel the song sheets were necessary for that particular number, Jarvis being my main man. There was also an eccentric and mostly grey-haired socialist choir belting out a few tunes (and history lessons), and a local community choir who sang the tear-jerking 'Moon Rover' as I leant against a gnarled tree and closed my eyes in the sun. They led us in a procession to the Enon Burial Plot across the cemetery, singing all the way. Flowers and tokens were placed in front of the small squared-off plot, and the dead below were commemorated for the first time. Then something I had never experienced before: a keening. Half a minute of wailing, ululations, drumming, cries of grief, deep sounds of pain, remembrance, joy... I stayed silent but felt at the heart of it.<br />
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It all finished with a jolly song. 'The Lord of the Dance'. Of course. Delirious from sun and surreality, we walked through graves and mausoleums, sniffed a few lilies, then sweated back on tarmac.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-24721139295408690552013-05-22T22:07:00.002+01:002013-05-22T22:08:57.875+01:00LettersA letter I wrote to <a href="http://hadleyfreeman.com/" target="_blank">Hadley</a>:<br />
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In other news, THIS HAPPENED:</div>
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A friend was drinking G&Ts with Alan in his kitchen on a Monday afternoon, watching birds out the window, and asked him to sign this for me. Oh boy. </div>
Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-68216294798223927972013-04-28T22:33:00.000+01:002013-04-29T23:34:37.763+01:00SouzouWe'd made a Saturday afternoon plan of an exhibition followed by pints in the Princess Louise, so we met in the rain at the Gargosian Gallery to see <a href="http://www.gagosian.com/artists/rachel-whiteread" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #ead1dc;">Rachel Whiteread's</span></a> casts of the space inside sheds. They were arresting for sure, solid and stark in the huge white room, but very grey blocks of art on a very grey rainy day. So we wrestled our umbrellas up the road to the Wellcome Collection, a place which always cheers me, being bright, buzzy and full of millions of interesting things. They usually have some kind of rather wondrous free exhibition going on, and I end up scribbling all over the hand-outs and staring at stuff like brains in jars and 18th century prosthetic toes.<br />
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The current special exhibition is the opposite of grey blocks. It is colourful and varied and crammed with all sorts of ideas and creations. It goes by the name of <a href="http://www.wellcomecollection.org/whats-on/exhibitions/outsider-art-from-japan.aspx" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Souzou: Outsider Art from Japan</span></a>. The artwork on show is by 46 artists who attend or live in Japanese social welfare institutions. All the artists have cognitive, behavioural and developmental disorders or mental illnesses. And they create. The word 'outsider' has somewhat negative connotations, and 'outsider art' is a rather ugly term for works by untutored artists who are not conscience of an audience for the pieces they make and who live the edges of mainstream society. However, the word 'souzou' is much more positive. It has a dual meaning: both creation and imagination. And these artists have imaginative creativity in no short supply.<br />
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This is art as therapy or distraction, but it's beautiful and intriguing in its own right. Visual expression is used as a release from the confines and confusion of language, and such different ways of seeing are represented throughout the exhibition rooms, as well as a whole range of materials and methods. Textiles and ceramics require lengthy repetitive processes that have a calming, therapeutic effect. One of the artists, Komei Bekki, takes a ritualistic approach to making his ceramic miniatures. Arriving at the studio at 16.00 every day, after everyone else has gone, he performs a sequence of actions which involve removing his clothes and putting them on again inside-out and partially moulding the clay in his mouth.<br />
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Everyday objects and the culture that surrounds the artists - film, television, landscapes and transport systems to name a few - are are very much in bright and bold evidence. Norie Shukumatari makes fluffy embroidery representing beloved subjects such as chocolate cake and a 1970s Japanese pop icon. <br />
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Shota Katsubi crafts a vast army of tiny anime soldiers wielding swords and bazookas from coloured wires which, on closer inspection, transpire to be the twist-ties used to fasten bin-liners. And an artist known as M.K. paints on a simple sheet of roughly cut cardboard. The image is called 'Lady with Rainbow Coloured Hair' and is a vibrant depiction of a female bust accompanied by an aeroplane safety announcement in English, beneath which is written: The gnus/were afraid of/the alligators in the/river/They waited for a long/time/before entering the water.</div>
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Norimitsu Kokubo is a map-maker; his sprawling, intricately detailed drawings are fictional cityscapes that explore real places he has never been to. He plots and constructs from facts he's picked up. The one I was most drawn to was 'Shanghai Disneyland of the Future'. It is relationships rather than landscapes that provide the overriding impulse behind Sakiko Komo's art. She makes round-faced friendly rag dolls, some life-size, representing friends and staff who have been kind to her over the 55 years she's lived in the residential facility. One of the dolls is called 'Looks a bit like an alien'. And Takahiro Shimoda is the artist behind the piece I loved most: a pyjama triptych. Comfy cream 'Ruff Hewn' tops-and-bottoms serve as a canvas for his fried chicken, salmon roe and pigeon-shaped cookies nightwear. Pyjamas printed with patterns of his favourite foodstuffs. <br />
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I want to eat a pigeon-shaped cookie. And, after walking through this odd forest of fascinating artworks, I just really want to make stuff. To whip out crayons, felt-tips, sewing kits, pipe-cleaners, paint and PVA glue. To create. That's the effect of souzou. Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-10473477449761681302013-03-23T20:20:00.003+00:002013-03-23T23:02:24.074+00:00Gin Before BedtimeAt the end of the working day on Thursday evening I put on my pyjamas. In the office. As did my two colleagues. Our boss opened a bottle or two of wine, and we sipped as we applied false eyelashes, rouged our cheeks and, crucially, rolled curlers into our hair, pinning them in place as the <span dir="auto">pièce de résistance</span> of our bedtime glamour. Then it was on with our slippers (slightly adapted for city streets) and into a cab.<br />
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Our destination was a boutique hotel in East London by the name of <a href="http://www.40winks.org/gallery.html" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">40 Winks</span></a>. The building is rather nondescript from the outside, a rather run-of-the-mill terraced townhouse on Mile End Road. But we had the correct address, and were all dolled up in the strict though sleepy dress-code. The instructions had stipulated nightwear, and we were to turn up no earlier than 7pm, no later than 8pm. So at 7.30 we were on the steps leading up to the front door, where Mr Carter presided over the arriving guests. Mr Carter is the owner of the hotel and was our top-hatted host for the night. The fourth member of our party was already inside, having arrived a little before 7pm. This meant that she was a Sinner. All guests were to be separated into Saints and Sinners, with the Saints a chorus of hallelujahs and the Sinners bellowing 'hells bells'. As our friend had been dubbed a Sinner, we were Sinners too. Much more interesting. <br />
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After popping on the white slippers provided by ladies in nightgowns, we padded up the stairs to the toppermost bedroom where guests were changing into silk and adjusting their jimjams. The bedrooms and bathrooms, stairways and corridors were bonkers and beautiful. Kitsch, chintzy, luxurious, curious, decadent, Gothic; all grandiosity on a small scale in this wonderful mini-hotel. Dark reds, rich creams, glossy black, burnished gold and pearls. A dressing table full of perfume bottles and trinkets stood beside a wrought iron bed, and taxidermy, antlers and tasselled cushions abounded. <br />
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From the top of the house to the bottom. Teacups filled to the brim with a gin cocktail were offered into eager hands as we poured into the basement, and hand-painted murals on the walls encircled us gin-drinkers. Top-ups came frequently, gin flowing in arcs from the spouts of tall teapots. Mr Carter did a turn as host, encouraging flirting and splitting the Saints from the Sinners in time for the bedtime stories upstairs.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3jN8v62534BF7LloPwwzs6eJlLIbYAgAItjATTdYx_Bf9vMpsKZNiuTfKZQuwy12x00nyhn_AhKRP3lta8KnKKcB_FglLI6hZYEoBbnrcZ6L9a2stgFmXts0DYBMKpI0B6gtj/s1600/549435_10151493021257980_1113261200_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3jN8v62534BF7LloPwwzs6eJlLIbYAgAItjATTdYx_Bf9vMpsKZNiuTfKZQuwy12x00nyhn_AhKRP3lta8KnKKcB_FglLI6hZYEoBbnrcZ6L9a2stgFmXts0DYBMKpI0B6gtj/s320/549435_10151493021257980_1113261200_n.jpg" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Gin cocktails. Photo from 40winks Facebook page.</td></tr>
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<br />
Sinners settled themselves on chaise lounges and satin floor cushions to listen to a black-gowned, red-haired tale-teller. She told us of a woman who wrenched out a man's tongue by the root with her own as she kissed him, then followed this with a shorter tale involving camels and mathematics. I listened in a warm haze of soft cotton pj's, gin and story-spirals. Then into another beautiful room to sit on a different satin cushion and be wholly captivated by <a href="http://www.katalysttales.co.uk/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Katrice Horsley</span></a>. Big dark eyes, short corkscrew curls, glittery make-up and physical flair. But all she really needed was her voice. Tumbling words, rhyming, working and weaving in rhythms and refrains. My mouth was open as I listened. Death, love, mouths slurping brains, beads of blood blooming from bosoms, handsome princes, broad-shouldered narrow-waisted devils, and old crow crones. Almost an hour of these wondrous things, told in something like a long song.<br />
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From stories to music. A young woman wearing sequined white, decked out in a huge feather and pearl headpiece, played the musical saw and a Victorian children's piano. She ended her set with a version of Abba's 'The Winner Takes it All'. I don't know if it was the gin, the sleepy setting, or the fact that Meryl Streep singing that particular song always kills me, but I could have cried. The musician calls herself <a href="http://thetigersbridemusic.tumblr.com/" target="_blank">The Tiger's Bride</a> after the tale by Angela Carter. I think this very fitting, as the whole evening struck me as something oh so Angela Carter: darkness, fairy tales, the visceral, theatricality, absurdity, decadence and storytelling. Is Mr Carter's surname mere coincidence? See <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wI3pXhvgyQQ" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">here</span></a> for more of an idea of the night.<br />
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I pulled out my curlers in the dressing room, strode into the cold wearing winter boots, and made my way home to a Turnpike Lane bed which, alas, is not surrounded by boutique-beautiful furniture and soft furnishings and stag antlers. But it is, as everywhere is, surrounded by stories.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-58482831866249915662013-03-11T23:26:00.000+00:002013-03-11T23:28:04.829+00:00Académie des FemmesOn the day following International Women's Day I journeyed west - by bus, rail and foot - for a party. The theme of this gathering was 'Académie des Femmes'. I strongly felt it was worth venturing to West Ealing for such a soirée.<br />
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There was once a woman named Natalie Clifford Barney. She was an American. An expatriate. A francophile. A novelist, a poet, a lesbian, a hostess. A pretty cool woman living on the Left Bank in Paris in the twentieth century. This is where she held her literary salon, a weekly meeting at which people gathered to socialise and discuss literature, art, music and any other topic of interest. French, American and British writers, artists and dancers crowded into her house for these famed evenings where both lesbian assignations and appointments with academics could, and did, crackle and fizz. <br />
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Barney wished to promote writing by women and formed L'Académie des Femmes in response to the all-male French Academy. She did also give support and inspiration to male writers, but strove to feature women's writing just as prominently, or more so, than the leading male names of the day. So Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, William Carlos Williams, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and Rainer Maria Rilke all attended her salons, and were welcomed wholeheartedly. But women were given an equal platform, and were arguably the more interesting, intriguing, eccentric characters. Imagine a riverside Parisian chamber after dark, lit up with the likes of Colette, Mata Hari, Isadora Duncan, Mina Loy, Gertrude Stein, Radclyffe Hall and Rachilde...<br />
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I was not in Paris, but West Ealing. However, the well-furnished flat, with its Singer sewing machine, lobster telephone and Playmobil horse bathroom light-pull, held all the charms of the Modernist dream-world through which Barney swanned and scintillated. I was in a new place with new people, stationed next to a glossy dark-wood drinks table of gin and whiskey and rum and bottles and bottles of red wine, surrounded by top hats, cloche hats, dinner jackets, bow ties, unfamiliar repartee, cheese and crackers. I had painted my lips red for the evening. It may have rubbed off as I drank and ate and chatted, but my husky unhealthy rasp of a voice remained due to a harsh March throat-sore that seemed more alluring than gross for this particular night. We all played pin the phallic symbol on the Freud, and pass the parcel with forfeits hidden in each layer of tissue paper such as having to recite a particularly sibilant line of Stein with a pronounced lisp. I caught two night buses home through the whole of London and fell asleep wearing faded red lipstick in my four-poster bed.<br />
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While on the subject of female Modernists, the below photograph is my <span style="background-color: white;">all-time favourite image. Virgina at Knole at the time she was writing <em>Orlando</em>. Wearing the most glorious</span> outfit and facial expression. <em>Orlando</em>: the biography of a man who becomes a woman, who transforms and is transformative. Literature's greatest love letter, from Virginia to Vita. A love letter from a woman to a woman, capturing all sex, gender, power and magic. The life of a woman. This photograph is in the centre of my copy of the complete letters Vita wrote to Virginia, with snatches of Virginia's replies interwoven. Many letters of domesticity and romance and adventures and arrangements to meet for tea.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Centrefold of one my obsessions</td></tr>
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Also for International Women's Day, I thought I would include this treat of a scene. Because it's brilliant. Bathing suits, pizza and solidarity.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWCQp1HP5Hq_Yt9-R23gQQtXypxoj0rVLe6VrVA45FwQb4LqR9iksckwZ3LMZnibbKQXbPMgT5NNBQZB4_kFLMJryf5Wb1D4NLRwGECNqAnYlYCpqQjBt7ba0hk1yPXbNGPrOh/s1600/11573_454178621319438_1477307977_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="295" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWCQp1HP5Hq_Yt9-R23gQQtXypxoj0rVLe6VrVA45FwQb4LqR9iksckwZ3LMZnibbKQXbPMgT5NNBQZB4_kFLMJryf5Wb1D4NLRwGECNqAnYlYCpqQjBt7ba0hk1yPXbNGPrOh/s400/11573_454178621319438_1477307977_n.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">In 1921, early suffragettes often donned a bathing suit and ate pizza in large groups to annoy men... it was a custom at the time.</td></tr>
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<span class="userContent"></span><br />
<span class="userContent">Also, on a similar theme, yet from the sublime to the ridiculous, I would like to end with <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p010l67p" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #ead1dc; color: #4c1130;">this clip</span></a><span style="background-color: white;">.</span> It is from <em>A Woman's Place</em>, an episode of BBC Four's 'Britain on Film' series which uses the Rank Organisation's Look at Life documentary shorts to look at
British society during the 1960s. It is fascinating (not only for the astonishing hairstyles) and I wish the full episode was still available on iPlayer. A crying shame that the footage is narrated by men with their RP accents and outmoded views, but this does serve to highlight the absurdity of these chaps and the times they lived in, and how awesome women were and have since become.</span>Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-9062681927441078752013-02-03T22:24:00.003+00:002013-02-03T23:17:03.287+00:00IdlingSunday lunchtime at Selfridges. It's fair to say that this is not my usual haunt. But I had my reasons. Reasons in addition to fantasising about my other life as a window dresser (though the true high-fliers for this fantasy are of course Liberty and Fortnum & Mason). I was popping in for a talk on Ancient Greek Philosophy.<br />
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Tracking my course through the wondrous gluttonous food hall, picking at tasters of pumpernickel and fruit breads on the way (I may have also left via this route, scoffing more bread as I fled), weaving between the fragrant, dazzling perfume and make-up counters, trying not to crash into meticulously displayed crockery in the homeware section, I eventually made it down to the basement. Books on Lower Ground. It's not my idea of the perfect bookshop, but I was not there to browse. Selfridges have introduced a concept called <a href="http://style.selfridges.com/whats-on/no-noise-selfridges" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">No Noise</span></a> for January and February. '<em>We invite you to celebrate the power of quiet, see the beauty in function and find calm among the crowds.</em>' So there you go. This means that they have a Silence Room, an idea apparently dreamt up by Harry Gordon Selfridge himself in 1909, a Quiet Shop which sells de-branded products such as <a href="http://www.selfridges.com/en/Food-Wine/Categories/Shop-Food/Condiments/Savoury/No-Noise-Marmite-250g_554-73029548-MARMITENONOISE250G/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Marmite</span></a> and <a href="http://www.selfridges.com/en/Features-Gifts/Categories/Features/No-Noise/De-branded-products/No-Noise-Baked-Beans-415g_554-73048852-NONOISEBAKEDBEANS/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Heinz Baked Beans</span></a> without the logos (oddly surreal), and Idle Sundays when the public can come and listen to a series of talks put on by the <a href="http://idler.co.uk/academy/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Idler Academy</span></a>. <br />
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They vary in topic, from fishing to cloud spotting to moonlight... I wish I had been available last Sunday for the talk entitled 'The Poetry of Silence, featuring readings from my main man Keats and additional Romantic poets. Alas, I was otherwise engaged, settled on the sofa watching the whole BBC series of <em>Pride & Prejudice</em> back-to-back in celebration of the novel's 200th anniversary. Jane Austen and Colin Firth unfortunately had to take priority. However, I was ready and willing to hit 'Aristotle, Epicurus and the Vita Contemplativa' with Dr Mark Vernon. <br />
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At first it felt rather absurd and ironic to be listening about the contemplation of silence in the middle of one of the busiest and flashiest stores on Oxford Street, one of the most crowded and stressful streets in the world. Especially when the tannoy/alarm thing kept going off at intervals right next to where we (a motley crew of curious beings) were all gathered. But then it kind of made sense. It's about finding the time to stop, contemplate, reason and feel when in the midst of living life. It's about looking over your shoulder at the silence that always lies just behind us and letting it push and nudge you further into knowledge rather than a vacuous ignorance. Or something.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifkEzQ_W-zM3HZK9KG2FsyT7gbEUkcgzah9g18VtYPE4osKwY_gh-GJsxqSybAU241IythCXjSkq7YDn0dI0RJNrZFL4xWHw2Ym-F_KYErWfSjTZzSXEY_40vd5judIp4e1OZW/s1600/Selfridges-No-Noise-The-Quiet-Shop-debranded.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="227" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifkEzQ_W-zM3HZK9KG2FsyT7gbEUkcgzah9g18VtYPE4osKwY_gh-GJsxqSybAU241IythCXjSkq7YDn0dI0RJNrZFL4xWHw2Ym-F_KYErWfSjTZzSXEY_40vd5judIp4e1OZW/s400/Selfridges-No-Noise-The-Quiet-Shop-debranded.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Very odd. Photo from selfridges.com.</td></tr>
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I was all set to just listen and absorb as the talk began, feeling a little sceptical of the whole thing. But then we had to participate in some audience interaction. Fateful words. Even more so when out of place among the clientele of Selfridges. We were asked to pair up and simply ask our partner 'Who are you?' Over and over. Quickfire, with short, sharp answers. It became more difficult and awkward and invasive as the unrelenting question persisted. My partner was a rather lovely old woman with wispy hair on her head, top-lip and chin, who answered with 'searcher' and 'traveller' and 'open'. I was less philosophical, more stuttery. The lecturer eventually put us out of our misery - before we could have nervous breakdowns about finding ourselves and knowing our souls - and I did actually LEARN THINGS.<br />
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Stoics are so called because Zeno taught philosophy at the Stoa Poikile, a colonnade overlooking the Agora. Philosophy in the marketplace, among the lettuces. Socrates also taught in open public places (which some people found irritating, hence the death sentence), and Aristotle thought we should take time to share the salt together. I guess he meant sit down and literally share a meal, conversation and points of view with each other, but also the saltiness of things, the bite, the tang, the questions in life that add flavour. So, with that in mind, I went and tasted some more pumpernickel bread and went off to the <a href="http://www.ica.org.uk/?lid=34587" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9;">Jeurgen Teller exhibition</span></a> at the ICA to look at lots of bright fleshy commercial photographs of naked bodies.<br />
<br />Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-84752838235724985272013-01-20T15:54:00.004+00:002013-01-20T15:56:51.967+00:00Hunting for BodiesA Saturday when the snow was melting to muddy slush and the glisten of frost was fading to grey, a dank and dreary day, so we went to see thousands of glittering jars in a central-heated museum in the upstairs of a grand pillar-flanked institution set in the still snow-covered Lincoln's Inn Fields. Gawping at bits of body preserved in liquid that shined like amber in the artificial light is the only thing to do on such a bitter afternoon. We came to this conclusion having visited <a href="http://www.rcseng.ac.uk/museums/hunterian/history/collections.html" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: #20124d;">The Hunterian Museum</span></a> yesterday, a little weaker in the knees but our heads swimming with fleshy flaps of skin, fragile scraps of membrane, ragged threads of veins...<br />
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Set at the top of the portrait-lined staircase of the Royal College of Surgeons, The Hunterian Museum lures in those cursed with morbid curiosity. The first wall shows four anatomical tables - boards slightly larger than a person with human-shaped maps of arteries, veins, circulatory systems pasted onto the grain of the thick wood, carefully dissected from the dead then stuck like fine blood-embroideries - which were prepared for the diarist John Evelyn in Padua in 1646. The vast majority of all the preparations and specimens in the museum were collected and displayed by John Hunter (1728-1793). The Scottish surgeon was dyslexic, so instead of reading about his craft and learning lots of inherited silly ideas, he garnered all his knowledge from observing, cutting, dissecting, poking, bleeding, preserving as much of the living (or, indeed, dead) world as he could get his hands on. The collection at The Hunterian is evidence of this. <br />
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Dissection of executed murderers was deemed acceptable, and the slightly less acceptable practice of grave-robbing abounded, but John Hunter also performed post-mortems on may of his close friends and family members, and was himself dissected after his death. His curiosity and quest for anatomical understanding knew no bounds. One such instance of this was the case of Charles Byrne, the 'Irish Giant'. He was 7'7" and made appearances at entertainments for money throughout his life. He had apparently wanted to be buried at sea, but Hunter purchased Byrne's body for £130 and displayed the skeleton. This now looms large in the museum, next to a much smaller and deformed skeleton, that of Mr Jeffs. This had been buried for many years before a man named George Harking acquired it. Hunter then bought it at auction as he was fascinated by the rare condition Mr Jeffs had suffered from. Fibrodysplasia causes bone to form in muscles, tendons and other connective tissue, so the skeleton has bone mass where one would not expect, as though bone blossomed from branches of rib and trunk of spine.<br />
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Other treats include a four-legged chick, a two-tailed lizard, pulp from the incisor of a horse, the healing stump of an amputated leg, three-inch long coagulated lymph coughed up by a patient, graphic illustrations of <a href="http://www2.biusante.parisdescartes.fr/img/?refphot=03268&mod=s" target="_blank"><span style="color: #20124d;">lithotomy</span></a>, the beak of a squid which was caught by the naturalist Joseph Banks during Captain Cook's first voyage... Banks gave the beak to Hunter and the rest of the squid was eaten by Cook's crew.<br />
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And there are many, many foetuses. Of a rhesus monkey, an armadillo, a porcupine, an aardvark, a guinea pig, unidentified rodents. And humans. I struggled to look. Then I couldn't look away. Three-, four-, and five-month-formed foetuses. Then larger jars for the couple of eight-month-formed, then larger still for the one full-term baby that had not had a chance to escape the womb and breathe it's first breath. Forever in a bell-jar, oddly calm and blank-faced. Next to this was a case holding quintuple foetuses from a premature birth. Five months formed then born too soon. The local doctor, John Hull, was told he could take the foetuses but not the placenta. This was burnt. Heaven forbid he take a placenta.<br />
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I would recommend watching <a href="http://www.rcseng.ac.uk/museums/hunterian/information/joshua-guide" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #d9d2e9; color: #20124d;">this short video</span></a> of a very cool dude presenting a glimpse of the museum. The warm glow of all life fixed yet floating in hundreds and hundreds of jars, glass reflecting awe-struck eyes, draws pulse-twitching, blood-pumping, air-gulping beings into a treasure trove of fleshy gems. And it's free. <br />
<br />Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-36498894101981635652013-01-01T21:19:00.000+00:002013-01-01T21:51:27.613+00:00Modern LoveI could, of course, write reams and reams prompted by the well-promoted, excellently curated exhibition on the Pre-Raphaelites I went to a couple of months ago at Tate Britain. I could write about the muses, Mariana, and the watery Ophelia. I could write about the detail and illustriuous list of greats in Ford Madox Brown's painting <em><a href="http://www.artmagick.com/pictures/picture.aspx?id=6109&name=the-seeds-and-fruits-of-english-poetry" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #cfe2f3; color: #351c75;">The Seeds and Fruits of English Poetry</span></a></em>. I could write about the staggeringly darkly beautiful wardrobe created by Philip Webb and Edward Burne Jones as a wedding present for William and Jane Morris. The front panels depict an image from Chaucer's <em>The Prioress's Tale</em>; a rather anti-Semitic yarn about a young hymn-singing boy who has his throat cut by Jews. Interesting choice of decoration for a wedding gift. But instead I will write about <em><a href="http://www.bmagic.org.uk/objects/1918P43" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #cfe2f3; color: #20124d;">The Death of Chatterton</span></a></em> by Henry Wallis. Partly because I have always loved this painting, but mostly because there seemed to be odd coincidences surrounding it. <br />
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Chatterton, that tragic Romantic hero, the poet who penned pseudo-medieval verses and committed suicide at the unfathomably young age of seventeen. [And if it wasn't suicide, it was death from an overdose of arsenic used as self-medication for a venereal disease, so equally Romantic.] Chatterton who ghoulishly languishes on his dishevelled bed wearing bright purple breeches in Wallis's depiction. Chatterton, painted by Wallis, modelled by the poet and novelist George Meredith. Meredith was married to Mary Ellen Nicolls, the daughter of Thomas Love Peacock (the rather overlooked yet most eccentrically excellent novelist), but she ran off with Wallis two years after her husband was painted as Chatterton. Scandal. However, it did lead to a rather great work: <em>Modern Love. </em>Meredith wrote fifty sixteen-line sonnets about the demise of a marriage. Arguably the demise of his first marriage to Mary Ellen.<br />
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'Fast, sweet and golden shows the marriage-knot.<br />
Dear guests, you now have seen love's corpse-light shine.'<br />
<div style="text-align: left;">
(XVII)</div>
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The sonnets are narrated by the husband and are at once both dramatic and domestic, intimate and heartbreaking. <br />
<br />
'I pluck the flower, and smell it, and revive <br />
The time when in her eyes I stood alive.'<br />
(XLV)<br />
<br />
The boy I know best once wrote an eight-thousand word essay on this novella in verse. He then used them as a starting point for one of his band's songs. I think of the Romantics and endless sonnets whenever I hear them play <em>Meredith</em>.<br />
<br />
And so to yet more coincidental oddities. Just after I went to the exhibition and marvelled at <em>The Death of Chatterton</em>, I began my obsession with Nigel Nicolson's <em>Portrait of a Marriage</em>. This is an account of his mother and father's marriage. His mother and father just so happen to be Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson. Their story is told in different sections, with great swathes taken from Vita's autobiography, followed by texts added by Nigel Nicolson who comments on events using his own memories, various letters, and Vita's diaries. It is, quite simply, wonderful. They had an unconventional marriage, yet it worked for them. Vita fell in love with bright distracting glittering figures frequently, passionately and obsessively. Most of these figures were women. Harold had his own dalliances. Yet family, literature, love and gardening fused them together until Vita's death. They were happy oh so more often than they were unhappy. They were separate free spirits, but they made a whole. A whole marriage. I thought it interesting reading about this marriage in light of what I had discovered about George Meredith (who I had looked into further on seeing him posed as Chatterton), but it wasn't until I was a little way through the first part that I had one of those eyebrow-raising moments. Vita is describing her seventeenth year in her autobiography, just before she met Harold but after she has first become hopelessly enamoured with Violet Keppel, and she writes 'I must have been suffering from a bad attack of <em>Weltschmerz</em>, and indeed I had just finished a play on Chatterton of quite unequalled gloom'.<br />
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There is no further reference to Chatterton in this work, but Vita did indeed write<em> Chatterton: A Drama in Three Acts</em>. A play running to 60-odd pages and her first published work. Unfortunately I have not read it myself so cannot comment on the content, but I do find it extraordinary that everything is connected and it all overwhelmed me in a wave. The Romantics, Chatterton, Wallis, Meredith, <em>Modern Love</em>, the intricacies and fascinations of marriage, Vita and Harold... <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">My not very good photograph of a photograph of Vita and her penmanship</td></tr>
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NB <strong><span class="srTitle">Weltschmerz</span>,</strong> <span class="bps-article-ttrans">( German: “world grief”) </span>the prevailing mood of melancholy and pessimism associated with the poets of the Romantic era that arose from their refusal or inability to adjust to those realities of the world that they saw as destructive of their right to subjectivity and personal freedom—a phenomenon thought to typify Romanticism.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-30445871571872939372012-10-25T00:15:00.004+01:002012-10-25T00:50:35.602+01:00La Jeune Anglaise<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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A weekend in Paris. There was too much to do/see/absorb that I can write about and do justice to. So, I'm going to briefly touch on padlocks on bridges. I know that folk attach padlocks to the railings and bars of bridges in all sorts of places, in many different cities and countries. But I really took the time to see them in Paris. Golden nuggets clustered like barnacles over La Seine. Couples (romantics/best-friends/soul-mates) lock padlocks onto bridges between two separate shores, connecting them and making them one, to signify everlasting relationships, everlasting love. I'm not so sure about the everlasting part, but I do like the idea of remembering particular moments with particular people for ever and ever and marking these with something tangible. Tangible and, of course, highly romanticised. But in the French language, everything seems a little romanticised... And husky, gorgeously gutteral.<br />
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Padlocking things, for instance, like reading the denouement of Kate Chopin's <em>The Awakening</em> while listening to the incessant rain pelting down outside our Paris hotel. Like gulping red wine with my mother on a boat trip at sunset along La Seine and watching young women eat bread and drink with each other with their legs dangling over the edge above the water. Like seeing the Apocalypse all sun-bright in a sky-high <a href="http://sainte-chapelle.monuments-nationaux.fr/en/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">stained glass window</span></a> in the shape of a rose, one petal depicting the Whore of Babylon being carried away by the Beast. Like reading a novel based on Ernest and Hadley Hemingway's life in Paris in the upstairs library of <a href="http://www.shakespeareandcompany.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">Shakespeare and Company</span></a> then buying a hardback pink-covered Ronald Firbank. Like coming across a rain-soaked leafy little <a href="http://www.museedemontmartre.fr/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">museum</span></a> in Renoir's studio and gardens all about Montmartre and the 'histoire, boheme, cabarets' in amongst all the glorious tat surrounding the Sacre Coeur. Like being floored by water lilies in an old <a href="http://www.musee-orangerie.fr/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">orangery</span></a>. Eight enormous canvasses curved around the walls painted deeply and heart-wringingly by Monet. I fell head-over-heels into that pond.<br />
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Like finding a revelation of an artist in a little room beneath these masterpieces. We found Chaïm Soutine. He was born in Jewish province in Minsk in 1893, then moved to Paris aged twenty, where he lived in Montparnasse along with other Eastern European artists. We stayed in Montparnasse for the weekend, purely by accident. Or, indeed, serendipitously. Soutine visited the Louvre regularly, and was enthralled by the old masters. He met Modigliani a couple of years after coming to Paris. Well, this friendship sealed my interest in Soutine, as I have a long-held adolescent love for Modigliani. [A framed blow-up study of one of his portraits as re-imagined by my thirteen-year-old self in oil pastel and batik hanging in the living room of my family home is an embarrassing testament to this.] Soutine was also befriended and sponsored by <a href="http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/67.187.107" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">Madeleine Castaing</span></a>. She had previously been an actress in silent films, then became an antique dealer. Soutine painted her portrait and it is STRONG. She is wearing a red dress and a fur coat, she has red lips and a long nose, she is beautiful, expressive, distinctive. Her eyes droop slightly at the outside corners and her her hands seem distracted, like her fingers are worrying each other...<br />
<br />
The portraits have a wit, a humour, yet they show more. Like the haunting eyes of a little girl in <a href="http://www.christies.com/lotfinder/paintings/chaim-soutine-la-petite-fille-a-la-5138465-details.aspx" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">La petite fille à la poupée</span></a>. He was also an obsessive, as evidenced by his many series. Series of turkeys, rabbits, head waiters, valets, choirboys, plucked chickens and endless beef carcasses. It was all the idolising of Rembrandt that did it. Though Andrew Forge did say of Soutine that 'he can paint a dozen turkeys, and each picture is like the discovery of a turkey'. The many canvasses of beef carcasses are rather a treat. As the exhibition pamphlet describes, 'the viscera of the spread-eagled animal glisten with vivid reds'. Well, Soutine did have fresh carcasses delivered from abattoirs which he then sprayed with fresh blood to maintain the colour, so I guess they would glisten... Trees were another big thing of his. Sometimes many, at sharp and fluid angles in the wind, painted in a way to both contain and emphasise their wildness, sometimes a single focal point in the foreground. Soutine spent his childhood in Minsk where the idea of tree as protector was central to traditional rites and customs. A childhood in Minsk, then a death at the age of fifty in Paris. He is buried in Montparnasse Cemetery. Picasso, Max Jacob and Cocteau all attended the funeral. This cemetery was first place we walked around on our weekend. We saw so many family plots, so many plaques, statues, all-out temples. Bodies piled down inside the earth so beautifully. We found the joint grave of Sartre and de Beauvoir, the pale stone covered in red and pink lipstick kisses. If only I had also tracked down both Seburg and Sontag, lying there beneath our wandering feet.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">La Jeune Anglaise</td></tr>
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I'm so glad Soutine came to light. I'm padlocking him for sure. This Young English Girl discovered him. La Jeune Anglaise. Though she resembles my mother a great deal more than she does me. Fitting, as this portrait is her favourite. Along with <a href="http://ns2.the-athenaeum.org/art/full.php?ID=56743" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">Woman Entering Water</span></a>, the white-clad Rembrandtian figure flaunting what she thinks are knees like hers. Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-37572375256445309862012-09-25T22:53:00.000+01:002012-09-25T22:53:14.449+01:00Very Morris<em>If a chap can't compose an epic poem while he's weaving a tapestry, he had better shut up, he'll never do any good at all</em><br />
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A truth uttered by Morris</div>
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Everyone knows that William Morris was a pretty awesome guy; that flat pattern, floral motif, arts & crafts design vibe he had going on was all-out great. What I did not know is that the William Morris Gallery is only one swift bus ride from my front door to that of the museum's - the Morris Express if you will. The gallery is a house in Walthamstow that Morris lived in as a teenager. It's been newly spruced up for 2012, what with all the culture and festivities in London this year. The gardens and grounds out back are beautiful, with a specially designed William Morris Garden directly behind the house. The plants and flowers are supposed to represent different aspects of Morris's philosophies, ideas and artistic endeavours. I don't really know how a garden can reflect these, but I think it just needs some time to grow into itself. <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Come back in ten years...</td></tr>
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The first room is an overview of Morris's life, with a sculpture of his wondrous bearded head placed beneath these words emblazoned upon the central wall: 'I do not want art for a few, any more than education for a few, or freedom for a few.'<br />
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Morris is eminently quotable. I shan't bore with all the many many wise words and lovely phrases I scribbled down all over the gallery booklet. I covered three sides in tiny writing. A favourite is a section of a letter he wrote to his sister Emma - so ordinary yet a clear and intimate insight into the personality and humanity of a growing boy with appetites for everything:<br />
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'As you are going to send me the cheese perhaps you would set Sarah to make a good large cake, and I should also like some biscuits and will you also send me some paper and postage stamps also my silkworm eggs, and if you could get it an Italian pen box.'<br />
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There are also quotes from other notable figures in the world of art and literature about Morris written along and around the top of the ceilings in this first room. I reckon Engels summed him up with his alliterative description: 'a settled sentimental socialist'. And John Ruskin enriches this by stating grandly that 'Morris is beaten gold'. Well, he was certainly glowing with passions - for beauty, for politics, for equality, for nature, for workmanship, for ART. He loved stories, classical myths, Icelandic sagas and medieval tales. And moments of his life read like wonderful fairy tales and vivid anecdotal images. When he was six and settled at Woodford Hall, with its 50 acre park, he was given a suit of armour and rode around the grounds on his Shetland pony. A little later in life, when hangin' with all those wicked, riotous Pre-Raphaelite fellows, he dressed up in armour commissioned from a local blacksmith to model for the paintings. He got himself stuck in a helmet, 'embedded with iron, dancing with rage and roaring inside'. He married the timelessly-beautiful Jane, and daily life in the Morris household was a hoot, with guests playing hide and seek and pelting each other with apples in the garden. They lived in 'more a poem than a house' as Rossetti said of Red House in Kent, which is oh so on my list of places to visit and gawp at and revel in very soon.<br />
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The gallery is absolutely packed to the rafters with information, little tales,grand ideas, facts, artifacts, meticulously printed and illustrated books, paintings, sketches, furniture, carpets, wall-hangings, wallpaper, objets tres tres beau! I can only but glance across them here. But Morris's first biographer put it perfectly when he wrote that 'people dressed themselves with his wall-hangings, covered books with them, did this or that according to their fancy, but hang walls with them they would not.' I wanted to wrap myself in Morris, to touch and feel and luxuriate as well as look look look. 'I determined to do no less than to transform the world with beauty' said Morris. He's certainly transformed this little bit of Walthamstow.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Gallery grounds</td></tr>
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Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-19579656950785541692012-09-11T21:18:00.001+01:002012-09-11T21:18:04.442+01:00Lovetokens (lying lank)On occasion I cloak myself in black, dig out my one pair of sensible black shoes that my mother bought me for my university interviews, pin back my flyaway hair and flex my muscles as I stand with loaded silver trays of champagne glasses at the top of the stairs of 50 Albemarle Street, the home of John Murray. I push drinks and the most beautifully crafted canapes upon the great, the good, the toffs of various foundations, associations and societies. Last night the quaffers and munchers were all members of The Byron Society. Interestingly (and disappointingly) there was no scandal, excess, incestuous love affairs or anything of the kind that Byron would have instigated or indulged in. They all seemed to leave for an early night.<br />
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This year marks the bicentenary of the publication of the first two cantos of <a href="http://knarf.english.upenn.edu/Byron/charoldt.html" target="_blank"><em><span style="color: #351c75;">Childe Harold's Pilgrimage</span></em></a>. Byron also took his seat in the House of Lords in 1812. All this means that laid out in the ground floor display room at John Murray's are the objects, trinkets and letters that were left to the publishing house by Byron. It turns out that this means mostly hair.<br />
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The first thing I'm asked on walking into the kitchen area is 'Have you seen all the hair?!'. This was not the most settling thing to hear in such close proximity to canape preparation. But in the little room just along the corridor, there was indeed a great deal of hair. Two hundred year old hair. Belonging to the ladyloves of Byron. Ranging from rich auburn to chestnut brown, locks of female hair were displayed in scant coils tied with thread, ropes of little ringlets and, in one disturbing case, a thick cascade that curled down off the table. Faded handwritten labels dictated whose heads these samples were once attached to. The current John Murray urged me to stroke the dangling strands. I refused with a nervous grimace.<br />
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Alongside the hair were Byron's inner boots. He had very tiny feet. The right foot much smaller of course. Tiny feet and a rather large collection of hair. Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-91309105450547544852012-09-01T13:07:00.001+01:002012-09-01T13:09:45.281+01:00<br />
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I have travelled home to Northumberland for two short stays in the past week and a half. The length of the country, four times over, provides time for reading. I am tackling <em>Wolf Hall</em> (finally). Hilary is supercool: blood, guts, and well-researched history made real. Snatches of humour too. I read this passage - which makes reference to Henry Percy, 6th Earl of Northumberland, who had been betrothed to Anne Boleyn before she made a play for the King - and had a little lol:<br />
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'My lady', he turns to Anne,'you would not like to be in Harry Percy's country. For you know he would do as those northern lads do, and keep you in a freezing turret up a winding stair, and only let you come down for dinner. And just as you are seated, and they are bringing in a pudding made of oatmeal mixed with the blood of cattle they have got in a raid, my lord comes thundering in, swinging a sack - oh, sweetheart, you say, a present for me? and he says, aye, madam, if it please you, and opens the sack and into your lap rolls the severed head of a Scot.'<br />
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Tru dat. Born and bred on delicious bloody oatmeal pud. <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">How lasses roll in Northumberland</td></tr>
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Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-78539061836377636962012-08-25T09:06:00.000+01:002012-08-25T09:06:32.111+01:00FlotsamAn image that lurks forever in the murky depths of my head is that of Sycorax breast-feeding her son Caliban. I watched Derek Jarman's dark imagining of <em>The Tempest</em> in my second year of university and it was the oddest, most grotesque, most dream-like film I had seen. Punk Miranda played by Toyah Wilcox - need I say more. However, after last weekend, I will associate new images with Jarman. <br />
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On the hottest Saturday of the year, we visited Dungeness. A flat shingle beach, the shore lined with fishing rods and put-you-up chairs, home to a simple stark lighthouse, and shadowed by the humming nuclear power station. Dotted about are wooden fishing boats, seeming as though they had unexpectedly beached, then dried and aged. And neatly spaced out along this flatness are cottages. They look like old railway carriages and are apparently hot property. The homes of poets, one would presume, if only they could afford them. On such a sunny day, they are idyllic living spots, but in winter and in storms they must be bleak. Beautifully bleak.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdYg-7l_BDWo8HghQBSA4crdCCbuCGc3VuafKT8zGMTA9kyOpof72F1mT-IY-KmGBIxTx5HE-zUeWQW8GorR2ejYQMKxo0eZIr-_aCL7n-eNWkRrD8Xpl0bBHpjAHq0dmnQ4pV/s1600/378607_3523983990952_1710993025_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="213" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgdYg-7l_BDWo8HghQBSA4crdCCbuCGc3VuafKT8zGMTA9kyOpof72F1mT-IY-KmGBIxTx5HE-zUeWQW8GorR2ejYQMKxo0eZIr-_aCL7n-eNWkRrD8Xpl0bBHpjAHq0dmnQ4pV/s320/378607_3523983990952_1710993025_n.jpg" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Prospect Cottage</td></tr>
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Derek Jarman lived in Prospect Cottage. It is tar-black timber, with the window and door frames picked out in yolky-sun yellow. A Donne poem graces one side of the cottage, words made from raised wood, lines from the first and last stanza of <a href="http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-sun-rising/" target="_blank"><em>The Sun Rising</em></a>. Jarman created a curious shingle garden, all bizarre beach plants and found objects. Artworks of rusted metal and driftwood surround the cottage. Stone toads, craggy and puckered, sit with fixed painted eyes. The pebbles, rocks, and shells shift and crunch as endless visiting feet step unsteadily. Jarman, dead eighteen years, no longer lives here, but jazz filters out through the windows, and bright canvases hang over cream sofas. So someone calls it home.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiELUq34y367DOG3fckHNGVmI50Eo0RybNJXa9DLZ-1j28QpRBK7-_9m5h1PO7oJ-5PnGRyZZjtg7Egy36SoX9T0IA0SRAuOhyphenhyphenTlXcGMn15dyTIcURxdn3SofcXzmP-a7FHriff/s1600/552162_3523987551041_199886437_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiELUq34y367DOG3fckHNGVmI50Eo0RybNJXa9DLZ-1j28QpRBK7-_9m5h1PO7oJ-5PnGRyZZjtg7Egy36SoX9T0IA0SRAuOhyphenhyphenTlXcGMn15dyTIcURxdn3SofcXzmP-a7FHriff/s320/552162_3523987551041_199886437_n.jpg" width="213" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">fotos taken by F</td></tr>
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Dungeness is other-worldly. As if to prove this, a little further along the shingle, a sign points to 'The Fifth Quarter Mystical Gift Shop'. A shirtless man sits outside its bead-curtained entrance, little furry dogs hump happily in welcome, and incense sticks burn with their sickening perfume. The tiny shop is filled with precious stones, mood rings, scented candles, dream catchers, glass lanterns, and a witch whose eyes light up as she cackles at those beach-combers lured in by the absurdity of it all. Perhaps a different kind of magic to that of Prospero or Ariel, yet Dungeness does invoke those famous lines of (the usually silly and insufferable) Miranda:<br />
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<strong>O, wonder!<br />How many goodly creatures are there here!<br />How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world,<br />That has such people in't!</strong><br />
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Jarman and his garden are two such wonders.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-62959840617544287072012-08-11T14:32:00.000+01:002012-08-11T18:52:06.716+01:00Garden of Forking PathsThe Southbank is sunny and busy and smells of hot dogs and donuts and sounds like applause and laughter at the moment. I was walking from the Millennium Bridge along to the Southbank Centre this week and was constantly distracted by street performers, ice-cream stands, music, silent movie-style outdoor theatre, and throngs of people (both tourists and locals). It was a colourful warm walk. When I reached my destination, an entirely different atmosphere settled around me. A quieter one. I had come to see if <a href="http://festival.london2012.com/events/9000965121" target="_blank"><span style="color: #a64d79;">aMAZEme</span></a> really is amazing.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj61LlahV9z6Xb5MxMLJQJUqo8QcagmXSWeevJIF2KqVsMYIC3L1Pe3I_zx-D_qYdZMRnaRWZ2yjsvRKdv7CRdb0RYhsWfMmP-KC2ORxcJPQGP19XwmaJCQ6w8fFvpRFJtlUwSS/s1600/book_maze_12_20120801_2050730992.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="212" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj61LlahV9z6Xb5MxMLJQJUqo8QcagmXSWeevJIF2KqVsMYIC3L1Pe3I_zx-D_qYdZMRnaRWZ2yjsvRKdv7CRdb0RYhsWfMmP-KC2ORxcJPQGP19XwmaJCQ6w8fFvpRFJtlUwSS/s320/book_maze_12_20120801_2050730992.jpg" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">From Juxtapoz Magazine</td></tr>
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Inspired by Jorge Luis Borges, two Brazilian artists - Marcos Saboya and Gualter Pupo - have created a book maze. A labyrinth of 250 000 books. The books have all been provided by Oxfam and supportive donors who wanted to make 'getting lost in a good book' a reality. Any visitor can pick up a book and begin reading - as long as the book is returned to the maze before the visitor leaves. The piles grow as the maze spirals in to the centre, starting low then gradually becoming far taller than me so I could see so many book spines before my eyes. Such variety! Mills & Boon (Modern Heat) lies side by side Margaret Atwood. 'The Complete Kama Sutra' sits next to 'Insects in Britain'. There are picture books, annuals, cookery books, celebrity 'autobiographies', and many many novels all packed together to form walls of stories and histories. Ring-binded sheets of braille lie open on a low wall, looking like wide-winged embroidered birds flying atop book-scapes. <br />
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A little girl was settled down on the floor, bright cardboard pop-up pages spread all around her as people stepped over her small absorbed form. Words and quotes are projected in a blinding light onto the books, distorting them as they wash over the titles. They are also projected onto a crinkled curtain behind the maze - the quotes of Abraham Lincoln, Gandhi, Muhammad Ali, Jean Luc Godard, Shakespeare...(not a lot of women I note, but there are certainly many women writers represented in the maze walls). Along with words, there are moving images projected in colour: fields, trees, sky, a man wearing a sculpted head of a bull as we follow him through different outdoor environments. Surrounded by stories. I was heartened to see that the maze was drawing people in. Browsing readers were picking up books, flicking through pages, occasionally taking them to the sofas on the maze outskirts. Encouragement to build up my walls of books as I travel forward. It's perfectly lovely to get lost every so often. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhQ9Oe5yXd7rqnuL1iAahpiJF3m7C-qfoiRVUZ9rkevs3FJUdHGMjOTHm1pkYsAmNOKtRxMUY44ns9phjnKGYmoGfrkw1gQC9tfPP-WTDXnxEF2G13oFEO3yTQwR6CFb3kPd4sR/s1600/313312.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="300" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhQ9Oe5yXd7rqnuL1iAahpiJF3m7C-qfoiRVUZ9rkevs3FJUdHGMjOTHm1pkYsAmNOKtRxMUY44ns9phjnKGYmoGfrkw1gQC9tfPP-WTDXnxEF2G13oFEO3yTQwR6CFb3kPd4sR/s400/313312.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-76325329231001777322012-08-06T21:16:00.001+01:002012-08-06T21:21:39.385+01:00Blume 4evaA friend of mine who also grew up obsessively reading Noel Streatfield then Jacqueline Wilson then Judy Blume now works at a well-known children's book publishing company. This doesn't just mean picture books and pop-up bed-time stories. There is also the pre-teen/young adult market to consider. Knowing my love for the likes of <span style="background-color: white; color: #674ea7;">'</span><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Are_You_There_God%3F_It's_Me,_Margaret." target="_blank"><span style="background-color: white; color: #674ea7;">Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret</span></a><span style="background-color: white; color: #351c75;">'</span>, she sent me the blurb of a new book she had come across at work. There were a great many capital letters and exclamation marks alongside the actual text of the blurb. This is because the American teen novel she was shouting about is pretty much perfection, and makes my life. Well, it would have made my life when I was thirteen. No, no, the blurb alone makes my life right now, and I must read the entire book ASAP. The back of Abby McDonald's 'Getting over Garrett Delaney' reads as follows:<br />
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<span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;">Sadie is in love - with her best friend, Garrett Delaney. But Garrett has been oblivious to Sadie's feelings for him ever since he sauntered into her life and wowed her with his passion for Proust, not to mention his deep blue eyes. For two long, painful years, Sadie has been Garrett's constant companion, sharing his taste in everything from tragic Russian literature to art films to '80s indie rock. When Garrett leaves for a summer literary retreat, Sadie is sure that the absence will make his heart grow fonder - until he calls to say that he's fallen in love with another girl! Heartbroken, Sadie realizes she's finally had enough and that it's time for a total Garrett detox. Aided by a barista job, an eclectic crew of new friends (including hunky chef Josh) and a customized self-help guide, Sadie embarks on a summer of personal reinvention full of laughter, meltdowns ... and a double shot of love.</span><br />
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Garrett sounds like the kind of douche I would have thought was an absolute dreamboat. Things in the young adult world may have changed since the Blume years, but it can't be denied that there is definitely some teen-targeting genius at work here. Passion for Proust! Magic.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-15549088737787110922012-07-29T19:12:00.004+01:002012-07-29T19:15:24.076+01:00One of four girlsIn 1961, the American photographer Eve Arnold contributed to a project for <a href="http://www.magnumphotos.com/C.aspx?VP3=CMS3&VF=MAGO31_2_VForm" target="_blank"><span style="color: #351c75;">Magnum Photos</span></a>: a series of photographs of people who placed notices in <em>The Times</em>. Three young women posted the following notice in the personal column:<br />
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'This little girl goes to America. We three stay at home. Which little girl will come and share our Knightsbridge flat?'<br />
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Eve Arnold came to London and took this beautiful photograph. I could look into the steam of it all day. Eve moved to London in 1961.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJQzCfhaWgYgwHRujDXk3Y4eCYNUFaY2YDnWmGsyx3eNbnRKrlH8stvtMN-Qy8fjNDnMFXS41_hyoNiww-IHISotyO1SRPWV3Tvv2EEZ7Jx2B01NopBeUAJQyV_bK_y8-e2H6H/s1600/LON4894.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="640" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJQzCfhaWgYgwHRujDXk3Y4eCYNUFaY2YDnWmGsyx3eNbnRKrlH8stvtMN-Qy8fjNDnMFXS41_hyoNiww-IHISotyO1SRPWV3Tvv2EEZ7Jx2B01NopBeUAJQyV_bK_y8-e2H6H/s640/LON4894.jpg" width="427" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">One of four girls sharing an apartment</td></tr>
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<br />Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-12703563651446145932012-07-26T21:59:00.000+01:002012-07-27T10:44:27.164+01:00Much Ado<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZalkoXnALhIHU_1PghYrxFzln9qEs7cXazROyStoyxQHdZuvjUGCxeVOCGU6m8uIAOTRD_lgfL_43HQtoJ8eY1SfhgCZWEcRsRrgYazZqvLlsRwQ4PEoCQApmud43A7moMWBp/s1600/579650_10151138178168368_140569102_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiZalkoXnALhIHU_1PghYrxFzln9qEs7cXazROyStoyxQHdZuvjUGCxeVOCGU6m8uIAOTRD_lgfL_43HQtoJ8eY1SfhgCZWEcRsRrgYazZqvLlsRwQ4PEoCQApmud43A7moMWBp/s320/579650_10151138178168368_140569102_n.jpg" width="240" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Photo taken by a Shakespeare-loving South African outside the Globe</td></tr>
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Once again the British Museum Reading Rooms have been re-jigged. They no longer house books and books and desks and books as they did when I first arrived in London, and how the likes of Oscar Wilde and Virginia Woolf experienced the space beneath that wonderful domed roof.<br />
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<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Times, 'Times New Roman', serif;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'; line-height: 14px;">'Written up are the names of great men; and we all cower like mice nibbling crumbs in our most official discreet, impersonal mood beneath. I like this dusty bookish atmosphere. Most of the readers seemed to have rubbed their noses off and written their eyes out. Yet they have a life they like - believe in the necessity of making books I suppose: verify, collate, make up other books forever'</span> </span><em>Jacob's Room</em>, Virginia Woolf.<br />
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However, though shelved books may no longer line the perimeter of this museum centre-point, it is still very much home to WORDS. Well, it is right now at any rate. Some of the very best words written in Britain. The current exhibition is <b>Shakespeare: Staging the World</b>.<br />
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Obviously it's all tied in with the London 2012 thing (because EVERYTHING seems to be) but, y'know, maybe good stuff can come out of the whole Olympics business... Entering through a corridor while the sounds of theatre crowds surround visitors is a pretty excellent opening to the exhibition and I certainly learnt some interesting bits and bobs while wending my way round.<br />
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Shakespeare came up with the theatre term 'groundling' to describe the audience members closest to the stage; a groundling is a fish that lies on the bottom of rivers and gazes up at the surface with mouths open.<br />
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I was also unaware that the bard was accused of assault outside the Swan Theatre (a fact I learnt when looking at rapiers and daggers, reading about London's knife crime), as well as being a keen gardener in Stratford upon Avon (learnt while looking at contemporary gardening tools in 'The Forest of Arden' section, where music fitting for a melancholy lover was streamed on a loop).<br />
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There is a board or two all about bear fighting: bears, like actors, could become celebrities. Displayed behind glass is a skull of a bear which was excavated on the site of the Bear Garden in the 1980s. Its teeth were ground down so that she couldn't crush a dog's skull in a bite. I guess that would mean that the show would be over too quickly.<br />
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A portrait of Elizabeth I hangs on the wall, with the pale Queen carrying water in a sieve. This, of course, proves her virginity. Just like the Roman Priestess Tuccia, the Vestal Virgin. Obviously.<br />
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Also displayed are really beautiful and rather quirky livery badges in the shape of bears, harts and swans. And tiny cameos of the suicide of Cleopatra, complete with asp at her breast. If only these were sold in the exhibition gift shop.<br />
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Less beautiful, but just as interesting, are the calf's heart stuck with pins and the witch's cursing bone. The cry of 'Where hast thou been, sister?' echoes shrilly in this wing of the exhibition, with the bloodthirsty and bonkers 'Killing swine' returning the call. The witches voices sing and hiss and cackle on repeat. James I's treatise on witchcraft, <i>Daemonologie</i>, is open in a cabinet; he was paranoid about this particular subject. He blamed witches for the storms that could have killed him.<br />
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There are 16th century artists impressions of 'others', such as the Picts of Scotland. A portrait of a naked and 'wild' man, in a pose often attributed to gentility, is entitled 'The True Picture of One Pict'. Hmm, yes, 'true'.<br />
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Two huge globes sit next to each other. They are called the Molyneux Globes and were the first globes to be made by an Englishman. One is terrestrial, the other celestial. The clestial globe depicts the constellations as elaborate illustrations; Leo is a luxurious lion, Ursa Major a glossy-coated wild bear, and so on. <br />
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The most memorable and amazing object, however, is Sonny Venkatrathnam's 'Robben Island Bible'. This is a copy of Shakespeare's Complete Works which was disguised as Hindu scripture (it is covered in bright Diwali cards) and kept by apartheid-era ANC prisoners in the 1970s on Robben Island, a prison off Cape Town. The inmates secretly passed the book around, and Venkatrathnam asked them to mark and sign their favourite passages. There are notes scribbled in the margins. Mandela chose lines from <em>Julius Caeser</em>, II, ii. <br />
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"Cowards die many times before their deaths,<br />
The valiant never taste of death but once."<br />
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I think that all who ever used the Reading Rooms would probably feel it's acceptable for Shakespeare to take them over for a time. Him and his words.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-42512269203062273542012-07-18T21:22:00.001+01:002012-07-19T10:48:37.970+01:00Moveable FeastsSo, I'm eating meat again. I hadn't eaten it since my sixteenth birthday. Eight years without meat. Interestingly, when I was twenty-two, I wrote a great deal about food. I had to plumb all depths to create a number of poems in a short space of time. I could write about food forever. <br />
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I wrote about cooking a goose at Christmas. I wrote: I am a vegetarian./I dream of eating meat.//Bloodthirsty dreams of medieval feasts,/glazed game, veins clogged with dripping./But the butchery is over,/I wake and hunt for raspberries instead.<br />
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I wrote about my father and I discovering an Italian restaurant that actually serves Zabaglione, his favourite, the rare dish that can still tempt his wavering sweet tooth. I wrote: ...they finish dessert,/folding napkins into boats.//She watches him fix his old tooth back into its hole,/all gum clumsy,/while her folds of flesh birth her own sweet tooth.<br />
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I wrote about inheriting hollow legs, which I tried so hard to fill. I wrote: ...she sweats over molten sucrose,/pours it down into ankles, mixes in pectin,/boils it up to make a viscous blood jam./Overripe fig flesh, bruised parma-violet,/clings to the marrow-sucked bones. <br />
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Etc etc. Bla bla. Lots of poetic overindulgence, enough to make you sick.<br />
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These writings are now old. They are about past cannibalisms and developing tastes. And were written when I was on the cusp of saying yes to everything. Eating meat is saying yes. It's stopping restrictions. I won't buy or cook it myself most likely, but I will take the opportunity to say yes to flesh when it presents itself, when it acts as lubricant or superglue in lovely social situations. (Didn't mean for that to sound sexual, more metaphorical...)<br />
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A friend of mine said yes big-time. He said yes to leaving the country, teaching in Mexico City for a five week spell, then cycling across South America for seven months. He will also have to say yes to meat - steak and rich red wine will fuel him. Though in Mexico, tequila is only 20p a shot. Shout yes to that! <br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjx7nF0K0U_Wmb2vDpcZiiVXN6xomr_RsEMZsNp9vYi0XBuGeiGnyNk11TMaQ9XyhH-XkV9_O5Dqytpkr2ercm9cDZ52khO6_AU9pkUlZBIxUOGajXaZ5f-XpswgXYjpwekywQ2/s1600/6_postcard85.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="102" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjx7nF0K0U_Wmb2vDpcZiiVXN6xomr_RsEMZsNp9vYi0XBuGeiGnyNk11TMaQ9XyhH-XkV9_O5Dqytpkr2ercm9cDZ52khO6_AU9pkUlZBIxUOGajXaZ5f-XpswgXYjpwekywQ2/s400/6_postcard85.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">From <a href="http://www.iwishyouwerehereproject.com/index.php?/project/postcards/">www.iwishyouwerehereproject.com</a></td></tr>
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He is very much a traveller, seeing and living all that he can. I came across a project called<span style="background-color: white;"> </span><a href="http://www.iwishyouwerehereproject.com/index.php?/project/postcards/" target="_blank"><span style="background-color: #f4cccc; color: #351c75;">I Wish You Were Here</span></a>. The project is all about postcards and a woman named Marianne. Marianne loves to travel and has done widely throughout her life. She now has terminal lung cancer. I don't want to dwell on this heart-wrenching illness (my mother has just taken part in a 'fun run' to raise funds for 'cancer victims' - a term I struggle with as the word 'victim' can never have positive connotations - and she will regale you with a very pink tale of horror and hilarity and a perma-tanned Zumba-dancing motivational monster named Bunny if you so wish to hear it), but it does mean that Marianne can no longer travel. So her daughter has asked the world to send Marianne postcards from wherever they hail from, with three things the sender loves about the place they live in scribbled on the back. This is an excellent idea. The daughter scans each and every postcard, front and back, so they can be seen on the website. If Marianne can't take herself out into the world, the world can jolly well come through her letter box.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyDofq2pMJFUT77F4tAxmBzwC66CxAEQRQzRmwSlrwZ2qt9tLBToz50uafY_A7icZfTFRrDh3FJT4K1Jrj0y3XLvuHRWkc64VNjD0ASa8s7ZNXyEGnzbvkuhD2ul-Mi1FPwNCm/s1600/6_postcard102.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="186" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjyDofq2pMJFUT77F4tAxmBzwC66CxAEQRQzRmwSlrwZ2qt9tLBToz50uafY_A7icZfTFRrDh3FJT4K1Jrj0y3XLvuHRWkc64VNjD0ASa8s7ZNXyEGnzbvkuhD2ul-Mi1FPwNCm/s320/6_postcard102.jpg" width="320" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">From <a href="http://www.iwishyouwerehereproject.com/">www.iwishyouwerehereproject.com</a></td></tr>
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She lives in Hackney Wick, only a couple of streets away from where I previously lived. The flat where I wrote a great deal about food in fact. And though she lives in the same city as I do, and only a stone's throw from my old home, I will write her a postcard. The three things I love about living here are overhearing conversations between every kind of person you could ever imagine on the top deck of London buses, being able to get cans of ice cold Tyskie and Red Stripe for a £1 each from local corner shops at all hours, and how I can walk across the Heath and visit Keats's house in snow in winter. Of course there are a million other things, and I would say yes to all of them and more.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-90213187201236851362012-07-04T15:43:00.001+01:002012-07-04T15:43:35.317+01:00Read SeaIn the late seventies Michael stayed in a wooden hut by the hot and salty Red Sea for a spell. He shared the hut with a chap named Ivan. Ivan was (and I presume still is) half Venezuelan, half Russian. He was going to study at Harvard, but wanted to travel first. He took two bags with him. One bag was very small and held clothes and vital supplies. The other was very large and held books. The books were mostly Russian classics in translation. His first language was Spanish, his second Russian, but he read Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Gogol, Turgenev et al in English. Once he had read a book he gave it away. Michael's eyes lit up. He had run out of reading matter, so Ivan saved him with Russian literature. Neither Ivan nor Michael cried while reading the tragedy-spattered novels, as there was more than enough salt water surrounding them. The book bag emptied and Ivan travelled lighter, though his head was heavier with yarns of suicidal heroes and heroines and unsuccessful love affairs and soul-struck suffering. <br />
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I like to think that he then left Michael in a hut full of novels, walked out into the heat, and strolled through the parted Red Sea carrying just one small bag. I'm pleased that Kindles didn't exist in the seventies, as this little tale wouldn't have existed either. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIJtIG-fazK1o_vU36W0I2z2fv1cWxpQbs_ODunc9EBm30774iiAIeyCjXycxsgDxubXppfShjpNHcuD3VcFIrMBz8A1iThH3nRKKWAo5FtpE-axZ5xf5j8CeQizSGS2iQu5Kk/s1600/Family+day+out+to+Barter+Books+001+(2).jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIJtIG-fazK1o_vU36W0I2z2fv1cWxpQbs_ODunc9EBm30774iiAIeyCjXycxsgDxubXppfShjpNHcuD3VcFIrMBz8A1iThH3nRKKWAo5FtpE-axZ5xf5j8CeQizSGS2iQu5Kk/s400/Family+day+out+to+Barter+Books+001+(2).jpg" width="238" /></a></div>Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-25384066087575499922012-06-06T23:36:00.002+01:002012-06-06T23:40:18.554+01:00<em>Raise me a daïs of silk and down; </em><br />
<em>Hang it with vair and purple dyes; </em><br />
<em>Carve it in doves and pomegranates, </em><br />
<em>And peacocks with a hundred eyes; </em><br />
<em>Work it in gold and silver grapes, </em><br />
<em>In leaves and silver fleurs-de-lys...</em><br />
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[A Birthday]</div>
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And so Christina Rossetti writes about the day she felt she was born to life, the day she really saw everything beautiful and anew. The birthday of her life has come to her because her love has come to her.<br />
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A Londoner who moved in avante-garde artistic circles, but was prone to depression. Well, I can't say that for myself. We may both love Keats, but where she turned to religion and became clinically melancholic, I am feeling as sunny as I ever have. Despite growing old. I celebrated one of the best birthdays last week. <br />
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I watched <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ZzNlA9uZ0g" target="_blank"><span style="color: #4c1130;">Harold and Maude</span></a> only a fortnight or so ago, imagining the taste of oat straw tea and ginger pie enjoyed alongside chats and songs with Maude in her cluttered rail car home. Harold bestows an engraved gift to Maude ('Harold loves Maude'), which she accepts then throws into the sea so she will always know where it is. He fills her birthday, and her home, with sunflowers, large and bright and everywhere, like a forest with cake and organic champagne at its heart. It is her 8oth birthday, the age she decides she will die. When Harold happily claims that spending so much time with her is giving him vices, she replies 'Vice? Virtue? It's best not to be too moral'. YES. Of course I've been listening to <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyoXneoGMLw" target="_blank"><span style="color: #4c1130;">Cat Stevens</span></a> on repeat since.<br />
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Our end-of-May party at Lawn House was full of white and yellow posies, my birthday full of books. Better than paper sunflowers. I cut the flowers, arranged them in jam jars and placed them on every surface. A full house of friends, tobacco and gin. Birthday week of home-made devil's food cake, my favourite coffee and walnut cake, Waitrose chocolate cake, and pastel-coloured lemon cupcakes (twee-alert) with take-out coffee. Prosecco, red wine, and so much summer gin and tonic. Then rounds and rounds of fries and onion rings that we inhaled to soak up alcohol. All this I raised in place of Christina's birthday daïs. <br />
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The books I unwrapped are as vibrant as any peacock, any gold and silver grapes, any purple dyes. A biography of Virginia Woolf from someone who knows me so well, and who knows our noses. The poet Kathleen Jamie's new volume of nature writing, bought for me after I went on and on and on about the <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/apr/08/bergen-whales-museum-kathleen-jamie" target="_blank"><span style="color: #4c1130;">Norwegian whale hall</span></a> full of enormous whale bones hanging from the rafters. A novel about a former university lecturer and modern day Socrates set in a hot London summer that was gifted with the message 'Read a good review and thought of you'. And money to be spent at my favourite <a href="http://foxedbooks.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #4c1130;">second-hand bookshop</span></a>, where I can browse for hours on a Sunday and stock up with pages and pages. Leaf through 'leaves and silver fleurs-de-lys' as it were.Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27312263.post-47460523928966817772012-05-12T13:36:00.000+01:002012-05-12T14:28:37.974+01:00ButterfliesSo, after saying I was going to see the Damien Hirst exhibition at Tate Modern every free day for the past God-knows-how-long, I finally went. Following a huge bank holiday Monday breakfast-for-lunch for indulgent sustenance, I once again cursed like the blazes at my dratted umbrella and bussed it through another grey day to Southbank. The drizzle was fitting, as I wasn't feeling too enthusiastic about checking out Damien's retrospective blockbuster. I'm gonna put it out there: I'm just not that into him. I get some of the messages and ideas and all of that, but endless pharmaceutical cabinets...really?? So yeah, I may be a philistine. However, I did find quite a bit of the exhibition seriously beautiful.<br />
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Firstly there was 'A Thousand Years'. A huge glass vitrine. Maggots hatch, develop into flies, feed on a severed cows head, stick to the congealing pool of blood leaving it pockmarked with fly-prints. Many meet their end on an insect-o-cutor, which sounds like a ridiculous and terrifying B-movie contraption. Others survive to continue the cycle. The eyes of the cow's head were wide-open and milky.<br />
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In the next room was a more aesthetically pleasing take on this life-cycle exploration. 'In and Out of Love (White Paintings and Live Butterflies)'. White canvases are embedded with pupae so butterflies hatch from the paintings, fly freely round the room, feed on sugar water and flowers, mate and lay eggs. Then there is the more stationary version. 'In and Out of Love (Butterfly Paintings and Ashtrays)'. Which is pretty much just that. Ashtrays overflowing with cigarette stubs laid out on tables surrounded by coloured canvases encrusted with varnished butterflies, and quite lovely for it.<br />
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Butterflies carry religious associations of resurrection. So symbolism dictates at any rate. 'Doorways to the Kingdom of Heaven' is huge in scale. On arch-shaped canvases butterflies are arranged into patterns like medieval stained glass church windows. The triptych has a pleasing internal rose-like composition. Stunning against the white gallery walls. More arresting, however, is 'Black Sun'. A vast dark circle, the surface covered in clusters of dead flies that look like a paste of thick tar stuck with tiny insect legs.<br />
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From black to white. 'Sympathy in White Major - Absolution II'. A pale pastel disc-shape comprised of subtle butterflies displayed in circular patterns. The first part of the title is taken from Philip Larkin, who wrote that religion is 'That vast moth-eaten musical brocade/Created to pretend we never die'. Though the poet that came into my mind as I walked through the butterfly rooms was Keats. In one of his many love letters to Fanny Brawne, he writes 'I almost wish we were butterflies and liv'd but three summer days—three such days with you I could fill with more delight than fifty common years could ever contain.' If we are to believe Jane Campion, Fanny opened her window to butterflies and trapped them in her room while she pined after her love.<br />
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In the centre of one of the butterfly rooms is 'The Anatomy of an Angel'. A white marble sculpture of an angel, but with a section of internal organs revealed, only visible from certain angles. In one of those sacred moments of poetic coincidence, I had started A.S. Byatt's <em>Angels and Insects</em> only a couple of days earlier. These are two novellas, the first about the naturalist William Adamson, explorer and collector of insects, the second about Christian Mysticism and communicating with angels. I hadn't yet begun the second novella, but the first seemed particularly prescient . William collects insects and butterflies and can't help but compare their habits to those of humans. His love-interest, named Eugenia (which is also the name of both a rare butterfly and the novella itself - <em>Morpho Eugenia</em>) makes decorative displays using butterflies. Well, blow me over with a feather (or, indeed, butterfly wing), for Damien is doing just that. Eugenia tells William:<br />
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'I have made a beautiful display - a kind of quilt, or embroidery almost - out of the earlier specimens you sent my father. I have pinned them out very carefully - they are exquisitely pretty - they give a little the effect of a scalloped cushion, only their colours are more subtle than any silks could be.'<br />
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I don't think I'm giving anything away (well, perhaps I am) when I say that their marriage does not last (for it turns out that she is actually more taken with incest than insects) and he leaves on another expedition. Which leads me to think it may not be such a good idea to paper my walls in butterfly wings, as beautiful as that may be. I would only have to watch them then decay around me.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Photographs courtesy of my gal-pal Frances</td></tr>
</tbody></table>Annahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01695179980657722268noreply@blogger.com3