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Archive for the ‘from the viewing room’ Category

This is superb – a short talk by Jeremy Rifkin illustrated fabulously by the RSA – please, take a few minutes and watch it. I think you’ll be inspired

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As adults we tend to forget how good it was to just play.
Have a look at these orange balloons at play……they’ll remind you how good it is to play, and, especially, to play with someone else who you feel connected to!
(seriously, isn’t it easy to imagine that these two balloons are ALIVE?! Just watch they way they move)

(I made this little video in Cassis, Provence, then set it to a little of the soundtrack of Amelie)

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……a very, very, short movie I made today

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I walked into my living room, and there on the TV was this display –

groundhog day?

I couldn’t resist it……..Groundhog Day???

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I’m a great Bob Harris fan. I love his Radio 2 show on a Saturday night. Last night he played three tracks from an album entitled Songs Around the World, from a project known as Playing for Change.

Here’s one of the three he played (I could have posted ANY of them!) This music is JOYOUS. Is there any better way to show how the paradox of difference and similarity is so characteristically human?

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Today I took a short trip on the train from Kyoto to Inari.
When you get off the train in Inari Station, turn left, then immediately up the first road on your right you’ll see the first two of 10,000 Torii gates winding up the hillside on which the shrine is built.

inari

Once you’ve climbed to the top of the hill you can look back to where you started and out over the whole of Kyoto.

See the same two gates in the distance?

inari and kyoto

That photo is taken with my zoom lens at full stretch. Look what happens as I pull it back up.

inari and kyoto

……and finally…..with minimum zoom…..(can you still see the gates?)

inari and kyoto

This shrine was originally dedicated to the God of rice, but is now more generally dedicated to prosperity. Each of the 10000 gates is donated by an individual or business hoping for prosperity. Foxes are believed to be the animals which guard the shrine and there are lots of stone ones to be seen (but I didn’t see any live ones).
The gates wind up and up the hillside. It’s quite a climb, especially on day like today when the temperature was 26C, but the gates are so close together that they form long shaded tunnels.

Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates
Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates
Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates
Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates
Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates

The gates thread their way through the wooded hillside and near the top you can wander off through forest paths…

Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates
Fushimi Inari Shrine
Fushimi Inari Shrine Torii Gates

I have never experienced anything quite like this. I’ve talked before about “emerveillement” and I strongly believe we need for re-enchantment in our overly materialist attitude to world. Places like this are known as sacred places. To walk in them, to sit in them, to breathe and listen and look around in them, it’s not hard to understand why. Magical.

Fushimi Inari Shrine

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Towards the end of last year I went unicorn hunting. It opened up whole unknown areas for me, not least that of medieval art. I’m still exploring this and learning all the time and, frankly, its awe-inspiring. Well, here’s another part of that adventure. When I read about the unicorn hunt tapestries which are in Cloisters of the Metropolitan Museum in New York (which are being re-created in Stirling Castle), I also read about the Lady and the Unicorn series which are in the Musee Cluny in Paris. I determined to go and see them, and, last week, I did.

One thing about Paris is that everything is further away than it appears on the map! So, although we set off to find the Cluny by opening time of 0915, it was only after stopping for a coffee at the Sorbonne, and scrutinising the map again, that we managed to actually track it down – only a couple of minutes away from where we had stopped.

musee cluny

The Cluny is one of those amazing small museums in Paris (there are many more for me still to discover!). It’s a rambling, ancient building which doesn’t have real corridors, just the occasional narrow passageway or set of stairs. I had come to see the Lady and the Unicorn tapestries so made my way through the various rooms following the signs to the tapestries.

clunyrez

This plan shows you the ground floor. You enter at the far right and make your way to the far left.

The rooms on the ground floor are either very dimly lit to protect the tapestries and ivories on display, or very brightly lit displaying statuary and parts of medieval buildings. One of the rooms has stained glass all around and all backlit which creates a beautiful effect. Having found my way to the staircase to the first floor, I climbed the stairs and walked through a doorway into the specially designed circular room where the unicorn tapestries hang.

clunypremier

The first thing you encounter is a wall. You can choose to enter the space either to the right or the left of the wall. I went right, and entered into a dimly lit room around which were hung the Lady and the Unicorn series of tapestries, five of them, each representing one of our senses. As you stand gazing at the incredible red and blue tapestries, working your way from the one to the next, you reach the furthest right hanging, “touch”, and turn right around and see behind you the largest of the six tapestries, the enigmatic “A Mon Seul Desir” hanging on the freestanding wall you walked around to enter the room. The overall experience is amazing. No photos, no words, will do it justice. You just have to go. For me, the last time I experienced art like this was when I went to see Monet’s Lily paintings in the Orangerie. There’s another place to put on your places I must see list. When you walk into those oval rooms of the Orangerie and find yourself in the middle of those incredible paintings, it’s completely amazing. You feel surrounded by them, enveloped by them, as if you are diving deep down into the art itself. The Orangerie does that, and so does the Lady and the Unicorn room in the Cluny. It’s pervasive and almost overwhelming. There are a few small stools fixed in the middle of the room and I sat down on one of them.

The first tapestry I looked at was “Taste”, on the far left. I don’t know if you have these experiences with art, but I find when I walk through galleries I can appreciate and admire many works but just occasionally one whacks me right in the heart. This tapestry did it for me. I felt my breath catch, my heart leap, and the tears well up in my eyes. I could hardly take my eyes off it. As I looked at the others, one after the other, they too impressed me but I have to say none of the others had the powerful emotional impact of the first. I’ve read a lot about these tapestries since then and it seems this is one of their key features. They bring out different reactions in different viewers. It’s as if there are deep archetypal truths in them and whoever you are, whatever place you happen to be in, in your life, they have the power to touch something in you, to reveal something of your soul. (no photos will convey even a smattering of the power and impact of these tapestries but if you’d like a quick look check out my collection here)

There are so many mysteries surrounding these tapestries. They are just over 500 years old and are quite astonishingly accomplished works of art, but unlike paintings of the same age, no-one knows who drew the original designs, who actually wove the tapestries, who commissioned and owned them, or what message they were created to convey. There are many theories, and Tracy Chevalier, the author of Girl with The Pearl Earring, is one of those to explore them.

Are all the tapestries portraying the same woman? Who is she? And what exactly is going on in the sixth tapestry, referred to as “A Mon Seul Desir”. Whose sole desire? And what is that sole desire exactly? Only in this last, and largest of the series, is she without a necklace, but is she taking it off and placing it in the casket, or is she taking it out of the casket to put it on?

Here are some of the theories. The tapestries were designed by the Master of Anne of Bretagne and woven in the North of France or in Belgium, having been commissioned by the wealthy Lyon family of Les Vistes. The medieval concept of the senses were that there were six. Taste, Hearing, Vision, Taste, Touch and Understanding (otherwise known as the heart or the intellect or, as we might now call it, intuition). It was this final, sixth sense, which controlled all the others.

I bought the guide book in the museum. It’s beautifully illustrated and lays out all the known facts, and the controversial guessed-at facts about the tapestries, but, frustratingly, I feel, makes only half hearted attempts to deal with the luxurious and abundant symbolism in the tapestries.

It’s this last feature which I find so appealing and intruiging. Someone looking at these tapestries in medieval times would see so much more than we do because the culture of that time was incredibly highly skilled at dealing with symbol, metaphor and allegory. In fact, no flower, no tree, no creature in these tapestries has only one possible meaning. Like the Hunting of the Unicorn they can be read in multiple ways. There just isn’t one answer, one interpretation which is the correct interpretation and even now with our somewhat impoverished skills in handling symbol and metaphor, they have the power to touch us really in the depths of our souls.

I’m fascinated. I’m intruiged. I’m hooked. I’ll tell you more if and when I uncover it. Don’t you just love a mystery?

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When I took a short walk yesterday I came across a helicopter practising taking water up from a lake and dropping it again as it’ll have to do when it fights forest fires.

I gathered the photos together in iphoto, made them into a slideshow, added some music by Max Richter and exported it as a movie.

Here it is. (I hope you agree the music fits the the photos really nicely)

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John Martyn died today, aged 60. I could choose I don’t know how many songs to share to remember him but here is one of his most famous and best. I love this version. It’s from the Transatlantic Crossing series – so many wonderful performances in those programmes. Here he’s joined by Kathy Mattea, Danny Thompson and Jerry Douglas. This made me smile so much first time I saw it, and, damn now its got me smiling and crying at the same time!

Watch it right through to the very end. I just love the closing seconds.

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Glasgow City Council has made a great images and sound display to celebrate Robert Burns. They project images up onto the City Chambers in George Square and have a PA system playing a soundtrack to accompany them. I went along and filmed it with my Flip Ultra. Take a look. I think you’ll enjoy it. (The programme runs for 15 minutes)

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