Countries, Culture

Brush strokes across Slow Art Day

I was slow at art at school and appreciate those who can draw, so Mr Cairney here are my brush strokes across Slow Art Day.

I’ve been slow too, like many, to Slow Art Day today and was only alerted to it by our pals at Amsterdam’s Van Gogh Museum.

Which is, of course, a great place to start.

Spuds you like: Van Gogh’s The Potato Eaters

Because to this untrained eye there is nobody who masses quite as much paint on a canvas as Vinnie.

So that you really have to get up close and study the encrustations on the canvas.

Which means more than the 30 seconds on average that is normally spent looking at a painting.

Monkeys and their Mickeys

Monkeying around: Breughel and tulips

Now unless you’ve studied art or tailgated a guided group you might not know what to look for.

But trust yourself, and besides you’re always likely to be found out if you hang on to a tour as the Son and Heir and myself were in the Capuchin Crypt in Rome.

Handily all galleries have audio guides and plaques to direct us to the messages in the art without cheating our way on to tours.

Of course, no piece of art is the same as another unless you’re a very good counterfeiter.

In the frame: Rembrandt in Amsterdam

But some feel easier to decipher than others.

Such as one of our favourites, Jan Breughel’s Allegory on Tulipmania at the Frans Hals’ Museum in 1640.

And not just because Breughel anthropomorphises and satirises monkeys.

And there’s one in the corner with his mickey out peeing on a tulip… but it helps.

The Bayeux Tapestry ‘swords’

Swordsman: The Bayeux Tapestry

It’s also come to our attention, and other puerile folks that there are 93 penises in the Bayeux Tapestry.

And you thought they were swords.

Well, that’ll take you more than 30 seconds to count them all.

Now there was probably a very good reason why Mr Cairney never took our class to the Glasgow Art Gallery.

Because we would have guffawed at the half-dressed women so beloved of the Old Masters.

Rather than wonder at the surrealist wonder that is Salvador Dali’s Christ of St John of the Cross.

Venus without her blue jeans

Shell life: Venus

Now Sandro Boticelli could never have imagined that his The Birth of Venus would become the plaything of Monty Python and pop up on students’ walls.

But we dare say that Sandro had fun putting the last touches to the body of the goddess who is displayed in the Uffizi Gallery in Firenze.

And it just shows that the allure of what you can’t see is often more erotic than what you can.

Although Michelangelo’s The Boy David has to be seen in all his nubile openness.

Now, of course, fans of Venus, and who isn’t, who live up in this northern tip of the British island don’t have to go to Fireze for their fill.

With Titian capturing Venus Anadyomene drying her hair at the Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh.

And that only goes to show that goddesses aren’t really all that different from the rest of us.

Now whether you like your art pared back, saucy, religious, irreligious or a pile of bricks or unmade bed, then we’re all for it.

And spend as little or as long as you want, or can.

 

 

 

Countries, Culture, Europe

Bayeux Tapestry and the weave of history

So because after 1000 years it needs some sprucing up check it out now… Bayeux Tapestry and the weave of history.

The Medieval version of a Netflix drama, the scroll of the Battle of Hastings is getting taken down for a clean-up from this September.

There’s a lot of activity around the old 68m-long drape and William the Conqueror in the Bayeux Museum.

In preparation for William the Conqueror’s Millennium 2027 celebrations in Normandy.

All of which we on my islands of Britain and Ireland are being asked to get in on.

With the Bayeux Museum £32m revamp and the construction of a contemporary extension.

To reflect the “monumental nature of the tapestry”.

History is the new rock’n’roll

Rolls: Charlie Watts

Twas all very showbiz we imagine back in the 11th century. 

And because history is the new rock’n’roll a little bit of glitz here for you. 

And scrolls: The drummer’s replica

The Bayeux Museum recently acquired an 1872 lifesize replica of the tapestry from the estate of Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts.

And it will use this to track the deterioration and alterations to the tapestry over the last 150 years.

Phil steam ahead 

Against all odds: But Phil has left an Alamo cornucopia

Rockers dabbling in history is actually not novel which shouldn’t be surprising as a good story is naturally in our artists’ DNA.

With Phil Collins the modern poster boy with his catalogue of Alamo artefacts which he donated to San Antonio in Texas.

And which, of course, I saw first hand in the pride of the Lone Star State and you should too.

Hat’s my man: With Davy Crockett

Back to the Bayeux and what can you expect when the Museum reopens in two years’ time.

Well, the tapestry will be installed behind a display case on an inclined table measuring the full 70m length of the tapestry.

And it should be breathtaking if design studo Atelier BLAM’s past work is anything to go by.

With the designers showcasing their expertise at the opening ceremony of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

With the creation of the mechanical horse galloping along the river Seine.

How to get there

Yes we Caen: This year’s Millennium city

And Normandy is, of course, easy to reach, by trains, planes, ferries and automobiles.

With ferries leaving from Portsmouth, Poole, Newhaven, Dublin, and Rosslare.

And 101 train stations across the region. 

Or fly into Caen which has its own millennium celebrations this year.

And where you can get into part with the medieval reenactments, parades, concerts and theatrical performances.