Thu 31st Jan, 2008, Not really art per se, Aragon, Man Ray

Reborn from the river



Snopes.com, that trusted spoiler of urban myths, once tackled the (apparently) widespread belief that the face of the ubiquitous CPR training mannequin was based on that of its grieving designer’s dead daughter. Poignant! But the fact, now widely dispersed on the Net, is that the face belongs to “the girl who drowned in the Seine”.

It’s an even more poignant story, actually, and one that’s fairly well known, but it’s worth a return visit and a modicum of meditation. It certainly was for at least two generations of writers, though not always good writers.

The spiritually sublime visage of “the Inconnue de la Seine”, as the unfortunate young women came to be known in the absence of her true identity, was reproduced countless times at the beginning of the last century. Once, her wisp of a smile held the same fascination for tens of thousands of admirers that the Mona Lisa’s evokes.

The details of the case and its literary ramifications are ably recounted by Anja Zeidler on Steven Moore’s excellent tribute site to the American writer William Gaddis (1922-98), whose first novel, “The Recognitions” left book critics gasping for air at 900-odd words and a daunting array of allusions, including to the Iconnue.

Gaddis was following a long tradition of writers composing wreaths of words to mourn the mysterious woman whose body was carried into Paris Morgue sometime around 1900, or a decade or two earlier according to one onlooker who read in her hairstyle an earlier era as well as “a peasant girl, a poor shop girl, or that of a beggar or vagrant”.

The morgue at the time was at the eastern end of the Ile de la Cité next to Notre-Dame Cathedral, a spot I once visited to watch a chained-up Harry Houdini leap from the roof of the death house into the Seine. The morgue was a bona fide tourist attraction then, the big draw being the daily panoply of a dozen unidentified and unclaimed corpses on black marble slabs displayed hopefully in the window.

Among these cadavers was placed the young woman, so the story goes, and her haunting beauty so struck one of the morgue’s upcutters that he made a death mask. Copies of it were soon on sale, not just to medical students but the general public, and these were placed on view in many fine homes across the continent. The owners and their guests would gaze into the face and wonder who she was, how she ended up in the river, whether she was really smiling and, if so, why. (See a previous Dali House post about death masks here.)

Death in the Seine’s bosom has always been commonplace. Great rivers beckon the living. In the 18th century people ritually loosed little rafts of wood into Paris’ eternally romantic waterway for its victims, each bearing sanctified bread and a candle. In 2006, the Guardian has noted, 50 corpses were pulled from the Seine, another 146 rescued alive.

In his 1988 film “Death in the Seine”, Peter Greenaway shared the stories of 23 of the hundreds of people plucked from the river in six years spanning 1800. Most were women, it was noted, and most had drowned in April. The speculation was that male suicides preferred hanging, and that April was the direst month for the French capital’s females because it came nine months after summer, when so many unwanted pregnancies took root.

Here, one of the mementoes of a loved one that were common in the United States in the 1800s, snapshots of the just-deceased, the better to remember them. Another is elsewhere in this post.

On Sedulia Scott’s remarkable website Consolatio, a balm to the grieving, I found the touching story of Victor Hugo’s 19-year-old daughter, who drowned in the Seine in a boating accident in 1844. Hugo wrote several poems about her as he struggled to come to terms with his loss, including “At Villequier”, which begins: “Now that I am coming out, pale but victorious, from the mourning that darkened my soul …”

The poem, an appeal to God written four years after the tragedy, continues:

We never see but a single side of things;
the other plunges into the night of frightening mystery.
Man bears the yoke without knowing why.
All he sees is short, useless and fleeting …
See the rest.

Sun 27th Jan, 2008, Canadiana, Black (Frank)

For Frank Black,
some posthumous admiration

blackbermuda

Frank Black’s “Back Street Bermuda”, circa 1932
Click the image to see it much larger.

It was a really pleasant surprise to get a couple of comments on my March 2007 post on Canadian artists who aren’t well known beyond the national borders. And the comments weren’t about the brighter of these dimmer lights but about the least known of them all, Frank Black.

Frank Charles Black was a British-born, Toronto-based artist who was an associate of some members of the Group of Seven and shared their initial profession — commercial art — and their disdain for it. He retired from the business as soon as he could and moved to Georgetown, Ontario, just west of Toronto, where he taught art basics to pay the bills but finally got down to painting what he wanted to paint. He died in 1988.

The readers’ requests for more information prodded me to try and get in touch with John Sommer, proprietor of Gallery House Sol in Georgetown, which is also the town where I grew up. John knew Black fairly well, whereas I had only met the artist once, around 1976. Unfortunately House Sol doesn’t have an online address, and the local library, who I know could put us in touch, didn’t respond to my email. Georgetown does seem to be in a timewarp that way.

However, both the National Gallery of Canada and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts responded quickly and helpfully. The latter has no Frank Black works in its collection, but at least offered a list of titles from its archives:

    “Georgian Bay, Minnieog”, 1922
    “Broken Ice”, 1922
    “Old and New”, 1930
    “Midsummer Street”, 1930
    “The Mill Road”, 1930
    “Landscape Bermuda”, 1931
    “Old Trading Ship, Bermuda”, 1933
    “Near Caledon”, 1934

“Minnieog” in the first entry could be a typo, since I’ve found no references to such a place in Ontario’s Georgian Bay area. There is, however, a Minnie Rock there. Other than that, the list indicates when Black was painting in Bermuda, which was central to the queries I had from both readers.

One of them, a resident of Lansdowne, Ontario, owns the painting reproduced at the top of this post, “Back Street Bermuda”. Her grandmother, she reported, had lived in Georgetown and while there bought a handful of Frank Black paintings. A label on the back of “Bermuda” includes accreditation by the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.

The National Gallery sent me by regular mail a package of photocopied newspaper clippings about Black, among which I was astonished to find two articles that I’d written while I was with Georgetown’s now-defunct Halton Hills Herald. I had no idea I was in the national archives (apart from police records).

Alas, neither of the galleries was able to supply digital images of any of Black’s work or confirm that any of his paintings had been at some point part of their collections (and the Art Gallery of Ontario is in the midst of a revamp for the next few months). But from the clippings, I’ve at least been able to prepare a short biography and extract some photos. The photocopied newspaper pictures are in rough shape, which I’m afraid still shows through in my Photoshopped versions in this post. See the rest.

Tue 22nd Jan, 2008, Amazing art

Kumi and her shadow


A Dali House reader who happens to make some very cool boots marched in here via an email after seeing my write-up on Peter Callesen, Denmark’s answer to Edward Scissorhands (my post here and Callesen’s website here).

If I like that, she said, I’ll love Kumi Yamashita, and sure enough, this 40-year-old artist’s website is filled with startling inventions. Heading off on a tangent from the Dane, she focuses on the shadows that manipulated paper and metal can be made to cast.

With the right lighting, a seemingly meaningless frill hanging on a wall produces an ethereal pair of lovers, an exclamation mark throws the shadow of a question mark, and a field of ostensibly random objects turns out to be a strolling human torso. There are also some compelling traditional portraits — but the tones are formed from written words or, in the case of 1996’s “Someone Else’s Mess”, the prints of military boots.

The piece that I’m sure everyone is most enamoured of is “Dialogue” from 1999. Yamashita fixed 60 cut-outs of a human head in profile on a rotating spindle. The shadow forms two heads, back to back, whose lips seem to be moving. It’s fascinating enough to warrant a video on YouTube.

The website’s nicely designed in itself but doesn’t really do her creations justice because the images are on the small side and not always clear. But you certainly find yourself smiling at the cleverness in the samples offered from every year since 1993. I’d love to see one of her shows or, better yet, get a version of “Dialogue” of my own.

Sat 19th Jan, 2008, Curator's Corner

Nice work, “Cousin” Noel Leaver fella!


The year before he died, Noel Leaver is seen in the middle of this group admiring someone else’s work during Civic Arts Week in the town of my birth, Burnley, Lancashire, England.

While Dali House was fully booked up for the seemingly interminable Salvador Celebration there were a few other things happening in the world of art, of which some I want to take note while pretending the rest didn’t occur.

One development that would have gone almost completely unnoticed was the establishment of a website dedicated to British watercolourist Noel Harry Leaver (1889-1951). I came across it after receiving an email from Kristian Baxter of the UK-based Briercliffe Society geneaological website, who said there was information online about Noel, a cousin (I think) of my late Uncle John Leaver, the husband of my late mother’s late sister Elsie.

Because of the family linkage I’ve written it all up on my personal blog, Dorseyland, but I wanted to get some of his paintings on show at Dali House as well. These images come from the Noel Leaver website set up by Robert Bruce.

The site has more than 250 works on view, and I was surprised to see that Noel had roamed quite far in his time. “His famous ‘Eastern Scenes’,” as Robert Bruce calls them, were unknown to me. These are actually North African (possibly some Middle Eastern), pocked with mosques and minarets, but sharing the same fascination with high walls as his paintings from France, Germany, Italy and the length of England. There are a few American views too, including Hoover Dam (which is nothing but a very high wall). The one show here is titled “Italian Town” on the website, and the one at the top of the post “An English Country House”. See the rest.

Thu 17th Jan, 2008, Amazing art, Thailand art

Politics and the profanity of disbelief

monkpainting
Click the image to see it much larger.

Last October “Doo Phra”, the oil painting above by Thailand’s Warthit Sembut, won one of the Young Thai Artist Awards meted out annually by the cultural foundation established by Siam Cement, one of the country’s leading corporations and one with deep royal connections. The foundation invited Warthit to bring his family to the awards presentation in Bangkok; his parents drove all the way from Chiang Rai in the far north to attend.

When they got to the venue, they found an empty frame dangling among the other prize-winning works.

The foundation, supposedly made of concrete, had collapsed at the mere possibility that Warthit’s painting would draw complaints for its depiction of Buddhist monks sinning — they’re lustily looking over amulets. The Buddha advised us to detach ourselves from material things and be free of desire. For the clergy who carry his message to be coveting superstitious trinkets is surely a dual sin.

The title of the painting, “Doo Phra”, means “monks watching” or, if you turn the translation slightly, “watch the monks”.

The Siam Cement Foundation had reason to worry about complaints. The month previous there’d been an unholy row over another painting that showed monks in a bad light. Anupong Chanthorn’s “Bhikku Sandan Ka” — meaning “Monks With Traits of a Crow”, a phrase the Buddha used — won the gold prize at the 2007 National Artist Awards and was displayed at host Silpakorn University. This one depicted two squatting monks with the beaks of crows and in the company of crows.

A storm descended on the campus. Dozens of monks and scores of laymen from Buddhist universities staged a series of protest rallies, demanding that the university withdraw the award and remove the painting from the show because it insulted the clergy. Some protesters wreathed a photo of Anupong and, as it was incinerated, monks chanted a funeral prayer.

The soundbites for the TV news came from a leader of the People’s Network to Protect the Nation, Religion and the Monarchy. This group had been involved in the summer rallies outside Government House where the drafters of Thailand’s new constitution were prodded to include a passage declaring Buddhism the national religion. Several monks staged a hunger strike to underscore how much this meant to them.

They stopped when Her Majesty the Queen, clearly endorsing the belief upheld in every Thai constitution that the King is the defender of all religions in Thailand, including Islam and Christianity, said in her birthday speech that Buddhism shouldn’t be involved with politics. Politics was at work in this demand for a “national” religion, 80% of Thais agreed, according to a poll. That fight would have to be put on hold until the election in December, and, the deposed prime minister’s proxy party having won it, we’ll see what the protectors of the old power structure, the old privileges and the old restrictions, do next. See the rest.