Where science meets art on a cold misty morning.
Science: A deposit of needle-like ice crystals formed by direct condensation of water onto surfaces at temperatures below the freezing point.
Art:
Random Walks in the Low Countries
Reflections and observations on the expatriate experience from an American scientist living and working in the Netherlands.
by Dave Hampton
by Dave Hampton
London has established a European-style Christmas Market along the south bank of the Thames. If you’ve been to it’s German cousins, it’s familiar and cute, ‘not too crowded yet attracting a younger crowd than Koln or Aachen. There are all of the usual suspects: craft huts and sausage vendors, gluhwein and Jager shots (at 5.50 gbp!). The carousel is colorful and the huge skillets of potatoes and onions are a nice variation on the theme. But no sign of ice skating or lebkuchen, and I miss the commemorative mugs and eierpunsch.
The evening’s most spectacular scenes were in the restaurant, though (Bistro Bruno Loubet),
and across the river, skyline and light against the churning skies.
by Dave Hampton
A warm winter Sunday ahead of a cod blast rushing in from the northeast; a perfect dry day to scurry in and see London at Christmas. There are lights around the man squares, a big tree in Trafalgar, holiday decorations in the store windows, colorful sweets at F&M. It was really a nice afternoon to wander and take it all in.
A few new exhibits have opened as well. The Royal Academy of Arts is
featuring a retrospective of landscapes by Turner, Gainsborough, and Constable. through February. It begins with several galleries of etched prints from Italy and Holland that preceded, perhaps inspired, the later works. A final room is filled with several paintings by each of the three masters, characteristic but not iconic. The accompanying text brushed by interesting ideas (the relationship of Picturesque, Sublime, and Romantic landscape styles) without elaboration or illustration.
I’m a big fan of Turner (Color!) and Constable (Skies!), but it’s hard to see the point of this exhibition.
The accompanying (free) exhibit “Almost Real Art” was almost better… whimsical sculptures and witty placards that made me smile.
Then over to the White Cube to see the new Gormley exhibition. It features two main themes, one interesting, the other baffling.
The baffling one is Model, a gigantic sculpture of welded metal plates that (after signing a release) you enter and explore. It’s pitch dark, featureless, echoing, close, and (sorry) meaningless. The catalog says that it’s a metaphoric experience of the dark interior of the body, but it was hard to connect with.
Better were the cubic renderings of human bodies,
with an
accompanying room of studies. Although abstract, I thought they conveyed a lot of feeling (one in particular that seemed to show a body wearily resting, head against the wall, was appealing).
But it’s been that kind of week.
