Friday, March 13, 2026

exhibitions


Into central London - first to see Cathy Opie's show at the NPG, which was excellent in and of itself - and of course good to find the face of a good and dear friend there (hi, Connie!) even if she is wearing a moustache (which reminded me forcibly of being in a cab going through the streets on Bandung many years ago, and suddenly being surrounded by men blowing whistles and wearing and selling fake moustaches).


Good though the show was, in some ways I appreciated even more how the gallery had hung a whole range of Cathy's works so that they are in dialogue with other older portraits - I especially loved Guillermo & Joaquin, which was hanging on one wall of a room devoted to Victorian photographic family portraits.


Then had a good look at some hands: Millicent Garrett Fawcett and Henry Fawcett, collaborating on a letter to a newspaper (he was blind); 


and in another Ford Madox Brown, these are the hands of John Osborne Riches, commercial manager of the Ocean Steam Coal Collieries in South Wales (there's a great deal to be said about FMB's portraits);


and I'd never previously notice how Queen Victoria's bracelet - showing Albert - in Barker's The Secret of England's Greatness is looking out to the world and not back up at her.


Lunch in the restaurant - amazing view -


and then to Turner and Constable at the Tate: Turner's rain-spattered sketchbook;


Hannibal crossing the Alps - the leader diminished to a tiny, tiny form atop an elephant in the far distance;


and the griminess of Dudley.  It was terrific, and telling, seeing the two hung side by side, and in dialogue with one another (admittedly my sense was made stronger by having just read Nicola Moorby's Turner and Constable: Art, Life, Landscape).  But - be warned - this was the most packed Tate exhibition I've been to in years.


Then for me, the ritualistic celebration of a sunset on Putney Bridge on the way home.








 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

we got here!


Like homing pigeons, to Wimbledon, and to a very comfortable (to which, in this grey, damp, and blustery weather, I above all mean warm) VRBO apartment on the right hand side of this old Victorian 1887 Grande Dame house (and yes, we have all three floors: one room above another).  The top floor skylight looks over the pond: I went and walked ritualistically round it a few times and noted how full it is from all the rain.  And then we headed out for dinner.  We're only in London for a packed weekend, so it's good, if faintly weird, to be on familiar ground.











 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

kitchen still life


This might be/have been the only moment of tranquility in an unbelievably hectic scramble-round to be ready to leave to get to LAX to get to LHR ... any moment now, we'll start finding out what we've forgotten ...

 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

unsettling students for forty years


This is Leo, who I've moved from one academic office to another for forty years - writing that is, in itself, a bit shocking, but he's certainly been a fixture.  He's apparently from Thailand, originally; made of papier mâché, and I bought him in shop next to The Nosebag café in St Michael's Street, Oxford (the name of which is on the tip of my tongue ... I tried to hunt it down online, and all I found was that, sadly, The Nosebag closed in 2022, having been open since 1971).

I'm completely used to his friendly roar, but I hosted a next-year graduate student in my office today, and she was ... distracted by him.  I've only ever had one student who was genuinely frightened by him, way back in Oxford, and she's now Senior Curator of Historic and Modern Paintings at the Fitzwilliam, so the damage can't have been long-lasting.  All the same, I forget that he might make an impact ...

 

Monday, March 9, 2026

nighttime with Gramsci


To be honest, this wasn't quite taken today ... but close enough to midnight, and that means that it would already have been today, March 9th where some of you are reading.  OK, equivocation, and I am indeed bending my own arbitrary rules - but how could I resist sharing a picture of the nightly adorable devotion that is a sleepy Gramsci?  Mind you, he's not light, and sometimes I find myself with a mouthful of fur (and weird dreams).  But usually, at some point, he shuffles away to my side ...
 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

our first poppy!


I'm used to snowdrops, then primroses, as harbingers of spring.  Here, it's ... poppies.  There were two out today - our first.  The other was a standard single toned orange Californian poppy: this one (from a packet of variegated poppies, but usually it's just the plain orange ones that germinate and flower) has a particularly sophisticated two-tone look.  

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Emiliano!


So this is what happens when one gives a handsome black poodle a toy llama to beat up on ...

Emiliano is a particularly lovely dog, and I'm sure that I think so in part because although I wasn't brought up with dogs at all, one of my mother's closest friends, Ann Bonsor, had a long succession of poodles - everything from big standard ones to miniature ones (on that scale. Emiliano is kind of medium).  I remember Matty, who was, I believe, brown, in particular.  Then there was a Lucy (were they always female?) - and I now realize that I may never be able to recollect all of the rest of them.  Oh!  There was Polly!  She was the first who I remember - I think she was grey.  Anyway, I do really like poodles ...