Ekphrastic Tourists

“The relation between what we see and what we know is never settled.” John Berger

Simply looking at a great work of art is not always enough. We often feel the primordial need to possess it in some way. And the cheapest way of doing so is by being photographed with it.

In Pisa, it’s almost mandatory to have a photo taken of yourself in such a way as to appear as if you are holding up the tower. Who doesn’t want to be a hero?

They felt like screaming so they did. Apparently, it is a big thing to take a photo of the self in front of Munch’s The Scream screaming (as can be seen HERE).

Thinking is for thinkers.

Rodin’s Thinker also inspires many ekphrastic photos. Even Robin Williams couldn’t resist as seen HERE once at the Rodin Museum.

Flashing in front of The Artist And His School by Arthur Siebelist. To keep the boys alert, sometimes you just have to flash back.

A photo  of a little girl dancing in front of a woman dancing made the internet rounds for some time.

Art inspires imagination and imitation.

This is a photo I took years ago. It is of a young boy on the floor drawing one of Rodin’s statues at the artist’s museum in Paris.

Imagination is a playground.

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Related:

Ekphrastic Copyists + Starry Starry Night + Ekphrastic: Lawrence & Jayne

How John Berger changed our way of seeing art + ‘A moment of awe’: Photo of little girl captivated by Michelle Obama portrait goes viral  +

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The Picnic

Picnics are not just for parks. It was once trendy to have them in cemeteries.

Here’s a photo of a small group picnickers sitting on flat tombstones at St. Luke’s Ancient Cemetery. (photo via HISTORIC ST. LUKE’S)

Atlas Obscura provides an interesting article HERE citing how one reason people had picnics there is because many cities lacked parks and/or public green space to provide an alternative. Plus it provided a place for  family get togethers where the deceased in the family could participate as well.

Related: Verano Monumental Cemetery + Excavating stories at Verano +

Remembering When Americans Picnicked in CemeteriesGraveyard Picnics Reunited Families + cemetery picnics our ancestors attended + The Victorians had a very peculiar tradition of picnicking in cemeteries +

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Consequences

Detective Barbara Havers made a mistake and now seeks redemption. A lead on a Cambridge murder gives Barbara a chance to make amends and she goes for it. Elizabeth George writes all about it in her crime novel, A Banquet of Consequences. She appropriated the title from R. L. Stevenson’s famous quote “Sooner or later everyone sits down to a banquet of consequences.” The idea is much the same as “A man reaps what he sows” (Galatians 6:7) In other words, our lives are the cumulative result of all the choices we’ve made.

And we  spend our days sowing, reaping, and gleaning.

A review of Elizabeth George’s A Banquet of Consequences REVIEW

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Migraines or Metaphysics?

Lewis Carroll, the author of Alice in Wonderland, suffered from terrible headaches. They were painful and made him feel weird about himself.

In 1955, the British psychiatrist, John Todd, began studying symptoms related to migraines and epilepsy. Noticing that certain kinds of migraines provoked a sense of depersonalization and an altered perception of the self, he tried to understand why. The symptoms made him think of Alice after falling into the rabbit hole. So he decided to name this condition the Alice in Wonderland Syndrome (AIWS).

The British mathematician, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, aka Lewis Carroll, often wrote in his diaries about his migraines and the aural phenomena that preceded them.

In 1862, Carroll and a clergyman friend took the three young Liddell sisters on a boat ride down the Thames. To keep them entertained, Carroll invented the story of Alice and her adventures in the rabbit hole. Alice Liddell, age 10 at the time, liked the story so much that she insisted Carroll write it for her.

Alice was the daughter of the dean of the college where Carroll taught. At the time, Carroll had developed a passion for photography and began taking photos of Alice and her sisters.

Carroll did not limit his interests to the Liddell sisters. He had many young “playmates” that he’d send letters to full of puns, puzzles, and requests for locks of hair. Carroll also asked them to sit on his lap semi-naked and pose for a photo. A very strong Peter Pan Jim Barrie vibe for me.

Initially Victorians were ok with photos of children in costume and/or partially undressed. But as the Victorians began to become interested in psychoanalytical theory, attitudes changed.

Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978) was born in Athens. His father was an Italian railroad engineer busy putting up rails in Greece whereas his mother was a baroness of Genoese-Greek origins.

When de Chirico was 17, his father died and his mother decided that it was time to return to Italy. In Italy de Chirico began studying at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence. But in 1911, de Chirico and his brother, Alberto Savinio, moved to Paris but had to return to Italy to enroll in the army as WWI broke out.

In 1817, the French writer Stendhal was visiting the church of Santa Croce in Florence. Fascinated, he couldn’t stop himself from wandering around it to admire its beauty. But after a while, he began to feel ill. He writes: “My heart was pounding, and I felt dizzy. All those works of extraordinary workmanship, so compressed into a limited space, were really too much for an aesthetic lover like me.

I had reached that level of emotion where the celestial sensations given by the arts and passionate feelings come together. Coming out of Santa Croce, I had a [strong] heartbeat; it was as if my life had dried up, I walked fearing I would fall.” A hundred years later, de Chirico would also experience an overwhelming sensation inside Santa Croce.

Almost 100 years later, de Chirico would have a similar sensation. In 1909, the artist was sitting in Piazza Santa Croce looking at the church. He’d recently recovered from an illness and was feeling weird. De Chirico writes that he was in “a nearly morbid state of sensitivity” causing him to feel as if he was seeing his surroundings for the first time. But he sees this epiphany moment as an enigma. Is the world in disguise? Is everyday life something so alien that one can never feel at home?

Metaphysics in philosophy exams the structure of reality. But how can one ever know what is real and what is not?

The Song of Love (1914) pursues the enigmas de Chirico was consumed by. There are certain recurring elements in these paintings such as the architectural setting, the Greek statues, and the trains puffing smoke. The latter is most likely a reference to his dad who helped with the construction of the Greek railroads.

The Uncertainty of the Poet (1913) shows the torso of Aphrodite next to a bunch of bananas that remind me of Josephine Baker’s dance costume.

In The Soothsayer’s Recompense, once again we have an empty city square, a train puffing smoke, and a Greek statue. This statue represents Ariadne, the daughter of Minos who helped Theseus escape from the Minotaur’s labyrinth. But once a free man, Theseus dumped Ariadne on the island of Naxos. He may be considered by some to be a divine hero but he most certainly was not a gentleman.

De Chirico spent the last 30 years of his life living at Piazza di Spagna in Rome with his wife Isabella Pakszwer Far. They had a magnificent home and a magnificent terrace that looked towards Villa Medici.

De Chirico, “Pictor Optimus”, although initially buried at the Verano Monumental Cemetery in Rome, was later reburied in the church of San Francesco a Ripa whereas his brother Alberto Savinio remained at Verano.

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Related: Brakes, Daphne du Maurier and Jim Barrie +

Giorgio de Chirico, The Soothsayer’s Recompense + Who Was Giorgio de Chirico? + The Neurology of Art – The Example of Giorgio de Chirico + Enigmas in Philip Guston’s de Chirico City + Video: Migraine aura +  Famous Artists with Migraine Throughout History + Rabbit Hole Syndrome: Inadvertent, accelerating, and entrenched commitment to conspiracy beliefs + The Neurological Disorders in Alice in Wonderland + Alice in Wonderland inspiration + De Chirico: le fasi pittoriche e l’influenza dell’aura emicranica +

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Pentimento

In Johannes Vermeer’s A Maid Asleep, a young maid is dozing at the table after drinking too much wine. One glass of wine in front of her is empty whereas another vine vessel has fallen on the rumpled table carpet. It is the trace evidence that the young woman has been naughty. This “misbehavior” of unsupervised maidservants was a common subject for 17th cen. Dutch painters.

Here is Vermeer’s initial exploration of domestic interior themes that were becoming popular in the Netherlands at the time. And to create the right mood, Vermeer had a collection of props he used for his paintings. Many of the objects such as the table carpet, the chair with studs, and the fruit bowl in A Maid Asleep can be seen in other Vermeer paintings.

X-rays show a figure of a man holding a brush and a dog looking at him were once painted in near the doorway then painted out. It’s believed the obliterated man was probably a self-portrait of Vermeer.

Artists often change their mind about the composition of their paintings and try to obliterate the now unwanted part by overpainting it away. This change of mind by the artist is known as “pentimento” from the Italian verb “pentirsi” meaning “to repent”.

In Vermeer’s Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window, there’s evidence of another pentimento. This time it’s a painting of Cupid with his bows and arrows. Often Cupid was depicted trampling a mask with his foot. As a mask represents duplicity, throwing a mask on the ground signifies Cupid’s contempt for deception in love.

Related:  The Met’s Vermeer may contain a hidden self-portrait of the artist at work + The Mysterious Cupid and Johannes Vermeer’s Paintings + Vermeer’s ‘hidden’ Cupid is the enigmatic artist’s latest mystery +  Five hidden symbols in Vermeer’s paintings +

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