Sunday, 18 January 2026

'Our Town'

      It is rarely, if ever, that I get to go to a theatrical first night, let alone one that launches a new theatre company.  Friday evening, however, I did just that when the Grand Theatre, Swansea, presented the Welsh National Theatre's inaugural production; Thornton Wilding's 1938 play 'Our Town'.  In some ways an intriguing choice.

     This three act play, which is rather Burkean in its conservatism, is set within the American trope/ideal of the small town - incarnated here as the fictional New Hampshire community of Grover's Corners. Twelve years - 1909-1913 - are portrayed. Nothing much actually happens, and there is an emphasis on community and continuity. A telling detail, or theme, is the increasing tendency of the inhabitants to lock their doors at night.  This essential conservativism, is not quite matched in the staging - the stage is bare, props are minimal and it is all rather 'meta'.  The main character, here played by Michael Sheen - a charismatic stage presence - is the omniscient Stage Manager.  A character that stands between the actors and the audience and engages with both, and is perhaps a manifestation of the divine.
     Changes have been made to both text and staging, which I believe involved input from Russell T Davies. Grover's Corners has been re-located to Wales: Main St has become Stryd Fawr.  A small point, but oddly (or arbitrarily?) many Americanism have been allowed to remain.  Well, the line has to be drawn somewhere.  A gay love affair (partly as a way of explaining a character's alcoholism) appears silently and fleetingly towards the end of the second act. 
     Finally in the 3rd act, at the conclusion of the play the Stage Manager is seen to join the company of the dead.  It works well enough, but the original direction is that the Stage Manager draws a curtain across the stage. (I detect the hand of Russell T Davies here; he has a history of portraying the death of God.) I worry that it undermines the Stage Manager's words at the beginning of the act:
     "We all know, that something is eternal.  And it ain't houses, and it ain't names, and it ain't even the stars...and everyone knows in their bones that something is eternal and that something has to do with human beings."
     
     The notoriously acerbic critic, John Simon, of The New Yorker, in reviewing a performance of the play at the Plumstead Playhouse (The New Yorker, 15.12.1969) wrote '....'Our Town' is recommended only to people with a craving for communal hagiography flavoured with maple syrup.'  On the strength of this production, I don't feel that to be true.  In all an excellent beginning.

Wednesday, 7 January 2026

'The Weirdstone of Brisingamen'


     I've just finished reading Alan Garner's 'The Weirdstone of Brisingamen'.  A bit of a mouthful that.  I remember my brother reading this to me as a child, and I think it was also read to us at school but I have a notion that for some reason it was abandoned.  Either way, I have no idea now how the book ended.  A year ago I dipped into the Granada adaptation of 'The Owl Service'.  And what a strange, baffling thing that is.  Anyway just before Christmas, in the our local bookshop, and looking for something to read, I decided to revisit the Weirdstone, it being the sort of book to have a cult following.  Rather like HTV's 'Children of the Stones', it shares some themes with the wider 'Folk Horror' genre.
    The Weirdstone is Alan Garner's first published novel.  The debt to the Inklings, particular Tolkien, is obvious.*  The novel is populated with dwarves, trolls and wizards. And other beings some of whom are from Norse mythology and others, one suspects, that are Garner's own creation.  (Though none of the names are as easy on the ear as those of Tolkien.) Not only that, but the protagonists embark on two arduous journeys, (one underground), that bear resemblance to the journey of the Fellowship of the Ring.  It is also a conflict for the possession of an object, in this particular case a jewel called the Weirdstone, which amongst other things, like the One Ring, facilitates access to the Unseen. The setting is not however a fictional world but Northern England - the county of Cheshire and that strange outcrop of rock in the midst of the Cheshire Plain known as Alderley Edge.  A place that has given birth to legends** and a place that Garner knew well as a child.  That specificity of geography brings it close to the artist John Piper's definition of Romanticism.
     Like 'The Owl Service', it is a dizzyingly complex novel.  I gave up trying to remember who was who.  Sadly, it suffers from a lack of characterisation.  We know, for instance, next to nothing about the two main protagonists, the children Susan and Colin, but for all of that there are scenes of incredible drive and intensity.  Some of them quite unforgettable; haunting and unsettling. At times I thought it wasn't really for children at all.

     

* I think there is an influence too of Tolkein's fellow Inkling Charles Williams.
** It is said, amongst a number of other locations in the UK, to be the sleeping place of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. 

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Last year in reading....


 

The National Gallery: Siena and the rise of Painting 1300-1350 Part Two


     Well, here, finally, after an very long wait, is the 2nd part of my review of  'Siena and the Rise of Painting 1300-1350' at the National Gallery.  I'm not that sure it makes much sense.  Make of it what you will.


    And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.  And I heard a great voice out of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them, and be their God.

      Now to the actual exhibition, and as is so often the case with exhibitions of this type, it is haunted by absence. In many ways the viewer is presented with a mystery.  In this particular case there is the unknowable, yet palpable, presence of the Medieval city, which sometimes saw itself as the New Jerusalem.

    During the near half century covered by this exhibition Siena was at the height of her wealth and power.  A city where, like the meeting of two great ocean currents, the Gothic north and the Byzantine east came into fruitful contact.  As this exhibition shows it produced an interesting, scintillating synthesis; as to whether in doing so, as the curators argue, it kickstarts Western Art I have my doubts.  Much is made of the position of the city on the Via Francigena, the Pilgrim route between Canterbury and Rome, with the suggestion that objects - luxury objects - such as illuminated breviaries and ivory triptychs were brought to the city by pilgrims.  They would have to be pretty grand pilgrims, it must be said.  Only it isn't said. It is suggested also that pilgrims ordered items from Sienese painters to be picked up later on the return journey.  There is no evidence for this, as far as I can see, and again they would have to be at the wealthier end of pilgrim traffic; the items in this exhibition are 'high status'.  But then nature abhors a vacuum, and something, i.e. supposition, must take its place.
     Nothing is made, as far as I can remember, of what must have been the presence of contemporaneous Byzantine art in the city.  Its presence, like that of Gothic art from the North must be inferred because its influence, like that of the Gothic, is there in Sienese art, particularly in the work of Duccio.
    At this time Siena was ruled by a mercantile oligarchy - hardly the 'most representative', or 'inclusive' (yes, that is on one of the information panels at the start of the exhibition).  Out of this oligarchy, the 'Noveschi', a nine men council, the 'Nove', was elected to govern the Commune of the city for periods of two months at a time. This provided, in a city state that was notoriously unstable, a sustained period of relative political stability.  I say 'relative', because for all her power and wealth during that those five decades Siena was still subject to regular bouts of communal violence.  Be that as it may, that half century saw a remarkable flowering of art and architecture in the city, as the authorities sought to re-order the city politically and spiritually. In 1348, however, came the fearful arrival of the Black Death, the population of the city was decimated and in the ensuing years there was the repeated threat of famine.  In 1355, after 68 years, the rule of the 'Nine' was overthrown. 

       And then there is the absence of two immensely large, and immensely important, paintings, both works by Duccio: 'The Rucellai Madonna' and 'The Maesta'.  Presences that may have had the ability to change the 'narrative' of the exhibition. I have talked about the former before, here.  Panels from the predella of the latter form the centre piece of the exhibition, occupying the central octagonal room. Along with the panels in the preceding room they clearly show the master's profound debt to Byzantine art.  For some they are evidence that Duccio may have been trained by a Byzantine master, but tempting though that is we are back to supposition.  The Maesta was designed as a free-standing altarpiece for the cathedral in Siena.  The front is essentially a massive icon of the Panakranta type with the Virgin and the Christ child sitting enthroned and surrounded by all the company of heaven. The reverse however is a collection of scenes, a collection of icons of a devotional scale.  How much any this was clearly visible to the congregation, i.e. the laity, is another matter.
    In Duccio's work the Theotokos continues to wear the blue Maphorion; other later artists, as this exhibition illustrates, are not so humble in regard to the tradition.   
   Of the works exhibited I find Duccio's the most sympatico; I certainly felt less warm to some of the work of the Lorenzetti brothers.  I however, particularly warm to a panel painting - religious in theme, I cannot remember if the artist was named - that hung in the tax office of the Palazzo Pubblico.  And why not?
     The strange thing is that while the exhibition began with icons it ended with an icon: Simone Martini's 'Christ Discovered in the Temple'.  The Virgin Mary still wears her dark blue Maphorion. Is the exhibition actually saying nothing has changed? A narrative could be created thus.

* On June 9th, 1311, the newly complete altarpiece, the embodiment of the cultural, political, economic, and spiritual power and aspiration of the city was brought in procession from Duccio's workshop to the cathedral.  Like the Ark of Covenant, in 1 Samuel 6 and 1 Chronicles 13 it rode upon a cart drawn by oxen to its resting place. The Theotokos being the ark of the New Covenant, and the tabernacle in the passage quoted at the head of this post which is from the Book of Revelations. This extremely large double-sided altarpiece was placed behind the High Altar until it fell victim to fashion and was eventually riven asunder, with parts of the predella ending up in the National Gallery.  


  

   



Thursday, 1 January 2026

January

 

New Year's Day  The Feast of the Circumcision


January by John Clare (1793-1864)


Withering and keen the winter comes
While comfort flyes to close shut rooms
And sees the snow in feathers pass
Winnowing by the window glass
And unfelt tempests howl and beat
Above his head in corner seat
And musing oer the changing scene
Farmers behind the tavern screen
Sit-or wi elbow idly prest
On hob reclines the corners guest
Reading the news to mark again
The bankrupt lists or price of grain
Or old moores anual prophecys
That many a theme for talk supplys
Whose almanacks thumbd pages swarm
Wi frost and snow and many a storm
And wisdom gossipd from the stars
Of polities and bloody wars
He shakes his head and still proceeds



Tuesday, 30 December 2025

Cecil Beaton at The National Portrait Gallery


     "If he does not care to show his sitters 'Warts and all' few would quarrel with him for this omission.  Today, his superb technique, hidden behind an apparent facility which belies his serious purpose, can make careless studies of the new generation which reflect the distraught 'sixties as clearly as did his many-faceted portraits of the undecided 'thirties."*


     Back to my day in London at the beginning of the month, and in the afternoon into the West End and the National Portrait Gallery. (I have to say I wasn't that impressed with the re-jigging of the gallery - too many unresolved bits in the architecture.  Funny how is this supposedly cash-strapped land of ours money can always be found for such projects. Those bronze doors by Tracey Emin are pretty thin fare, artistic gruel.) I was there to see the current exhibition: 'Cecil Beaton's Fashionable World'.  My second Beaton exhibition this year.  He seems to be back in fashion.  But what can I say about Beaton, that I haven't already said?  Nothing.  Here then, is what I wrote in the summer after visiting the Beaton exhibition at the Garden Museum.

     "Cecil Beaton (1904-1980) was one of the most important, and influential, British photographers of the mid 20th century.  He was also a designer for stage and film.  He won an 'Academy Award for Costume Design' for his work on Vincent Minnelli's 1958 adaptation of 'Gigi'; and (more importantly for this exhibition) two further Oscars for Best Costume Design and Best Art Direction for George Cukor's 1964 adaptation of Lerner and Loewe's musical 'My Fair Lady'.  He has been described as a polymath. Beaton was also a dandy, with amazing personal style. An aesthete. An inhabitant of the Beau Monde. He was a (waspish) diarist, and [] a very keen gardener.  Piquant and perennially fascinating; perhaps his greatest work of art was himself."

     He led that sort of life that the rest of us can only dream of.

      This lavish exhibition - it contains an overwhelming number of both images and items - is by way of a retrospective.  It covers some 40 years of Beaton's live from his student days at Cambridge and concluding with his work on George Cukor's screen adaptation of Lerner & Loewe's stage musical of 'My Fair Lady' in 1964.  An apotheosis of sorts.
      The NPG, I should add at this point, held its first exhibition of Beaton's photography (portraits) back in 1968, when Sir Roy Strong was Director.  It was the first time the NPG had held an exhibition for a photographer and a living artist.  It was designed by the outlandish Dickie Buckle, and it was a great success.  This current exhibition, in comparison, is of a much more conventional design.  Ainsley Ellis, in the 'British Journal of Photography' wrote of that exhibition, and in a manner that could quite equally apply to this exhibition, "To walk into this exhibition of Beaton Portraits 1922-1968 at the National Portrait Gallery is to enter a time capsule of the utmost fascination."

      Beaton's ascent, both professional and social, was not of a steady, even trajectory - his career can be divided into two parts.  The first half, roughly corresponds to the Interwar period.  It is the ascent of a highly ambitious young man into the rarefied atmosphere of the Beau Monde, of the Sitwells and the 'Bright Young Things'.  He also began work on British Vogue supplying both photographs and artwork to the magazine, which led in turn to work for American Vogue, based in New York. This was the time also of his first experience of Hollywood. Judging by a quotation accompanying a photograph of, perhaps, Gary Cooper, it must have been quite overwhelming for the twenty-something Beaton. I cannot remember the quotation in full but he did describe Hollywood actors as 'gods'.  Of the actor Gary Cooper himself, who he first met in 1929, he wrote: "The new hero, the Western cowboy, with agate eyes, huge shoulders, hairy chest, flat cardboard flanks; hipless, with big hands, expressive and sensitive, became the new Adonis.”
        Given this reaction to Hollywood it is perhaps not surprising that Truman Capote - and he was not alone in this - once described Beaton was 'a recorder of fantasy'.  I don't know the context of Capote's quote but perhaps Capote underestimates Beaton, for he was more than a recorder of fantasy; he was its creator.  I don't mean just the obvious fantasy  of the designs for film and stage, but something that ran deep through all he did.  There are those incredible photographs, inspired by Surrealism, he created of the Sitwells (for example), in which the taking of the photograph is but one moment of a long and laborious creative process.  And it used to be said that the camera never lies.
    There are also those weekends of dressing up, and the fetes and routs he staged at Ashcombe (his country home - 1947) and elsewhere. And then there is the circus bedroom he created for himself also at Ashcombe.  Perhaps 'Fantasy' is not even sufficient to describe what he was doing which, I suppose, was actually creation of a heightened reality in which he was both director and star.
     In 1938 American Vogue published one of Beaton's illustrations.  It was a depiction of New York society.  On closer inspection it was found to contain a number of anti-Semitic phrases.  Beaton was sacked, the edition recalled and, I believe, pulped.  He returned to the UK.  He continued to be commissioned by the Royal Family, and when the War came he became an official photographer for the Ministry of Information.  As Beaton himself said: the War has pitchforked me out of my self-made rut into all sorts of different worlds.  That world of fantasy never returned in quite the same way.  His War work helped rehabilitate him and return to America: in 1956 he won a Tony for Best Costume Design for his work on 'Quadrille'; a second Tony for Best Costume Design followed for the stage production of 'My Fair Lady'; a third Tony in 1960 and a fourth in 1970.  His first Oscar in 1958 for his work on 'Gigi' and two further Oscars for 'My Fair Lady' in 1964 for Best Art Direction, and Best Costume Design.  Quite the feat.  Though the reviewer for the Guardian thought it all too narrow, parochial, and English.

*Madge Garland in Apollo, November 1968.  I have never heard the 'sixties referred to as 'distraught' before.



 

Friday, 26 December 2025

Christmas


St Stephen, the Protomartyr

Christmas by John Clare (1793-1864)


Christmas is come and every hearth
Makes room to give him welcome now
E'en want will dry its tears in mirth
And crown him wi' a holly bough
Tho tramping neath a winters sky
O'er snow track paths and ryhmey stiles
The huswife sets her spining bye
And bids him welcome wi' her smiles
Each house is swept the day before
And windows stuck wi' evergreens
The snow is beesomd from the door
And comfort crowns the cottage scenes
Gilt holly wi' its thorny pricks
And yew and box wi' berrys small
These deck the unus'd candlesticks
And pictures hanging by the wall