Sunday, 30 January 2022
January seems to have slipped by - I was going to say in a slump of lethargy and getting hooked on Wordle - but actually I've been busy at work, and not much time to get out and about. But a sunny weekend and a walk along the river yesterday proved energising - and when I got home, I set myself to booking tickets. First off was a matinée this afternoon - an unnervingly good audience with Maggie Thatcher at Riverside Studios. Not a very useful recommendation as this was the last performance and the actor is off on tour to Spain and the Netherlands - but he promises to be back (to the Edinburgh Festival) and also performs as Hitler/Churchill/Dickens/Einstein/Hitchcock/Francis Bacon - he must have a phenomenal memory, not only for his lines but for whole biographies as the audience can catch him on the hop and ask him anything. Anyway, now we've discovered him, we'll be looking out for him again.
And talking of Francis Bacon, the Royal Academy exhibition is simply riveting and so powerful. I came out feeling energised, as if the sap were rising ...
The herringbone overcoat is just because I liked it - but I was enthralled by the potency of his bullfighting pictures, especially as the gallery cleared and for a few minutes I was there all alone. Now I fully understand that Bacon isn't everyone's cup of tea. Regrettably, though, there is a 'trigger warning'at the entrance to the exhibition (after they've taken your £20, though!) cautioning visitors to beware of potentially disturbing content ... heavens, art that elicits an emotional response, how very shocking!
I do sometimes feel the need of a trigger warning for infantilising twaddle!
beware of potentially disturbing content
ReplyDeleteOh, good grief. Whatever next? There seems to be a national fear of causing offence to anyone.
Did you see the story the other day about the University of Chester - not an establishment I'd previously heard of - warning that Harry Potter could raise issues of "gender, race, sexuality, class, and identity."
ReplyDeleteIs it £9000 a year now - to study Harry Potter? I think I'd be giving my offspring a trigger warning that they could study in the cupboard under the stairs!
Oh yes! And when the TV stations tell you what helpline to ring for support when they report the horrible things that human beings do, and do to each other...
ReplyDeleteThe one man performance sounds astonishing and well worth a visit as does the Francis Bacon; warnings and all!
Hope you have a good week.
xxx
Thanks, Vronni - I'm having a very good week so far - but it's only Monday!
ReplyDeleteOh, you work? I'd somehow thought you must be retired - you seem to go to such a lot of interesting stuff. I bet, therefore, that you're not a teacher. The greatest thing about being retired, if you're a teacher, is that you have EVENINGS! And WEEKENDS! And thus you can do interesting stuff. The only disadvantage is that the school holidays seem quite long, with all those children cluttering up the place. They used to seem short... .
ReplyDeleteOh, no, I'm not a teacher, Pam - I wouldn't have lasted a week! I suppose I'm semi-retired. Still keep a toe in the water but nothing like the hours I used to put in. Though I was glad of work during lockdown/Covid. It gave a bit of shape to the week! Who would have thought - after looking forward to retirement since I was 20!
ReplyDeleteI’ve always thought of you as my own personal arts reviewer and correspondent. But perhaps that’s wide of the mark too. Then there’s your historical cooking niche. All fascinating.
ReplyDeleteNow if I had my time again, I'd be a food historian for sure, Lucille - though I'm not sure there's a living in it! It's very niche. All done as a volunteer!
ReplyDeleteGreat post! There is a trigger warning on old episodes of Steptoe & Son and Adrian Mole on Radio 4 Extra! Makes you wonder how people managed to survive the 1970's and 80's!
ReplyDelete