Monday, April 22, 2013

La Vie en Rose: Paris


The unexpected meeting on the metro of a kindred soul of a decade, now. Long-lacking joyful embrace and caresses of a dear dear friend and the curious, confused, and amused looks of the Parisians around us.

First sight of Paris: Moulin Rouge. Darker, a bloody redder, and much ickier than Toulouse-Lautrec led me to believe in his pastel paintings. Hokier, smaller, and more realistic than Baz Luhrmann led me to believe in his Bohemian passionate film. But a long line of people just as curious (but bound to be disappointed) as to what it really looks like on the inside.



Crepes, croissants, baguettes, french onion soup, duck, fish, beef bourguignon, crème brulee, raspberry cake, wine, macaroons.

Saint Chappelle: oldest fresco in France sitting unassuming under the breathtaking nave of wall made out of stained glass.



Walking in the prison where Marie Antoinette was held before she went to the guillotine. Wondering what happened to her children while she was there.

Finding sanctuary in the motherly Notre Dame, posing as a gargoyle, and enjoying the less populated park behind her with sweet flowers, trees, and views of her flying buttresses.




Wishing I could settle in to a nook of Shakespeare and Company and never leave. Singing along to “How High the Moon” while fingering through a Lucian Freud book and thinking about all the starving writers who found refuge in this place.



Magical sea-foam green Laduree and their spectrum of colorful, precious, delicious macaroons.

Escaping the Parisian rain showers by having a cool-kid picnic under the bridge by the Seine instead of a chic feast on the lawns of the Eiffel tower.
----The sight of a one-legged pigeon just as interesting as the giant famous triangular structure. I don’t know what that says about us.



The Louvre:
            Disillusioned by the hundreds of visitors who do not view the art except apathetically through their camera lens, attentive to only what people have told them is important.
            Redeemed by the Winged Victory of Samothrace standing isolated in a round cream apse with a skylight, apart from the overwhelming concentration of still life’s, portraits, naked nymphs, and babies riding on lions and staring at rainbows.
                        ----but still enraged by the way that people did not walk around. They took a picture directly in front and immediately took a right to see the Mona Lisa.


see if you can spot Mona.


            Amazed by the globe of Vermeer’s Astronomer, Corot’s natural arches in the landscape, and the technique  Fayum portraits despite being so ancient.
            Satisfied by catching the small detail of a dog pooping in a painting.

The view of blue and white Paris reflecting the sky from the top of the steps of Sacre Coeur and from our window on the fifth floor in Montmartre.



Listening to the two young men playing the piano and guitar at our restaurant (after the uncomfortable karaoke singing of an old man in a silky white shirt and belt-buckle that said “Danny”) that turned into forty minute jam session with them singing Ray Charles, Coldplay, Beatles, and ending the night with “Everybody Wants to Be a Cat” ---not even my request.

Opulence on opulence at Versailles. Escaping the herds of tourists inside the palace to frolic in the extensive gardens with classical music blasting. Resting in the grass of the Marie Antoinette’s Petit Trianon where gold and red and crystal were replaced with simpler greens and whites.



The blessed Orsay, the train station turned museum:
            Much needed distortion of idealized youthful figures in the caricatured clay heads of Daumier.
            The luminous, sorrowful, dirty peasants of Miller. Sacred in the simple.
            Paint on Cezanne’s hands like scales.
            Boldini’s Madame Charles Max with her feathery skin and dress, posed to soon lift up and fly away.
            Butterflies in my stomach and wanting to cry at getting to be so intimately close to the work of Van Gogh’s hands that I have been acquainted with for so long but never so close. 
            Experiencing the seasons with Monet
            Degas’ menagerie of ballerinas made out of airy lines and lava-like bronze dancing ignorant of his defeated woman with her absinthe at the cafe.
            Luce’s rainbow beard of Henri Edmund Cross and the unanswered questions of Whistler’s mother.


           

Camoflaged with Monet’s water lilies and willows in the oval rooms of the Orangerie museum with my turquoise dress and maroon tights. He never got to see the paintings installed in the place specifically built for them, and he never got to see me swimming in his pond.
           
Resting in the portable green chairs with crepes in hand alongside the other men in a row sleeping in the sun in the Tuileries Gardens. Well done, Paris, with those chairs. They lean back and everything.

Looking up at the Opera Garnier and imagining the Phantom standing on top and singing with a rose in his hand.

Blending into the familiar crowd at Closiere de Lilas, one of Ernest Hemingway’s favorite bars and doing some people watching. Which made it ironic when the cute old black man in a cardigan sat down next to us and made a gesture with his hands like he was zooming in with binoculars towards us and took an imaginary picture. If only we knew French and could have extended the gesture of a conversation with him. We walked out greeted with several “good-evenings” only to run back at the faint sounds of La Vie en Rose being played by the man at the piano.



Excited to come to this magical place with friends old and new, and just as excited to return back to my lovely roots in Orvieto---where a woman holding her baby will wave and blow kisses at me as I see her through her window whether I know her or not.

The Necropolis



A beautiful path with cherry blossomed trees leading up to the grassy oasis that is hardly a city of the dead. 6th Century BC in 21st century AD. Death and life, growth and decay, fresh beauty and ancient ruins all coexisting.
Empty tombs with only prehistoric looking plants growing around the stone benches under the spider webs---we take nothing with us, and we took their amphora vases out of their tufa graves too late for them to know that.
A ghost town for the sorrows carried by those of us in our community to sojourn: the draining of life of loved ones of our professors, death of friends and grandfathers, distance from familiarity, old burdens and struggles that remain despite the Italian sun and gelato.
Henry Nouwen told us that because a tree is useless, that is how it can grow tall and give shade and beauty. Life is not a possession to be defended, but a gift to be given. Take the world seriously, but not too seriously.




Dante Purgatorio Canto X:
 “In just this way, the smoke of incense
sculpted there put eyes and nose
in discord, caught between yes and no.
There the humble psalmist leaped in dance
Before the blessed vessel with his robe hitched up---
And was at once both more and less than a king.”




A Room with a View - E.M. Forster




“About old Mr. Emerson—I hardly know. No, he is not tactful; yet, have you ever noticed that there are people who do things which are most indelicate, and yet at the same time---beautiful?”

“Tut, tut! Miss Lucy! I hope we shall soon emancipate you form Baedecker. He does but touch the surface of things. As to the true Italy---he does not even dream of it. The true Italy is only to be found by patient observation.”



"You are inclined to get muddled, if I may judge from last night. Let yourself go. Pull out from the depths those thoughts that you do not understand, and spread them out in the sunlight and know the meaning of them. By understanding George you may learn to understand yourself. It will be good for both of you.”

“There is at times a magic in identity of position; it is one of the things that have suggested to us eternal comradeship.”

“’I shall want to live, I say.’
Leaning on her elbows on the parapet, she contemplated the River Arno, whose roar was suggesting some unexpected melody to her ears.”



“That day she had seemed a typical tourist-shrill, crude, and gaunt with travel. But Italy worked some marvel in her. It gave her light, and---which he held more precious---it gave her shadow. Soon he detected in her a wonderful reticence. She was like a woman of Leonardo Da Vinci’s, whom we love not so much for herself as for the things that she will not tell us. The things are assuredly not of this life, no woman of Leonardo’s could have anything so vulgar as a “story.”
………..…….“He looked at her, instead of through her, for the first time since they were engaged. From a Leonardo she had become a living woman, with mysteries and forces of her own, with qualities that even eluded art.”

“’There is a certain amount of kindness, just as there is a certain amount of light,’ he continued in measured tones. ‘We cast a shadow on something wherever we stand, and it is no good moving from place to place to save things because the shadow always follows. Choose a place where you won’t do harm---yes, choose a place where you won’t do very much harm, and stand in it for all you are worth, facing the sunshine.’”

Friday, April 12, 2013

Tropo Buono


We do things in a strange, but beautiful way. And I love it.



Making a perfect circle with our bodies in the courtyard of our monastery (ain't no thang?) during chapter meeting with Hannah our RA as the center only to watch her lift her left hand in the air displaying a ring. We unknowingly reenacted the scene of the inside of the Pantheon where Federico proposed to Hannah, which led to lots of shrieks and tears.

Celebratory gelato and laughing about how even epic romantic experiences can coexist with annoying saggy tights, just like the awkward juxtapositions like two gelato flavors that simply won’t achieve flavor harmony.



A schedule for the day consisting of sitting in the library, going to hear the nuns at Buon Gesu sing vespers, worshipping at the Preghiera, and going to dinner at Locanda del Lupo where Enya continues to outdo herself with our meals. 

Letting words like boustrophedon and canticle tickle my mouth.

Taking a casual field trip to the church down the road where Thomas Aquinas cell that he occupied for a bit was located, but now obliterated by Mussolini’s demolition to the church to put up military buildings. Mussoooliiinnniii. Tsk.

Magic coffee and complimentary cream puffs at Adrianos.



Spending a Friday working on Roberta’s farm and liberating fave beans from the suffocating weeds with a hoe until I can’t move my arms. Receiving the best wages of more food than I could ask for and playful pups.



A hug train for my dear pilgrim friends who walked 35 kilometers while praying and painting along the way to Lake Bolsena.

Impromptu dance parties while waiting for dinner.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Renaissance Excursions





Firenze and Arezzo
Land of internationally renown beauty, and also mud-brown rain that stains our coats.

Witnessing the movement from doubt to belief from lower body to upper in Verrocchio’s bronze Doubting Thomas.


Rusticated stone, gray skies, warm neutral yellow buildings, and David’s smooth white marble skin.

Sitting on the porch of the Ospedale degli Innocenti where mothers left their children so that they might have a better life, and feeling the harmony and comfort, but knowing it is a place of sojourn not permanence.

The reverberating echoes of Dona Nobis Pacem in a chapel.

Meditating in a mausoleum




Wishing I could tell the fashionable, vain Brancacci dandies to look left and right to the miracles happening next to them in the frescoes.

The pleasant surprise of a gypsy music concert and dancing with abandon, simply letting the strings and tambourine do its work.






Monte Oliveto
Further hagiography painted in the walls of the courtyard of the monastery.

Sunshine and silence.

Buying strawberry honey harvested by the Benedictine monks 



Siena

One of the most successfully constructed public spaces in the world. Successful enough to keep the tourists sunbathing in the Palio ring instead of flooding the Sala de Nove where we freely examined the Allegory of Good and Bad Government.


A town hall that smells like the inside of a metal tin containing old crayons. But also has lots of very famous artwork.



Viewing the city from atop the remains of a broken pride: the separated skeleton wall of the Duomo that was supposed to make its size surpass that of competitive Florence, but the hill could not support it. Now a wall of contentment, to walk to the top and look over the city that had a paint color named after it.

Watching Manuele our carpenter friend be more enthralled by ornate door frames than famous frescoes. Getting on the floor and touching the low reliefs.
Learning about Italian geography from him in Tuscany (in Italian… therefore stretching my communication skills) and singing Lykke Li and learning Italian songs as his co-pilot on our drives to our destinations.