Sunday 9 February 2014

Cultural Tourist.

Sometimes, in January, the British winter seems interminable. As we all become more global some people interpret this as a necessity to flee and guaranteed sun in the middle of our winter is expensive. Two generations ago those who could afford it, migrated to the South of France. My grandparents were amongst them and in fact my grandfather died whilst on one of these winter outings aged 89 in 1958.
After a particularly grey highland winter we decided to follow in their footsteps and rent a flat in the medieval part of Old Nice. On the fourth floor, with only two small windows, one to a covered inner courtyard, and the other down a quiet side street, we have been woken each morning to the sound of heavy rain. Luckily, so the guidebooks tell us, Nice is second only in culture to Paris. So, as is usually the case when we visit new cities, we become cultural tourists.
MAMAC Nice or Musee d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporian is within easy reach of our flat, and so as it was raining we decided to start there. Although the building is conspicuous in its modernity and claims to have formed a new town square which felt more like a traffic junction, the entrance was surprisingly hard to find and we past a group of homeless men cooking their lunch on a camping stove three times before we found the door. Once inside, however, the building worked well as a temple to twentieth century art with galleries at each corner and wide airy passages that linked them. This gave each chapter of the collection room to breathe. For me what was enjoyable was the introduction to new names. French artists that I had not heard of before and who stood in equal stature to the best of modern painting.
The gallery is unashamedly French, with little use of the English language and as my French is a poor schoolgirl version, I got bored with the struggle of translation and let the work speak for itself. Everyone finds a voice to resonate with and I found the work of one man in particular, very engaging. Jean Charles Blais uses the French tradition of haute couture to inform his work and in particular, in the work seen here, pattern cutting. The reference to tailoring provides an indirect commentary to the human condition. Some of his work was more direct with drawings of body parts painted on layered surfaces made from old posters. There was a touching piece of feet, painted in the early Van Gogh style. In fact his work seemed tender, something I think unusual in much modern painting especially by men! A large stricking piece comprised three moving lines projected onto a wall showing a changing configuration of the human head.
Our second wet day was spent at the Musee Matisse. Trudging through a sodden town to find a bus that took us up a hill, it felt exciting and unusual to be almost alone in a wonderful collection of such an iconic hero of so many. The museum is in an attractive villa sitting in a park with an olive grove up to the front door and orange trees standing like sentinels. Beyond the terrace as the house looks out to sea, are roman ruins on all sides. An awe inspiring situation to house such a museum, The collection itself contains a number of iconic masterpieces, many placed in a context of their making, with drawings, sketches and preliminary paintings to place the work into its context, rooting them like the olive trees outside. This was supported further by some of the painter’s possessions being placed amongst the paintings and including the wooden silver coloured chair carved like a shell that appears in several pictures. Unlike some overstuffed museums where every classroom, jigsaw puzzle and chocolate box reproduces the original but where you remain unmoved through over exposure to an image exploited by advertising and popularism, here the work sang in the space around it, a semi domestic setting and seemed to me as fresh and relevant today as it must have been when it was made.
Despite the wet we had two great days of culture, it felt like drinking a great bottle of wine, and despite returning with soaking shoes, socks and feet, we both enjoyed every minute.







The author and partner at the market!
"Please allow me to introduce myself." Having written a page on Facebook, started to promote our house and garden, the time has come to renew our web site. In thinking how we want it to do it and following suggestions about linking it to a website of my own, I have decided to start a blog instead. This blog will be about about painting and my life as an artist. Inevitably it will appear more of a diary. My work and my life are intrinsically linked and in many ways our life here, house, garden, friends and work have become a whole. Inevitably, our partially self sufficient lifestyle makes life and work one seamless activity. Some days are spent sowing seeds for the next seasons salads and the next, sitting somewhere in the garden trying to evoke a small piece of visual poetry.