Category Archives: Arts

Arts History

A visit to the V&A Islamic gallery

Over now on My London Your London an account of my weekend visit to the new Islamic gallery at the Victoria & Albert Museum. Well worth making a special trip to see it. As every, it was the odd little quirky items that I really liked, the ones they never have postcards of.

Lady of Quality Theatre

Coriolanus: Macready or Kemble?

My 19th-century blogger, Frances Williams Wynn, is tonight back at the theatre, with Macready’s Coriolanus, comparing it to that of another 19th-century great, Kemble.

“I should say that Kemble was more Roman, more dignified, and Macready more true to universal nature,” is her conclusion.

Interesting to compare it to the recent Globe production of the same play – I suspect the bull-headed military glory-seeking might have made more sense to her era than our own.

Arts Feminism

From the inbox

A new feminist e-journal, FemTAP: A Journal of Feminist Theory and Praxis. From the table of contents:

Ime A. S. Kerlee Theory and Praxis: An Introduction
Nancy A. Naples Feminist Activism and Activist Scholarship in the 21st Century
Ann Millett Disarming Venus: Disability and the Re-Vision of Art History
Tao Valentine Receiving Love: Black Women’s Writing, Theory, and Experience
Alison Bartlett Dear Regina: Formative Conversations About Feminist Writing
Lena McQuade Transforming Tradition: Bat Mitzvah as Jewish Feminist Theory and Praxis

Arts Lady of Quality

Seeing the bronze casting

My 19th-century blogger Miss Frances Williams Wynn is today visiting the workshop of the sculptor Francis Legatt Chantrey, to see the finished version of the equestrian statue of Munro that was to be, and was, transported to Madras, having been paid for by local subscription there.

As ever, when you she is speaking in her own voice she sounds delightful, enjoying a conversation about the work of bronze casting with an “intelligent workman”, if someone irritated that the buzzing crowd (probably I’d suspect of socialites) made the talking difficult.

You can find images of the statue here (Scroll down for other views.)

Books History

Literary London 2006 (Part 1)

I may have been a bit quieter than usual last week, as I spent Thursday and Friday the Literary London 2006 conference. It was the first of these I’ve attended (although it probably won’t be the last), for it is a fascinating combination. Basically focused as the name suggests on literature, it is however, highly welcoming to interdisciplinary approaches, and ranges widely in timeframe, from current, very current, technological “art” back to, well the earliest paper this year was on Chaucer and the “shitty” place of Southwark in his London.

I also presented, for the first time, a paper myself, entitled “Exercises in rhetoric or genuine laments? Four accounts of a ‘bounteous Ladies large beneficence'”, about Dame Helen Branch. The session worked out rather nicely, since one of my fellow panel members, Adam Hanson, from Queen’s University Belfast, was speaking about “William Haughton’s London in Englishmen for my Money,” a play written in 1598, only four years after Dame Helen died, so the two papers were quite complementary, and I was able to refer to his map handout. (Thanks Adam! and thanks to all the commenters on this blog – particularly Clanger and Sharon – for all their help in the research that went into my paper.)

I’m not posting the paper here because I would like to get it published some time and posting might complicate that, but if anyone is interested I’d be happy to send you a copy.

The following is a short collection of notes from the sessions I attended. (Note, these are my thoughts and collected snippets, and should not necessarily be taken as a full reflection of what the speaker said. And I think they are accurate, but it was an intense two days. Caveat rector.)

“John Milton, London writer”: Patrick J. Cook, Washington University
He’s more of a London writer than you think, was the basic thesis. Women and London are both alluring and frightening – the combination explains why London starts as the source of all beauty and ends up as Circe’s cave. (Logical enough for a boy just up from a male-dominated Cambridge.)

Milton was a great walker, but became much more a walker in London after going blind he “became a blind version of John Stowe”. (And when you think about it walking about early modern London – the smells, the noise – manufacture, horses, carts, itinerant traders singing out their wares – must have been pretty amazing, and frightening.)
read more »

Books Politics

Development prescriptions

Over on Blogcritics I’ve got a review of a development book written by an economist: The Central Liberal Truth: How Politics Can Change a Culture and Save it From Itself by Lawrence E. Harrison. His heart is in the right place, but the idea that you can decide what is the “right” culture for development (without even debating what “development” is), work out how to get to that by ticking a series of boxes (and getting a resulting culture that looks very like your own) is a little on the simplistic side. Indeed after reading it, you understand why US foreign policy so often gets it horribly wrong.