My London Your London

A cultural guide

Page 13 of 42

Exhibition Review: Renaissance Faces – Van Eyck to Titian

by Natalie Bennett

Many of the male portraits in the Renaissance Faces exhibition at the National Gallery are well known, iconic even – take Hans Holbein the Younger’s “The Ambassadors”. Although among the famous depictions of women here are the wife of Giovanni Arnolfini, and the much talked about Quinten Massys “The Ugly Duchess”, a savage portrait of female old age.

So to get a different perspective on the Renaissance, and meet the best collection of the women of the age now possible, I decided to go around the exhibition concentrating on the women – and the real women. (There’s obviously been a commendable desire here for gender balance, but it did lead to Virgins and “ideal” women being included among the genuine portraiture.)

One of the oldest real faces of women we have from anywhere is one of the youngest people here, a portrait that is probably of Blanche, daughter of Henry IV of England, who married Ludwig of Bavaria in 1402 at age 10. (The portrait here is probably from a few years after that.)

In profile, as is usual for the time, she’s notable for savagely plucked eyebrows and a thorough ageless face. (Perhaps the way the artist dealt with her youth.) Not looking into our eyes make her seem distant, aloof and much older than her years

It’s carefully bland, unlike Alesso Baldovinetti’s “Portrait of a Lady” c 1465, which has a faint, Mona Lisa-like smile. You feel like she’s glimpsing you feel out of the corner of her eye, and something of the set of the jaw suggests a strong character.
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Exhibition Review: Taking Liberties – the Struggle for Britain’s Rights and Freedoms, at the British Library

by Natalie Bennett

There’s much pressure these days on museums and galleries to be “relevant”, to be “interactive”, to be “accessible”. All too often this results in embarrassingly clunky efforts by curators to get down with “the kids”, to squeeze ancient objects into modern debates, to take multimedia places it should be decent left out of.

Taking Liberties – the Struggle for Britain’s Rights and Freedoms, the exhibition that has just opened at the British Library, is very much a reaction to these demands – but it suffers from none of the typical faults. When you look at an early version of the Magna Carta, with the debate over 42 days detention echoing in your ears from a nearby screen, then this is a genuine, unmistakable case of history being relevant to today.

The continual rediscovery and reinvention of the Magna Carta at the heart of English law is perhaps the most powerful single story here. The exhibition pays rightful honour to Sir Edward Coke in rediscovering and redeploying the Magna Carta in the 17th century, and notes that William Blackstone, whose Commentaries dominated teaching of English law, celebrated it as the as the fount of modern liberties and the rule of law. But I was most pleased to learn that a woman had a role in this. Possibly the first printing of the Magna Carta in English was by “Elisabeth, widow of Robert Redman” in 1541.

Again we’re back to modern day parallels though, with the history of the Haebus Corpus Act of 1679. Learning that it was passed after judges, jailers and politicians manipulated old rules by moving prisoners between jails or transferring them to Scotland, one immediately thinks of George Bush, Guantanamo and the whole “they’re enemy combatants” sleight of tongue.
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Restaurant Review: Ma Cuisine, Kew

by Richard Montague

In a bid to end all harmony, our marriage and possibly even our lives, sometimes my wife and I go for a drive together on our nation’s motorways. I won’t have to tell anyone who has done this recently how deeply unpleasant an experience it can be. That is, apart from the veritable oasis that is the M6 Toll. You cruise from motoring hell into a parallel universe in which motorways are how they should be, practically no lorries and at least two lanes free of traffic at any point. The sun comes out, my favourite songs play from the radio and my wife no longer finds any of my incredibly helpful advice irritating. It is this kind of heaven-like respite that I was searching for when we went to Ma Cuisine on Monday night.

The reason I was feeling like this is two-fold. Firstly, I have had several poor food experiences over the last couple of weeks, most notably a trip to my local supermarket where, despite searching extensively, I could not find a single piece of British fruit. This prompted a bout of internal-monologue Tourette’s, the nature of which, if it could have been heard, would have made grannies faint, children cry and undoubtedly earned me a night in the cells somewhere in West London.

On top of that, this week has been hot. And muggy. Too hot for me. I know it is sacrilege to say this in the UK, where we worship hot weather, but it is never hot for long enough to acclimatise properly so chubby blokes like me just end up uncomfortable most of the time. Anyway, no matter how difficult the weather, or how bad my recent food experiences were, nothing was going to put me off going out and trying more food, especially somewhere that advertises itself as “the home of regional French cuisine”.

The approach from Kew Gardens tube is very pleasant, it has that village feel and the restaurant is really easy to find. Sitting outside provided a lovely refreshing breeze, and, admittedly, it always feels more authentically French if you are sitting outside on the street on a table that is a bit too small amongst the smokers.
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Theatre Review: Glyn Maxwell’s Liberty at Shakespeare’s Globe

by Natalie Bennett

There are two sorts of scenes that the Globe Theatre, with its intimacy and its sky-open space, relishes: light sexual comedy, and big dramatic set pieces. The second new play in the Globe’s 2008 season, Glyn Maxwell’s Liberty, set towards the end of the French Revolution, contrives to present a collection of each of those.

The comedy comes before the interval, the time mostly taken up by a picnic at which a frivolous young seamstress, Elodie (played with winsome gaiety by Ellie Piercy) tries to distract a dedicated but callow young revolutionary, Evariste Gamelin (David Sturzaker), from his speechifying and philosophising. Trying to set him back on course is the scheming Louise (Belinda Lang), while also providing distraction is his more sophisticated, and less driven, old friend, Philippe Demay (played with show-stealing charm by Edward Macliam).

The dramatic set pieces come later, as Gamelin rises, pushed by Louise, and inevitably falls, in the turbulent final paroxysms of the Revolution play themselves out. Besterman has a particularly fine piece of wildcat, spitting defiance in the face of the guillotine, and the pathos pulses from a prison scene between a hardbitten bit-part actress Rose (Kirsty Besterman), and Maurice, the Lucretius-spouting former duke for whom she’s surprisingly but believably fallen. And the Globe, as it always does, proves the perfect setting for a fine tumbril scene – as the cart rolls among the inevitably discomforted groundlings.

This is a story based on Anatole France’s 1912 novel Les Dieux ont Soif (usually translated as “The Gods Will Have Blood”), although the dialogue is all the playwright’s own, written in unrhymed iambic pentameters — but not obtrusively so. And the play is marked by a fine stream of one-liners; my favourite was when Demay complained that once, “public safety was trying not to put your feet in horseshit”.
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Theatre Review: Rebecca Lenkiewicz’s Her Naked Skin at the National

by Natalie Bennett

Epic in scale, huge in the staging, sure-handed in the storytelling, Rebecca Lenkiewicz’s Her Naked Skin occupies the demanding space of the National’s huge Olivier theatre with power and panache. Given (astonishingly) that this is the first play by a living female playwright in this landmark space since the National’s opening in 1963, the subject of the play — the suffragettes — could not have been better chosen.

At its centre is one great tale, the relationship between two suffragettes, the upper class, middle-aged fragile rebel, Celia Cain (Lesley Manville) and the spirited but uncertain young seamstress Eve Douglas (Jemima Rooper). Balancing that is the fraught relationship between Celia and her husband William (with whom she’s unhappily had seven children) – he (Adrian Rawlins) is the one male portrayed sympathetically in the play, the one who suggests that men too are being damaged by this grossly gender-imbalanced Edwardian society.

But the truly memorable scenes are those at the heart of the suffragette struggle – the women, joyous in the determination to seize public space with (then) shocking demonstrations, determinedly brave facing the shock of prison life, delicately supportive of each other when the pressure becomes too much. The force-feeding scene – hinted at in the first act and consummated in the second – left the audience gasping, and more than one covering their eyes in shock.

Light relief, in this almost Shakepearean, mulitstranded structure, comes from the political scenes, in Downing Street and Westminster – the only real-life characters, Herbert Asquith and his liberal cabinet being, fittingly, the Hal characters – the buffoons playing silly, drink-sodden games and complaining about such serious issues as the suffragettes having scorched their golf course with acid.
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Theatre Review: Cosi at the White Bear, Kennington

by Natalie Bennett

Dark comedy is a tough genre. To laugh, but to feel pain, to start, but still sympathise, it is a tough balancing act. When you add that Cosi, which opened this week at the White Bear Theatre in Kennington, is not only a dark comedy, but is set an a mental asylum, well when you settle down into the intimate space of the back-of-the-pub venue, it has to be with some trepidation.

But after a slightly slow expository first 20 minutes, it becomes clear that you are in the hands of a master dramatist. And that’s a fact, for Louis Nowra is one of Australia’s best-known playwrights, and the skill and the experience shows here in the balance of laughter and pain.

And the language is a delight – no surprise to this Australian-born reviewer, who recalls studying a play at high-school in which parliamentarians were called “scrufulous sheep”, but there were shocked goggles in the London audience at lines such as “He’s a testy as a ram wanting to get into the ewe paddock”, but by the time we got to “you know what culture is to most Australians – what grows on stale cheddar” they were right in the swing.

But Nowra doesn’t need specifically Australian references to have fun with language: a particular focus is the problems the transexual inmate Ruth (Neil Summerville) has with illusion and reality. As she explains: “I can deal with things being an illusion or reality but not at the same time.”

There’s plenty of illusion in this tale, however, at least in the minds of the characters, as the inmates of an early Seventies Australian asylum meet the young director Lewis (Matthew Burton) who’s been employed to help them produce a play. Some cheerful simple comedy would seem in order, although Lewis has his heart set on Brecht, but one of the inmates, Roy, is determined to fulfil his life’s ambition of starring in a production of Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutti, despite the fact that not one of the potential cast either knows a word of Italian, or anything about opera.
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