My London Your London

A cultural guide

Page 17 of 42

John Fletcher, Shakespeare collaborator, seeks new home

by Claire George

A Jacobean playwright is waiting to get together with old friends in Trafalgar Square, but he needs your help to settle in. The Sussex-born John Fletcher was one of the most successful dramatists of the early 17th century. A collaborator with Shakespeare, most famously on Henry VIII, he succeeded the Bard as house playwright for the King’s Men.

Fletcher also had a long-running writing partnership with Francis Beaumont, with whom, on one account, he lived in scandalously close quarters on Bankside, with “one wench in the house between them”.

Now the National Portrait Gallery has a chance to buy the only surviving picture of Fletcher to have been painted from life, a work that was featured in last year’s Searching for Shakespeare exhibition. By an unknown English artist, its history is well-attested, it having been in the Clarendon collection, assembled by Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, in the mid-17th century and held initially on his great mansion in Piccadilly.

The National Portrait Gallery has collected a significant proportion of the £218,000 purchase but needs to raise a further £50,000 from public donations by January 20.

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Exhibition Review – Seduced: Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now – Barbican

by Natalie Bennett

At the start of “Seduced: Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now”, the Barbican curators are almost paranoically determined to remind you that you are in an art gallery, not some slimy back street show, despite the “strictly no under 18s” sign on the door. So, they proclaim, “We are offering you the pleasure of being seduced by the artistry with which sexual subjects have been brought to life. Above all we hope that seduced will help us reflect on what we share with people from different ages and cultures.”

And they even show a playful turn, beginning with a plaster cast of fig leaf for Michelangelo’s David “unknown artist probably English 1857” – apparently it was presented to Queen Victoria at her request, to protect the modesty of those viewing a plaster cast of the original. After that, it might not surprise you to know that there are few English, or British, artists here. Or that in the Bourbon Museum in Naples the “reserved cabinet”, where visitors had to get a special permit, most requests came from Englishmen.

The claim for some sort of universalism in approach to sex made at the entrance is further dispelled by the ancient material. To the Greeks and the Romans sex was about much more than, well sex.

I can’t imagine precisely the purpose of meaning of the tintinnabulum, a chime shaped as a large winged penis that has limbs that are also penises (or should that be penii? I’ve not previously had cause to ponder that grammatical question.) But surely it must have been symbolic and religious – just like the art of Pompei.

Then, by the Apollodoru painter, is an Attic kylix of circa 490BC showing a sapphic scene of a crouching woman fingering another. But she’s holding a vase in one outstretched hand and perhaps playing a musical instrument in the other – the meaning is surely symbolic rather than erotic.

And into early modern times, particularly but not solely with work of “popular”, “low art” forms, some of this ancient sense of sex as symbol remains. I was struck by the curiously prosaic imagine on a French 16th-century polychrome majolica ceremonial dish of a woman with a basket of phalli. She’s seated on the ground in a demure posture, with her legs tucked under skirt and a serious expression. Similar in feel is an etching by Giulio Romano (Pippi) of a naked woman approaching a man on a bed to kill him. A fully dressed haggard man, perhaps death, holds back the curtain for her.
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Hands on History at the Central Library in Uxbridge

By Claire George

You can get your hands on history and help the soap opera of Victorian life unfold before the eyes of the world in a colourful corner of West London. That’s the offer being made by Uxbridge Central Library, which is seeking volunteers to help with the Heritage Builds Bridges project.

The national lottery-funded scheme is built around a website that brings together major heritage collections from Brunel University, the British and Foreign School Society and the London Borough of Hillingdon. “The collections were united because they present a unique and complementary picture of Hillingdon – its people, its industries, its geography and how Hillingdon is developing,” said the project manager, Mandy Mordue of Brunel University.

The combined collections also document the history of education in Hillingdon schools and at a national level. The BFSS holds one of the world’s leading research resources for 19th-century elementary education and teacher training. Brunel University’s archives contain records from two teacher training colleges, and illustrate the fight to raise the status of women teachers.

“The website has two main strengths, the breadth of the collections and its usefulness as a teaching tool,” said the Central Library museum curator, Clara Pereira.

Heritage Builds Bridges has worked closely with local teachers to tailor the website to suit schoolchildren. The schools section uses old photographs, prints and collection artefacts to take youngsters on an evocative tour of 19th-century childhood, industry and trade. It also employs characters and games to teach children about the differences between life then and now.

But the aim is to reach much beyond the immediate locality. “We were careful not to make it too local, so teachers in other parts of the country can use it,” said the assistant archivist, Paul Davidson.
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A hidden gem: the London Library

By Natalie Bennett

“There is a dead female rat in the square garden.
File it under SC MISC.”

That’s a recent short exchange from the readers’ comments book at the London Library. Unpick the terse phrases, and you’ll get to know a lot about this unjustly little-known London institution.

London Library readers, by and large, are the sort of writers who’ve checked their footnotes three times, who’ll never be caught out with a spot of inadvertant plagiarism in their latest book. So when they see a dead rat, they won’t just note its presence, they’ll collect all of the information they can about it.

The second line, translated, means “science, miscellaneous”. Not for this library the calm mathematical march of the Dewey system, but some glorious, madly illogical, and very, very 19th-century system of its own devising.

Look up “Korea” in the electronic catalogue and you’ll find nothing is under “K”. Most is in History.Corea (apparently the 19th-century spelling, or just what the librarian preferred), a monograph of incense burners under “Art.Bronzes”, Korean movies under “Science.Cinematograph”, plus a few books under “T” for travel.

It is a wonderfully mad system that I’m sure gave some 19th-century librarian a chuckle as he put Science.Witchcraft beside Science.Women. But it does, in its own way, work. Often, having trudged up the rattling staircases, scratched your head, and gone back down again, you’ll eventually find your way to the appointed shelf, and discover that while the catalogue entry that took you there turns out, in the cellulose, to be disappointing, nestling beside it is just the text that you need – or if not, then some irresistably titled alternative that will give you hours of reading pleasure – and pleasure that you can take home, and keep just like it was your own, for many a week.
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Exhibition Review – Inhuman Traffic: the Business of the Slave Trade

By Natalie Bennett

The buzz at the British Museum just now is all around China, with the hottest tickets in town being for what’s universally known as the terracotta warriors exhibition. But it’s worth taking a little extra time to pop upstairs, to a small but powerful display on the slave trade. It aims in one small room to take in a lot, from the economics of the slave trade, on which it is academically strongest, to the echoes of slavery today, which is attracting plenty of attention from visitors for its eclectic power.

Opening and dominating is “Beyond my grandfather’s dreams”, a contemporary bronze by Fowokan George Kelly. In form and styling it is like a traditional European portrait bust, but it depicts a beautiful black woman whose face is dawn in suffering.

But then the focus moves from pain, so often often the focus with exhibitions on slavery, to the other side, all of the wealth and comfort Europeans were able to enjoy as a result of such suffering – tobacco, ivory, sugar, markets for manufactured goods that built the wealth of Victorian Britain. As Ignatius Sancho, who was born on a slave ship between West Africa and the Americas, wrote: “The grand object of English navigators – indeed of all Christian navigators — is money…”

The ways in which this trade was a complete integrated system are made clear in this exhibition. The tobacco grown by slaves in the Americas was a luxury commodity, but the lowest grade was often sent to Africa, where it might be used for buying more slaves. A similar pattern was seen with sugar: the fine products were sent to Europe but molasses, the byproduct of the dangerous refining process (boiling in huge open kettles – known as the Jamaica Train), was sent to Africa to buy more slaves. Josiah Wedgewood advocated abolition, but made beautiful sugar bowls for the luxury product, which surely helped encourage its consumption.

Chain gangs of slaves for export carried with them elephant tusks for the luxury trade in ivory. On display here are gambling tokens from London’s gentlemen’s clubs and piano keys from polite drawing rooms – some of the myriad of items into which it was made.
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Theatre Review: Anorak of Fire at the London Arts Theatre

by Robert Bain

If you’re looking for a group to make fun of, there aren’t many easier targets than trainspotters. Most of the work has already been done for you: we all know spotters are dull, obsessive, socially inept men who carry thermos flasks and, of course, sport the obligatory anorak.

Stephen Dinsdale’s one-man play Anorak of Fire wants to be a comedy about someone we all know. But the spotter, Gus Gascoigne, is familiar not because he exists in real life, but because he’s a caricature we’ve already seen mocked a thousand times. Just like we all poke fun at ‘chavs’ today, the ‘anorak’ stereotype emerged as everybody’s favourite punchbag in the 90s, appearing in sketch shows, adverts and snide conversations behind people’s backs. It wasn’t all that big or clever back then, but at least it was fresh.

Fourteen years on from the play’s debut, the joke is feeling very old. With Gus, played by Stephen Glover, Dinsdale has done little to flesh out this all-too-familiar character, so the play’s humour and story hold few surprises. Details that ought to bring it to life – like the obligatory anecdote about a failed sexual encounter – prove just as predictable.

Dinsdale’s script and Glover’s portrayal of Gus are both needlessly over-the-top – a shame, because there’s really no need to resort to silliness like this to derive humour from weirdos. The world is full of hilarious real-life geeks, obsessive oddballs and social outcasts, indeed we can all see aspects of these characters in ourselves. But Gascoigne bears little relation to any I’ve ever come across. Instead he’s like a cartoon Jarvis Cocker – all sneering and nasal with an exaggerated northern accent.
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