Friday, 22 July 2011

22nd July 2011 Good-Bye Lucian Freud

July 22A
He was one of the most prominent British painter, author of many notable portraits, of psychological penetration and ferocious realism, with which he more than laid bare his models physically. He died day before yesterday in his London home at the age of 88. He lived to paint, and painted until the day he died. If his name didn't seem familiar to you, no doubt that of his grandfather did, the world famous neurologist and founder of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud.

A lot of his paintings are of nudes, but his are not at all like the other painters' who show their female nudes to be alluring and in artistic or seductive post. His most controversial 'The sleeping supervisor of benefits' in 2008 fetched 2.5 million € in an auction in New York. I posted that painting here in my Multiply Photo Album, and many people criticised it to be ugly and even disgusting. He also painted many celebrity figures including Kate Moss and Jerry Hall, both to many very unflattering, and equally controversial, almost.

I thought I would post his most famous (some say notorious) painting of the 'supervisor' here, together with is own portrait, as homage to his life long achievement as one of the most acclaimed artist of the 20th century.

May he rest in peace.
SleepingBeautyLucianFreud

Prev: 22nd July 2011 Street Musicians - Head Or Tail?

22nd July 2011 Street Musicians - Head Or Tail?

July 22
The Town Hall of Barcelona has a huge storeroom where there are, apart from all sorts of other things, hundreds of music instruments confiscated. Now I understand from the news that these are going to be destroyed if no one claims them. I don't know if, at the moment of these being seized, whether they were identified with a number or the name of the proprietor or user. I think there's little probability of anyone coming forward to present themselves as owner of this guitar or that clarinet, because to recuperate one of these instruments, one has to pay the sanction of 180€.

There is regulation established about such musical activities, including the existing Association of street musicians of Barcelona. This city had in the past permitted real assaults to the public, in the installations of loudspeakers and sound equipment with ultra aggressive potency. That I think should be sanctioned, not the music or the musicians.

Every summer, if you eat in Roses beach front restaurants, you will find (rather, they will find you) street musicians, solitary or mostly in groups of 2, 3 or 4, with variety of instruments. The musicians are usually dressed casually, but some are rather stylish and others even try to match up to harmonize with their music; and the Mariachi, the originally Mexican street musicians dressed in silver-studded outfits that look a bit like a Spanish bull fighter's, but with wide-brimmed hats. They play music to entertain you while you eat, or at the beach; quite pleasant really, and this adds festive atmosphere.

I have had some very good times thanks to these wandering street musicians, not just here in Spain, also, while I used to travel often all over the place, in cities like Munich, Vienna, New York, San Francisco and many other countries. I have very pleasant memories of some of them and, none used loudspeakers or any other amplifiers - the sound is pure and natural.

Once I had the chance to hear a young couple interpret the 'Santa EspaƱa on cellos. And other songs, some melodic and soothing, others merrily cheerful. Curiously I saw them in the metro underground 2 years later, in Hong Kong!! They were university students playing music because they love playing music, and in the meantime earn some extra cash so they can travel to other countries to broaden their knowledge, playing music to earn their keep there. That's not the same as some others with a trumpet and drum, to gain some cash too but on the base of making noise.

I do wish the Town Hall would return the instruments to the rightful owners, perhaps with a warming that they should get permission first? A temporary license maybe? No loudspeakers to disturb the neighbours? Test their music standard first? There must be ways not to deprive the city with good music in the streets.
 
It's senseless waste to destroy music instruments, isn't it?
 

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