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Who lives a still life? he asked. It was the end of the day, he was alone. He could think of a few souls living quietly, not doing much, letting the days go by. They would say they were busy exercising their minds, reading sporadically, worrying a little about distant children, noisy neighbours, absent friends, the state of the house. But they espoused stillness, enjoyed the afternoon light as it fell across the windowed sill illuminating that Venetian vase. They were not anxious about making tea, just yet. It was good, this being still. She often wondered about the still life, the artists’ ultimate challenge, duty even to that most particular of genres; the attempt to catch the moment, the fleeting moment, it could only be a moment when light fell sharp or diffused on objects chosen or arranged, a never to be recovered moment, except by the painter’s hand. Here was a chair, a red armchair in a room almost certainly in Gordon Square, Bloomsbury, a Vanessa Bell, she said, painted in, well, 1934 or 5, and very characteristic then, its dark blue cushion plumped for a soon-to-be sitter. It stands in front of her painted screen, obscuring the lower part of the window open to the morning, yesterday’s flowers in a vase nearby, on a table with books. And above the chair, a small painting hangs, an intimate scene, left of the window where the long curtains fall to a still pool of fabric gathered on the wooden floor.
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Jun 17, 2014
Jun 17, 2014 at 10:02 AM UTC
Still Lives : Still Life
Who lives a still life? he asked. It was the end of the day, he was alone. He could think of a few souls living quietly, not doing much, letting the days go by. They would say they were busy exercising their minds, reading sporadically, worrying a little about distant children, noisy neighbours, absent friends, the state of the house. But they espoused stillness, enjoyed the afternoon light as it fell across the windowed sill illuminating that Venetian vase. They were not anxious about making tea, just yet. It was good, this being still. She often wondered about the still life, the artists’ ultimate challenge, duty even to that most particular of genres; the attempt to catch the moment, the fleeting moment, it could only be a moment when light fell sharp or diffused on objects chosen or arranged, a never to be recovered moment, except by the painter’s hand. Here was a chair, a red armchair in a room almost certainly in Gordon Square, Bloomsbury, a Vanessa Bell, she said, painted in, well, 1934 or 5, and very characteristic then, its dark blue cushion plumped for a soon-to-be sitter. It stands in front of her painted screen, obscuring the lower part of the window open to the morning, yesterday’s flowers in a vase nearby, on a table with books. And above the chair, a small painting hangs, an intimate scene, left of the window where the long curtains fall to a still pool of fabric gathered on the wooden floor.
nigel-morgan
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Jun 17, 2014
Jun 17, 2014 at 10:02 AM UTC
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