art & civilization

..this quote from the guardian article “Civilisations are judged and remembered not by their most successful businessmen but by the art they leave behind.” yeah, sounds real nice if you can get over the fact it’s simplistic romanticized pap. perhaps in the sense of pre-history there is some truth in this. it’s hard to tell a businessman from a quarter inch piece of bleached knee bone. pottery and cave paintings are self evident. but once history began to be recorded i’d have to contend the exact opposite is the case.

This was written by the author of the nonist (a new-to-me blog) some time ago in a very thought-provoking rant concerning that ever perennial question, “what good are the arts?” Do read the whole post for he does make some sense while maybe needling the reader. However I really disagree with the above quote.

I think of the Renaissance period as a major example of where business and the arts collaborated to create some of mankind’s greatest art works. The wealthy businessmen and the wealthy churches were the patrons who supported and encouraged artists to create masterpieces for their homes, towns and churches. I guess what we need today are more patrons like the Medici family!

As for whether arts matters to society, I think of the many cities in the world that have great museums, opera houses, concert halls and theatres. Business and tourism thrives in these places, and the money that is made here is then spent enjoying the arts. Can you imagine Paris, Rome, London or New York without the arts?

I agree that many people are not interested in the arts at all, sadly, and I blame their deficient education. This brings to my mind the recent blog Finland Diary by Robert G. Kaiser and Lucian Perkins of the Washington Post who toured Finland to find out why it has the world’s best educational system, produces such talented musicians and architects, and is an economic success. (I blogged about it when it had just started.)

That’s enough of my mini-rant. Dear readers, are the arts important to a great civilization?

Addendum Aug.6.05: Here’s some interesting facts from the Alliance for Arts and Culture:

I think that the manifestation of our culture in terms of our identity is absolutely crucial.
-Prime Minister Paul Martin, on the subject of the Canadian Televison Fund, April29/03

Dollar amount that the arts contribute to Canada’s economy each year: $26 billion
Number of people who attend a live perfomance each year in Canada: 14 million (double the number who attend sporting events)

long weekend

We all like our long weekends, and we are having one now with the first Monday in August being BC Day in British Columbia. I was curious to find out if all our provinces have such a provincially designated holiday (ie. not the national statutory ones like Christmas). Here’s what I learned from CanadaInfo:

The first Monday in August is holiday in most of the Provinces and Territories. What you will often find, however, is that its name changes from province to province, and even amongst different regions within a province. On calendars, it is generally labeled as “Civic Holiday” as not to be region specific. No matter what it is called, it is a much needed long weekend to augment the short Canadian summers.

The only other provinces designating it as a Province Day are New Brunswick and Saskatchewan. Manitoba, Nunavut and Northwest Territories call it a Civic Holiday, while Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have Natal Day, and Alberta has Heritage Day. Ontario’s is designated as a municipal holiday with different names around the province. Quebec, Newfoundland/Labrador and the Yukon do not have a holiday on the first Monday of August but have other provincially designated holidays. Newfoundland and Labrador have six!

(Non-Canadian readers may find this map of provinces and territories of Canada of interest.)

So, after all these boring facts, you ask what are we doing this long weekend? After having had our floors refinished, we have now been vacuuming up the fine wood dust, patching walls and sanding wood window sills and trim, some of which have never been finished. After final sanding and vacuuming, we’ll paint the walls and ceilings, and varnish the wood! It’s hot and sticky so it’s early morning and evening shifts with afternoon siestas (or blogging)! It will look fresh and new again after fifteen years of family living!

Gotta go buy some more ceiling paint now! Hope you are having a great summer weekend!

Art in Nature

Doesn’t this scene look very magical and surreal, with the strange almost man-made looking sculptural forms scattered about in the landscape?

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Photo from the World Conservation Union (IUCN), via BBC

It is the desert floor of Wadi al-Hitan, or Whale Valley, south of Cairo, littered with fossils of the last whales known to have legs. The remains reveal the transition of whales from land-based to the ocean-going mammals we know today. It is one of eight areas of natural beauty that have been put on the World Heritage list by Unesco (do look at them all).

National Geographic also reports on this, stating that “Egypt’s Wadi Al-Hitan (“whale valley”) reveals one of the iconic transitions in the record of life”. Have a look at this photo of a whale, and another at UNESCO World Heritage Centre where you can also visit all the sites around the world on their list. Check out how many are from your country.

Canada Day

redcurrants.jpg

Happy 138th Birthday Canada!

In honour of the day, the Canadian and inestimable mirabilis has posted a wonderful link to the origins of “O Canada”. Calixa Lavallée composed it in 1880 in Quebec City. It remained a French only anthem for some 20 years before it was performed in English Canada in 1901. Several translations later, Stanley Weir’s was published in 1908. It wasn’t until 1980 that it was officially made Canada’s official anthem! I remember singing it as a child in school, along with “God Save the Queen”, so I suppose it was an “unofficial” national anthem for many years.

There are more Canadian links from the other inestimable Canadian wood s lot. He’s also posted some wonderful Lauren Harris paintings!

More

Oh, and a happy new month, too! My youngest daughter, when she was little, would always cheerfully call this out with the turn of a calendar page. Tonight she is off to the fireworks with her boyfriend.

Land of the Saame

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Photo by Pekka Antikainen, in “Land of the Saame”

As my dear readers know, I’m fascinated by the northern indigenous cultures, in particular the Saami people of northern Europe who are a branch of the Finno-Ugric family. Some time ago I came across a Finnish photography website Leuku.fi that includes a book by Pekka Antikainen: Saamenmaa or Land of the Saame. It is viewable as a PDF (7.9 MB). It’s full of gorgeous yet honest photographs and stories of the land and the people, with text in both Finnish and English.

He writes,

It was in 1982, as an enthusiastic student of photography,
that I made my first photographical expedition to Lapland.
The imposing scenery of Enontekiö made a great impression
on me, but it was in the village of Raittijärvi that I realised
something that eventually led me to produce this book on
the Land of the Saame, although I could not have imagined
then that it would take me a whole twenty years to complete.

I highly recommend a read and look for an understanding and appreciation for this unique part of the world through the eyes of this empathetic observer.

(Oh, and it is available to purchase for 34 Euro, just click on the lower image and an email window opens. No, I have nothing to do with it, but just noticed that this page has no English for non-Finnish buyers.)

Midsummer nights

Many summers ago my husband, our two little girls and I were traveling by car and ferries through Germany to Denmark, Sweden, Finland and back again to Germany before flying home to Canada. The night we arrived in Denmark we went to friends for a delightful family dinner in their home. Afterwards we were invited to come with them to a lovely big midsummer’s party at the gracious manor-like home of our friend’s company manager. At midnight everyone walked down to the coastal beach to see the many bonfires lining the shore – a magical scene.

The next evening we were in Sweden in a little town by the sea, wondering why the town was strangely empty and quiet. Walking around we soon heard music and merriment in a park on the outskirts where we found everyone celebrating Midsummer’s in a fairground theme including something like a maypole. Our children loved the rides and lively music.

In Finland the next night we again enjoyed a Midsummer’s celebration, actually Juhannus (St. John’s Day) with bonfires on beaches and young birch branches tied to posts everywhere. Everyone with a summer cottage was out there with family and friends. According to Virtual Finland, “the interminable nights of winter have given way to the white nights of the Finnish summer. Midsummer, celebrated at the summer solstice, has been very important since pagan times, especially in northern Europe, where the difference between the dark and the light seasons is particularly dramatic. In the north of Finland, Midsummer marks the peak of the exotic appeal of the Arctic, as the sun remains above the horizon all night.”

Obviously the actual celebration dates are rather flexible in each country for convenience, and our family struck lucky to enjoy it three times in three countries where it is a major annual event. It’s strange to me that it’s called midsummer, when it’s really the beginning of summer, especially in the North. Sadly though, from now forth the days are starting to get shorter. Those white nights are truly unforgettable!

If interested, you might like to read more about this in last year’s post, and at Answers.com. In Britain, Stonehenge is open again for solstice celebrations.

Hauskaa Juhannusta! Happy Midsummer’s!

UPDATES: Stonehenge in Pictures at BBC, and this article in National Geographic

Father’s Day

Happy Father’s Day to all Dads everywhere! We enjoyed revisiting last year’s wonderful poem/card by our daughters to their Dad. This year’s celebration is quiet with only one daughter home, one living several hours drive away, and the third out of the country on vacation. We are also remembering and missing our own fathers, gone many years now.

According to Wikipedia’s history of Father’s Day, it became an official day in USA in 1972. I notice also that Father’s Day is not celebrated the third Sunday of June everywhere, for instance in Finland it is in November.

on artists & celebrity

Poking around in my bookmarked “articles to re-read”, I was taken in once again by this Guardian interview of JG Ballard about a year ago. His thoughts on today’s art scene struck a chord with me:

Today’s art scene? Very difficult to judge, since celebrity and the media presence of the artists are inextricably linked with their work. The great artists of the past century tended to become famous in the later stages of their careers, whereas today fame is built into the artists’ work from the start, as in the cases of Emin and Hirst.

There’s a logic today that places a greater value on celebrity the less it is accompanied by actual achievement. I don’t think it’s possible to touch people’s imagination today by aesthetic means. Emin’s bed, Hirst’s sheep, the Chapmans’ defaced Goyas are psychological provocations, mental tests where the aesthetic elements are no more than a framing device.

It’s interesting that this should be the case. I assume it is because our environment today, by and large a media landscape, is oversaturated by aestheticising elements (TV ads, packaging, design and presentation, styling and so on) but impoverished and numbed as far as its psychological depth is concerned.

Moving off topic, I want to learn more about the author and discover there’s a lot of material on Ballard to sift through, but Answers has a nice summary. JG Ballard is the author of numerous books, including Empire of the Sun, which was made into a film directed by Steven Spielberg. It is one of my favourites that I’ve seen twice. Amazingly, the early part of the story has autobiographical elements and makes me want to see this very powerful and moving film again. (Maybe I should read the book too, something I don’t like to do AFTER seeing the film.)

MoOm

Museum of Online Museums

“Welcome to the coudal.com Museum of Online Museums. Here, you will find links from our archives to online collections and exhibits covering a vast array of interests and obsessions: Start with a review of classic art and architecture, and graduate to the study of mundane (and sometimes bizarre) objects elevated to art by their numbers, juxtaposition, or passion of the collector.”

There’s a great deal from weird to wonderful to explore here. I notice that Virtual Museum of Canada is listed as a sole Canadian site. I’ve seen it before and though it has its merits, the site is quite “blah”, not a good example of exciting web design.

(found at january blog)

mother’s day

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made by youngest daughter Erika
A Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers everywhere!
Mother’s Day Proclamation at wood s lot
and at watermark