Meander

Following the flow…

Jesus really does not like us drawing lines we do not want crossed…

Cartoon – Thanks to the brilliant Naked Pastor


  • Orgreave After Guernica

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    Bob Olley’s unsettling vision of clash between miners and police is part of 40th anniversary show in Bishop Auckland

    Mark Brown North of England correspondent

    Thanks to the Guardian: Article here

    Tue 7 May 2024 06.00 BSTShare

    Click to enlarge…

    Bob Olley was there 40 years ago at the “battle of Orgreave”. “I saw the violence,” he said, shaking his head. “I thought I was in a foreign country when I saw what the police did. It is hard to believe it happened in this country.”

    The brutality he and others witnessed on 18 June 1984 as striking miners met 6,000 police officers on horses or wielding batons on foot will stay in the memory. It was in his head as, some years later, he embarked on his response to one of the world’s greatest artworks, Picasso’s Guernica.

    The resulting painting, Orgreave after Guernica (2018), has gone on display at an exhibition exploring the demise of collieries and the impact on communities.

    It is an unsettling presence in the show, titled The Last Cage Down, which has opened at the Mining Art Gallery in Bishop Auckland, County Durham, and coincides with the 40th anniversary of the miners’ strike.

    A police officer’s eyes follow the viewer around the room. “People do say it’s disturbing to look at,” Olley said. “It’s not everyone’s cup of tea but I’ve never had anyone say: ‘I don’t like it’. The painting did what I wanted it to do.”

    Olley, like many artists in the show and in the gallery’s collection more widely, did not follow a conventional career path. He went down the mines aged 16 and ended up at Whitburn colliery, near South Shields, which had tunnels going as far as three miles out under the North Sea. “You had to walk in and out.”

    He was made redundant in 1968 and wasn’t sorry. “I could see the way the industry was going,” he said. “I was ready to pack up. That year was the one that the government closed more pits than at any time in the history of coalmining.”

    He had left school with no qualifications but while a miner he had been doing a correspondence course in magazine illustration, and decided to try to make a career in London.

    He lasted five minutes, with one of the first people he encountered being Marjorie Proops, who later became the Daily Mirror’s legendary agony aunt. Her advice to Olley, he said, was not helpful. “She said: ‘Do you come from the north?’ I said ‘I do.’ She said: ‘I suggest you go straight back’.”

    Perhaps it was good advice because back in north-east England a light went on in his head about painting what he knew – northern working-class life and coalmining. He started making money and had particular success with a work called The Westoe Netty.

    Other works in the new exhibition include an explosively coloured protest painting by Marjorie Arnfield called Women Protesting (1985), and works by Tom McGuinness and Barrie Ormsby.


  • A picture’s worth a thousand words … but only some of them tell the whole truth

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    Soviet flag Soviet flag being raised over the Reichstag, Berlin, 1945

    Yevgeny Khaldei’s original image of the Soviet flag being raised over the Reichstag, Berlin, 1945.

    The picture was later amended to obscure the officer wearing a watch on both wrists. 

    Photograph: Sovfoto/Universal Images Group/Shutterstock

    From The Guardian May 2024: A Russian soldier raises a Soviet flag over Berlin’s Reichstag in Yevgeny Khaldei’s well-known 1945 photograph of wartime triumph.

    But in the original image, the officer standing below can clearly be seen wearing a watch on both wrists. Khaldei’s shot, first printed in a Moscow magazine, was quickly withdrawn and the extra watch, which might actually have been a military compass, was removed for safety’s sake. Looting was not a good look and was punishable by death.

    The Guardian


  • The Last Caravaggio

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    The Last Caravaggio -Martyrdom of Saint Ursula

    Martyrdom of Saint Ursula

    On display at the National Gallery, London, until 21 July 2024

    From the National Gallery...

    May 1610. Caravaggio is in Naples working on the last picture he’d ever paint.

    Two months later, he died in mysterious circumstances. But it was during his final tumultuous years that Caravaggio made some of his most striking works.

    His characteristic style includes tightly cropped scenes and dramatic lighting. He used real models with dirty feet and grimy fingernails.

    Few paintings are better placed to tell the story of Caravaggio’s final years than his last-known work, ‘The Martyrdom of Saint Ursula’ (1610, Gallerie d’Italia, Naples). The painting is coming to London for the first time in 20 years.

    We witness violence at uncomfortably close quarters. Caravaggio shows us an intricate interplay of guilty and innocent hands. And his own self portrait looks on, helpless.


    What you see

    Click to enlarge…

    The Last Caravaggio -Martyrdom of Saint Ursula
    Martyrdom of Saint Ursula

    According to legend, Saint Ursula traveled with eleven thousand virgins to Cologne, where the chief of the Huns besieging the city fell in love with her. When she rejected his advances, he killed her with an arrow. In this haunting depiction, Caravaggio places the two figures improbably close to each other, maximizing the contrast between their expressions: Ursula’s perplexed gaze at the agent of her martyrdom; the tyrant’s conflicted reactions of rage and guilt. Caravaggio includes himself as a spectator, straining for a glimpse, while another figure thrusts his hand forward in an abortive effort to prevent the saint’s execution. The exaggerated contrasts between dark and light seem not merely a dramatic device but a symbolic allusion to sin and redemption, death and life.

    From TheMet


    Saint Ursula and the 11,000 British Virgins

    The legend of the martyred Saint Ursula and her 11,000 followers has kept a global audience intrigued for centuries. But who was Ursula? And did she ever really exist at all?

    Historians have attributed Ursula to various periods between 300 – 600AD, although it is generally agreed that Ursula was of Romano-British descent and that prior to her untimely demise she was betrothed to a man of high rank and was travelling to be united with her intended.

    Unfortunately Ursula and her travel companions – said to be anywhere between 11 and 11,000 virgin maidens – found themselves in the city of Cologne in Germany, where they were cruelly massacred for refusing to copulate with or marry the invading Huns, a nomadic race from Central Asia who conquered much of Europe in the fourth century.

    Whilst some historians have argued that Ursula was completing a holy pilgrimage through Europe to Rome before her marriage, it has also been said that the ships on which the women were travelling were caught in a storm and shipwrecked far from their intended destination. The survivors were subsequently taken prisoner and savagely beheaded, whilst Ursula their leader was said to have been shot by an arrow by the leader of the Huns.

    From Historic UK


  • Heart of Darkness

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    And this stillness of life did not in the least resemble a peace. It was the stillness of implacable force brooding over an inscrutable intention. It looked at you with a vengeful aspect.

    Joseph Conrad


  • Six months on…

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    Photographer Ali Jadallah documents the appalling violence that has gripped Gaza

    Article here