Walk: Short, Rain
Distance/Activity: 1.5 miles, 1 hour Yoga Room
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| Rene Magritte (Belgian) , Golconda, 1953, oil on canvas |
Walk: Short, Rain
Distance/Activity: 1.5 miles, 1 hour Yoga Room
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| Rene Magritte (Belgian) , Golconda, 1953, oil on canvas |
Walk: AMC Kabuki (The Secret Agent)
Distance: 3.25 miles
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| Claude Monet, Rain, Etretat, 1886, oil on canvas |
Walk: Hood
Distance: 3 miles
| JMW Turner, Rain, Steam and Speed - The Great Western Railway, 1844, oil on canvas |
Thirty+ years before Caillebotte painted his 'rain' work (CIWT 15/9,10,11), JMW Turner was also looking at a new landscape in England. This time a landscape that had brought a massive shift from an agrarian econmy to one dominated by machine manufacturing. In a word, the upending of the Victorian era by the Industrial Revolution. And, like Caillebotte, Turner was one of the few artists to find things to embrace in this newness.
He accepts to the point of embracing that technological change is not going away. In fact, like the train it is racing toward us and the future. He also equates the immense power of torrential nature with the might of steamy technological power, finding both overwhelmingly thrilling, part of his ongoing fascination with the sublime.
The Great Western Railway he names in his title was an actual railway company and new means of travel, and the location of the painting is widely thought to be the Maidenhead Railway Bridge across the Thames. But, above these factual references, Turner is communicating the immense and emotionally awesome impression of stunningly intense velocity. And arguably he is the first artist to capture the sublime in both nature and the new technology advancing on the world..
Walk: Small; Rain
Activity: 2.5 miles
Walk: No, Rain
Activity: One hour Yoga Room combination cardio, yoga, pt
| Gustave Caillebotte (Fr. 1848-1894), Paris Street, Rainy Weather, 1877, ca 7' x 10', oil on canvas |
This complex intersection, just minutes away from the Saint-Lazare train station, represents in microcosm the changing urban milieu of late nineteenth-century Paris. Gustave Caillebotte grew up near this district when it was a relatively unsettled hill with narrow, crooked streets. As part of a new city plan designed by Baron Georges-Eugène Haussmann, these streets were relaid and their buildings razed during the artist’s lifetime. In this monumental urban view, which measures almost seven by ten feet and is considered the artist’s masterpiece, Caillebotte strikingly captured a vast, stark modernity, complete with life-size figures strolling in the foreground and wearing the latest fashions. The painting’s highly crafted surface, rigorous perspective, and grand scale pleased Parisian audiences accustomed to the academic aesthetic of the official Salon. On the other hand, its asymmetrical composition, unusually cropped forms, rain-washed mood, and candidly contemporary subject stimulated a more radical sensibility. For these reasons, the painting dominated the celebrated Impressionist exhibition of 1877, largely organized by the artist himself. In many ways, Caillebotte’s frozen poetry of the Parisian bourgeoisie prefigures Georges Seurat’s luminous Sunday on La Grande Jatte—1884, painted less than a decade later.
* See CIWT Day 9/84 and Day 13/230
Walks: Hood
Distances: 3.75 average
So Ciwt has been considering what she might watch in this Christmas - New Years stretch. Marty Supreme is getting excellent reviews for Timothee Chalamet's Oscar worthy performance, its director, cinematography and other perfomers. But Ciwt is hesitating because she saw Uncut Gems by the same director a few years ago and found it a lot of work to watch. Adam Sandler was excellent but the movie, with its close up view of a seedy slice of life was difficult for her to take in. It also moved jittery fast so was agitating to stay with. And the dialogue was so machine gun rapid, Ciwt strained to hear and keep up with the plot. Her sense is Marty Supreme has most of these same elements, so she is passing for now. (But will need to get there before Oscar season).
Walk: Hood making post xmas returns
Distance: 4 miles
So, in this winter holiday season Ciwt looks at the winter scenes in so many Christmas cards and remembers her times skiing down mountains in Idaho, sliding down hills on flying saucers, skating on frozen lakes in Minnesota and other exhilerating activities in her youth. Would she rather still be living closer to nature surrounded by the wonders of winter, coming into warm hearths with friends after cross country skiing in the soft white beauty of new snow? Absolutely.
Same for paddle tennis, cycling, long country walks and horseback rides in the spring and winter. And glorious summers playing tennis, water skiing, zooming all over the lake in boats with friends.
Here in Northern California, we have one season: luckily it is fall, the one she resonates with most deeply, in all its various moods. Yet, yes, she misses the changing seasons. But she thrives in light and winters are often long, frigid and dark, spring is very short and muddy, after June, summer is muggy with dog days on the lake and mosquitos throughout, fall is short with the spectacular autumn leaves only lasting a few weeks. Plus, and most important, she was lucky enough to have enjoyed all these seasons and their wonders, sports, heartwarming get togethers with nearby family and friends. These are wonderful memories.
But now is no longer the time for sports that might break bones, twist ankles, wrench backs. And drives on icy roads or walks on icy paths to various appointments and necessary errands are best avoided. Friends and family who are still here are scattered.
It is time now for maintenance, resting, enjoying the life she has put together over decades with as much ease, stimulation, convenience and health as possible. And San Francisco, city living where she can easily walk, bus or drive to all necessary appointments, daily supplies and extensive parks and trails, cultural activities that challenge and keep her growing, is what suits her now. The place she chooses to be. But, yes, parts of her long for country, sports and all four seasons.
Walks: Hood between storms
Distances: 2.5 miles