“And they write innumerable books; being too vain and distracted for silence: seeking every one after his own elevation, and dodging his emptiness.”
T.S. Eliot, “Choruses from ‘The Rock'”
Archives for February 2008
GALLERY
Diebenkorn in New Mexico (Grey Art Gallery, New York University, 100 Washington Square East, up through Saturday). Fifty glorious abstract paintings and drawings by Richard Diebenkorn, a great American artist who made the professional mistake of spending most of his career in California. No matter how good they are–and Diebenkorn was as good as it gets–West Coast artists find it hard to get East Coast critics, curators, and dealers to take them seriously. A case in point is this tightly focused show of works made between 1950 and 1952, when Diebenkorn was a graduate student at the University of New Mexico. It belongs in a major museum, but instead it’s being exhibited in a university gallery. Go see it there, far from the madding crowd, and marvel at the impenetrable mysteries of art-world politics (TT).
TT: Almanac
“A broad margin of leisure is as beautiful in a man’s life as in a book. Haste makes waste, no less in life than in housekeeping. Keep the time, observe the hours of the universe, not of the cars. What are threescore years and ten hurriedly and coarsely lived to moments of divine leisure in which your life is coincident with the life of the universe?”
Henry David Thoreau, journal, Dec. 28, 1852
CAAF: Book report
I had an idea that when we visited Biltmore House last Friday I’d just nip over to the library and have a good look around, and then we’d venture off to the gardens. But the tour though the house is more regulated than it used to be. As I remember it, you used to be able to sortie out a little bit on your own; but as it is now, you shuffle in a line on a prescribed one-way route through all four floors of the house, every so often pooling in an inlet to a particular room. No nipping, no darting, no backtracking. It’s a well-organized tour, and I salute the estate’s curators for succeeding where many other museums and historic sites have failed, by keeping me on track and in the main exhibit area and not off in some custodial closet or dead-end hallway or any of the other places I usually end up when left on my own to navigate– but it’s a little confining, especially for a repeat visitor.
This meant I revisited a lot of rooms I hadn’t intended to. Not the worst thing but I was glad I’d reminded myself that morning about Henry James’s comments about the house: Whenever I was going through a room I wasn’t particularly interested in, I’d imagine Henry there looking disagreeable. The banquet hall — an enormous, anachronistic room with great tapestries and flags on the walls and heads of deer and moose looking down — has a Skinner pipe organ that occasionally blasts away, and it was nice to think of the dyspepsia it must have given Henry at his dinner.
Another change: The estate’s library is long and rectangular, and I believe you used to be able to traverse the length of it. Now visitors are kept to one end, while the majority of the books are on display on the other end, too far away to be able to see any of the titles. I craned, but it was no good. It was like trying to read something from across a ballroom. “You should have brought binoculars,” Lowell said.
I was curious about the collection because it’s supposed to be an unusually good one. Vanderbilt was a great reader and an avid collector of rare books. So the library wasn’t assembled just for show, with one of those bought-in-lot collections that look impressive at first glance but are really dreary on closer inspection, all Julia, Country Nurse with a Heart and Prize-Winning Sheep of Hertfordshire, 1918, etc. But while you hear many numbers attached to Biltmore’s collection — the two most cited being: that there are more than 23,000 volumes in all (with about 10,000 displayed in the library), and that Vanderbilt started keeping a list when he was 12 of the books he’d read, and at the time of his death (at 52) the list was 3,159 books long — details about the books themselves are harder to come by. I remember odd bits about the books from previous visits but I meant to record a little more on this trip.
As I said, the library’s a long room with a high ceiling. Overhead is a ceiling painting by Pellegrini, The Chariot of Aurora, which came to the estate from a palace in Venice. A second level of books is reached by a spiral staircase. The shelving and paneling are walnut, and there’s a good amount of natural light from windows and French doors that lead out to the patio. The couches and chairs are elegant although maybe not as comfy and luxe as you might expect. Off to one side is a giant globe, which I think we can all agree no self-respecting library should be without.
The part of the collection that was within my sight was beautifully bound, with lots of reds, golds and browns. On one low shelf were the “magnum” oversized books, mostly about art, including:
• A five-volume set of Fables de Fontaine bound in a gorgeous leaf green
• Two volumes of Drawings of the Florentine Painters
• Carter’s Ancient Paintings and Sculptures in England
• Gainsborough Works
• Two volumes on The Royal Collection of Paintings, with volume one devoted to Buckingham and volume two to Windsor
• A multi-volume set stamped in gold leaf with titles like Specimens of Ancient Sculpture, Penrose’s Athenian Sculpture, and Ionian Antiquities by the Dilettanti, my favorite title of the day.
A representative smattering of titles from the shelves above:
• A two-volume set of Godwin’s Life of Chaucer
• Musical Instruments
• Auguste Rodin: L’Oeuvre et L’Homme by Judith Cladel
• Glimpses of Italian Court Life
• Holbein’s Court of Henry VIII
• A 45-volume set, bound in a bright cherry red, of L’Art
• Le Livre D’or de Victor Hugo shelved next door to a five-volume set on History of the Indian Tribes of the United States, right where you’d look for it
• And bound editions of Country Life magazine dating from 1896 to 1904 (this tickles me, as it both describes and completely fails to describe what Vanderbilt set up for himself at Biltmore)
The room’s attendant, who was lovely, told me many of the rarer books are kept on the third floor of the house, which is climate-controlled. The hallway where this part of the collection is displayed is darker, so it was harder to make out titles — also, my companion was looking a little rebellious — but I was taken by one shelf of books by Andrew Lang, including The Blue Fairy Book, Green Fairy Book, Yellow Fairy Book, Violet Fairy Book, The Animal Story Book, and The Book of Dreams and Ghosts.
The estate offers a number of specialty tours, and I wish they’d start a Library Tour, where you’d get to romp around the library beyond the cordon as well as handle some of the books, to look at the illustrations, read a little, and maybe huff at the bindings when the curator was discreetly turned away.
PLAY
Richard III (Strawdog Theatre, 3829 N. Broadway, Chicago, closes Mar. 29). Nic Dimond’s lean, mean production of Richard III is anchored by a charismatic title role performance by Strawdog ensemble member John Henry Roberts and a soulful one by Jennifer Avery as Queen Elizabeth. The fine supporting cast barely fits all at once in Strawdog’s tiny performance space, but Joe Schermoly’s pared-down set makes the most of the claustrophobia. All in all, electrifying (OGIC)
TT: Almanac
“California is a place in which a boom mentality and a sense of Chekhovian loss meet in uneasy suspension; in which the mind is troubled by some buried but ineradicable suspicion that things had better work here, because here, beneath that immense bleached sky, is where we run out of continent.”
Joan Didion, “Notes From a Native Daughter”
PLAY
The Trip to Bountiful (Goodman Theatre, 170 N. Dearborn, Chicago, closes Apr. 6). A Chicago revival of the off-Broadway production that was the talk of Manhattan playgoers two seasons ago. I praised it to the skies in The Wall Street Journal: “Horton Foote’s The Trip to Bountiful is fully as worthy of regular revival as Our Town or The Glass Menagerie, and this production, directed by Harris Yulin and acted with quiet skill by Lois Smith and the best ensemble cast in town, leaves no doubt of its special quality….I doubt you’ll ever see it performed better, especially by Smith, whose acting is so beautifully straightforward that you feel as though you’re eavesdropping on her.” It should have transferred to Broadway, but no theaters were open at the time, so instead it’s being presented a second time as part of the Goodman Theater’s Horton Foote Festival. Do not miss this extraordinary show under any circumstances, no matter how far you have to drive, fly, or ride a bus in order to see it (TT).
TT: Speed demon
On Friday Mrs. T and I took the Coast Starlight from Los Angeles to San Francisco. We spent eight hours of our eleven-hour trip sitting in the Sightseer Lounge Car, noshing on deli sandwiches from Canter’s and looking out the window at the most beautiful view in California, or maybe the universe.
The only blot on the day was the intermittent presence of a teenager with a cellphone, a penetrating voice, and no interest in scenery:
TEENAGER WITH CELLPHONE So I’m like, I totally did not sleep with him! Woh! Eeuuww! Hel-lo!
ME (muttering grumpily) Stupid California robot girl.
MRS. T (stroking my arm soothingly) Don’t be negative, darling.
ME I’d like to nail her tongue to her forehead.
Otherwise it was bliss.
We spent the weekend seeing shows in San Francisco and Berkeley. We’re staying at the Hotel Diva, which is handily located across the street from one of the shows I came to town to review. Our room, as befits the name of the hotel, is…well, let’s just call it extensively decorated. No sooner had the bellman dropped off our bags than we discovered a printed list of official Diva Dos and Don’ts over which we’re still giggling: DO throw on a cuff bracelet to complete an outfit. DON’T forget a smile is still the ultimate accessory.
On Saturday we shopped and paid a visit to the de Young Museum, which I saw for the first time a year ago. I feel the same way now as when I wrote about it then: the building is remarkable, the collection spotty but by no means without interest, especially if you’re into Richard Diebenkorn. Then we went to a late-afternoon service at Mission Dolores, where one of my blogfriends is the organist. Non-San Franciscans know the church from Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo, in which it figures prominently.
The Old Mission, which was built in 1791 and is the oldest surviving structure in San Francisco, makes a very different impression when filled with ordinary churchgoers than when you see Jimmy Stewart and Kim Novak passing through it on the way to the graveyard in back. In Vertigo it is subtly glamorized, if only by the presence of famous faces. In regular use it is no less beautiful, but also homelier–in every sense of the word. I was astonished, for instance, to see that the same man who had rented me a car only a few hours earlier was sitting three pews ahead of us. Perhaps I shouldn’t have been: San Francisco is like that, a thoroughly, even self-consciously cosmopolitan community whose scale and pace are nonetheless far removed from the frenzied bustle of Manhattan.
Afterward Mrs. T and I took our organist friend out to dinner at Zuni Cafe, which needs no introduction to cookbook-collecting foodies, and ate very, very well. Should you go there, make a point of ordering something–anything–that has anchovies in it. Unless you have major anchovy-related issues, you won’t be sorry.
Sunday was devoted to more playgoing, interspersed with meals shared with two other bloggers. Today we breakfast with yet another blogfriend, followed by a cable-car ride and whatever else tickles our mutual fancies. Tomorrow we fly back to New York, just in time, since we’re both starting to feel a bit worn from our nonstop adventures.
And then? On Wednesday I write, followed by a taping with a CBS camera crew (about which more later, maybe) and a trip to Studio 54 to see Sunday in the Park with George. On Thursday I write. On Friday I write. On Saturday I write and see Passing Strange. On Sunday I write and see Adding Machine….
It’s a living.
P.S. Yes, we ate at Pink’s. And it was good.