Showing posts with label rembrandt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rembrandt. Show all posts

Saturday 15 July 2023

1990 Munich

9.11.90

Well, what a surprise.  I find myself in the gloriously appointed Altes Residenztheater, all cream and light Baroque.  I have come (foolishly perhaps) to see Schnitzler’s “Zwischenspiel”.  Inevitably the programme tells me nothing – even going so far as to reprint “Die griechische Tänzerin" – which I have read several times.  His prose is so good, so smooth, so inevitable – I wish mine were.

Despite my tiredness, and my activities of the past days/weeks (more anon), I think I’ll be OK, if only because I kipped from 5 to 6.30pm  Everyone very formal here – glad I didn’t come in trainers… Inside to the theatre.  A glorious riot of gilt, cream and maroon – a very regal feel.  Very High Baroque (Asam brothers etc.).  Real armless chairs – I have a whizzo one, No. 72, DM41.  Royal box amazing: central, with huge drapes et al.   A real find – I tried first for the opera – “Ballo in Maschera” – but sold out.  I just hope Schnitzler’s dramatic prose equals that of his short stories.

In front of me one is confronted with the stage curtain, “Zwischenspiel” written thereon, a wind-up gramophone in front.  Hmm… (NB: there sill soon be kids who have never seen gramophones, or understand their principles…) 

Halftime.  Out with the throng as they rush to their Sekt and various raw meats.  An interesting experience.  I catch perhaps one sentence in 10 – but it is enough, and I shall definitely stay to find out what happens.  The story so far (cf. “A Life for the Tsar” in Moscow and “Le Donne Gelose” in Venice).  The composer Amadeus teeters on the brink of an affair with a singer (Friederike).  He has a long talk with his wife Cäcilie – another singer – and they part (though I dunno why she agrees).  He meets C. again some time later, and they seem to be getting back together… (?)

The German is lovely, though not very well projected, especially from downstage – the acoustics don’t help.  The direction rather static, but this is partly Schnitzler’s fault.  Like me, I fear, he’s a bit of a talker, not a virtue in drama.  Unlike Canada, some attractive bints here – with a characteristically hard look to many of them.  But what a contrast to Toronto… Acting generally feels high quality – and judging by the papers, there’s quite a lot of it – again, cf. Toronto…

10.11.90

I sit in the Hofgarten, under a gentle sun – we are leicht bewolkt – the air cool but pleasant.  Bustling Müncheners everywhere.  1.45pm strikes.  Selig?

I salved my conscience this morning by trolling along to the show for an hour or so.  But never before have I rubbed blisters from a show.  Then back to change, out to try to buy tickets for Vermeer at Herkulessaal (sold out), then along to St. Matthäus for a concert (on the door).  But it’s too pleasant now to do much except walk around.  I have had an odd lunch (ish) – roast chestnuts and dried bananas (à la Lakes).  Then along to the Ägyptische Sammlung – rather disappointing, small, nothing special.  For me the most exciting thing there was the map of Egypt, with all its evocative names.  Ah, "Egyptian Romance"….

Along to the Staatsgalerie for Kaffee and Kuchen.  Then: roomful of Kirchner – some quite nice.  Great Nolde: “Nordermühle” blazing orange and complementary greens and mauves.  Two good Kandinsky: one early, the other (abstract) later, but organically growing out of it.  A Max Beckmann I know well – “Still life with telescope” – but why?

Interesting effect in Dali’s “Apotheosis of Homer”: he put big gobs of paint on, lets them dry, then paints on them.  His ants only have four legs on some of his pix.  Magritte’s “Third dimension” – shows birds perched on the veins of a leaf – fractals…  “Sie können niemals wissen” – eerie pic of half human/half android…  Collection quite good, though upstairs is naff.  Also rather quiet.  The Tate et al. gain from the people.  Perhaps modern art is otherwise rather lonely.

Along afterwards to Die Neue Sammlung – exhibition of newspaper cartoons, happily fairly comprehensible, if only because the images were rather obvious [kids going by, shuffling their feet through the yellowing leaves – something I loved doing up Downs Road – and still love doing here and in Canada][I have been sitting for a while, trying to remember the Greek word for otherwise/altrimenti/autrement/sonst – αλλιώς?  These words – but I’m pleased how quickly my German seems to have come back.  Though last night I failed to grasp the ending of the play – I’ll have to read it when I return].

So now I sit in the Englischer Garten – named after its Capability Brown freeness, I suppose (ich vermute), the sun low and weak, sinking through the light cloud which has threatened all day, but mercifully held off.  People out walking in pairs, people playing with kids (but far fewer than in London), running with dogs, sitting and watching (like me).  

A few notes on this and that.  The river through the park is in some state of spate, roaring through.  Walking across the grass, I saw molehills – and immediately thought of the smell of anti-mole poison as smoked in by my father.  A lovely way to go, I always thought.  Other childhood smells: plasticine (a slightly rude, stinky smell), crayons.  Furs seem far more acceptable here than in the UK.  Half the world seems to be wearing glasses – all the trendy new shapes (that also look very old-fashioned, for obvious reasons).  People playing with frisbees – delighting in its simple grace – and the joy of catching it effortlessly.

Money begets beauty.  Not directly, but a wealthy city has far more attractive men and women than a poor one, if only because they are well-groomed and well-dressed.  Also noticeable is everyone eating out at lunchtime today – another sign of wealth.  On the U-bahn here, a man rubbing his daughter’s cheeks, quite hard, superficially in play, but it went beyond that.  The girl, eight or nine, also reacted to him in a very grown up way – not like a child.

The bells sounds with a quirky, deep-throated old-world clangour.  Only time can do this.  An AC/DC video on the TV: the ultimate Dionysian music for the 20th century.  Also the obligatory “erotic” programmes – even at the Sheraton.  Annoying how sex – of this rather laughably (but dangerously so) soft kind 
 has been normalised.

A lovely day today – and a week ago I was at the Niagara Falls.  Amazing.  The sun reddens to the right of the Dom’s towers (Dom closed for restoration).  Why do the words “tub of lard” keep going through my head?  All around me a few remaining trees with full foliage in various stages of turning.  Lovely smell of sap and leaves.  In the distance, a bloke practises juggling with Indian clubs (what a nice name for an object).

A long walk through the park, the temperature dropping now that the sun has disappeared.  U-bahn back to the hotel, where I put a jumpy on for the evening.  On the TV a programme about Computer Associates, narrated in that ultra-clear German accent – with lovely uvular fricatives – that I know so well from my previous Munich trip.

Which brings me on to something I have omitted to mention: that I recognise barely anything of Munich.  Marienplatz (just), Odeonplatz, the Staatsgalerie – but barely anything else.  It would seem that – like a baby – I had not evolved my full city mapping machinery.  Now when I visit somewhere, I soon lock in and retain its basic outline – as well as details (e.g. Torino rears up in my mind, even though I took just one early morning walk there).  Interesting.  But it also awakens a desire in me to visit München, um sie besser kennen zu lernen (Deutsch really is pulsing through the old Gehirn).  Not to mention Paris, Berlin, etc. – perhaps a weekend every month or two.  I think that "Egyptian Romance" will demand much of my time next year.  Also, I am pretty certain I’ll go to South America – therefore I must brush up my Spanish, therefore I must do Germany first, lest (μήπως) I become confused.

I am eating in a place just down from the Kaufhof at Marienplatz.  Like the Peterhof we ate in on Thursday night, it has a real buzz about it.  The Dirndl-skirted waitresses fit, as does the décor and the music.  Nudeln and ox soup to start (nice), some pork job to follow.  

Pork job was pretty gross (as was to be expected of German food): roast pork, boiled pork, pork sausages, pork dumplings (?) sauerkraut and tatties.  Some of the flavours distinctly odd – but surprisingly pleasant for being so.  I have not drunk beer since I was last in Munich (12 years ago), when I tasted two.  Given this is the centre of beer making, I almost wish I drank the stuff.  Perhaps I should try it?

11.11.90

Up late (I missed my alarm), checked out, on circuitously to the Alte Pinakothek.  I vaguely – but only vaguely – remember this.  Downstairs – lots of old German stuff that does very little for me.  Also an exhibition of early Italians – what a contrast – there seems so little humanity in the German by comparison.

Upstairs to the real stuff.  Mabuse’s beautiful “Danae and her golden shower”. Rogier van der Weyden’s wonderful Madonna painted by Luke, in a big triptych (the faces…).  Dieric BoutsChrist’s faceAltdorfer’s “Battle of Issus” – totally different shape from what I recall.

Of the main Rubens hall I still find his style overblown, if virtuosic.  However, I have a better appreciation of the lusciously endowed women of this period.  Wonderful series of Rembrandts – the tiny early self portrait, and the Biblical series.  I wonder what he saw in the darkness which surrounds the image?

To the cafeteria for a quick cake and coffee – the latter very Italian, tasty.  Once again, I find a Munich gallery good but rather unsatisfactory.  It doesn’t really hang together.  The National Gallery is far better balanced – but then Munich is not London.

Over to the Neue Pinakothek.  It is everything that the Alte Pinakothek isn’t: light, friendly, busy in the right way.  A few comments.  I must just note a masterpiece by a minor painter:  O. Achenbach’s “Italienischer Park” – the effects of light are gob-smacking – a beautiful Tiepolo pink, but so true it emphasises how rarely other pix achieve this justness.  Also “Don Quixote” by Daumier here, and very noticeable how utterly English Constable looks.  Beautiful metaphorical landscapes by Caspar David Friedrich.  Looks daft to see “Strasse in Upper Norwood” by Pissaro… Another pic I remember well: Segantini’s “Das Pflügen” – though before it was upstairs by a stairway (in the Alte Pinakothek?)

Along to the Staatliche Antikensammlungen.  I pass through an open space I have vague memories of: that of the Staatliche Antikensammlungen and the Glyptothek.  I remember things as grander, perhaps raised up more.  It looks more like Downing College

Lovely and light inside.  Greek things now send a certain frisson through me.  The stone facing of the halls reminds me of Khufu’s tomb…  This place is beautiful, partly because it is so well designed.  The floors are black stone, the walls pitted and creamy, the chairs butterscotch – the perfect match and background for the red and white patterns. 

Downstairs, totally mind-blowing gold crown – so delicate and well preserved.  I don’t normally go a bundle on earrings, rings, bracelets, etc., but this lot is gob-smacking: I have never seen such workmanship – and from 700BC sometimes.  In fact, I’ve no idea even how some of it was done, the tiny weaving of gold braids together – these were hardly primitive civilisations.  This is quite simply the best collection – and display – of ancient treasures I have ever seen.

To the Glyptothek – a name that has been floating in my brain for 12 years.  Hall XI: a sea of bobbing Roman heads viewed from the ramp.  Magic.  All of them looking out to the courtyard, as if yearning for Rome…

Great use of the same blistered stone as a partial lintel.  Otherwise lightly whitewashed bricks.  Very cool spaces.  Perfect.  Amazing mosaic: not only does it have a Möbius strip, but also a portrait of Hitler…

Again, this really is the perfect example of how this museum should be done.  I sit now in the lively café – brill coffee and cheesecake, spoilt by the smokers around me.  I sit in a canvas and wood chair.  Selig again.  Very attractive women about – art certainly does it…

The Glyptothek reminds me of something out of Piranesi, of the yellow church by Sangallo outside Montepulciano (when was that…?).  High barrel vaults and Pantheon-like corner rooms – all very appropriate, perfectly classical, perfectly muted.  Collection well-spaced out as it should be.  People sketching, sitting on thoughtfully provided stools (canvas again).  Also a book showing how Eduardo Paolozzi and others exhibited here, stimulated by the works.  Great idea.  Should do in the UK.

Happily, this trip seems to have panned out well..  This is a great ending.  I have got the hang of Munich (only 12 years late), and discovered the Neue Pinakothek, the Antikensammlungen, and – vor allem – the great and glorious Glyptothek.

A fine Weston differential pulley hangs over the eaters, drinkers – and smokers.  Its massive coiled chains look almost alive.  But what is it used for? [The pull of the pulley…]  It is amazing how national characters linger.  A man next to me sports a monocle; elsewhere, I have seen many people in ankle-length leather coats – à la Gestapo. Surely this stuff is still loaded…

Once round as fond farewell, then outside into the gentle drizzle.  Across to the Propylaea, which reminds me of Dendera. To the U-bahn.

Monday 11 October 2021

1989 New York

8.11.89 Heathrow

Heathrow airport, on board flight BA 175.  Well, dull it isn't.  After my burglary (my burglary?  Well, more of that later on), a real, live (ha!) aborted take-off.  I was dozing at the time, as is my increasing wont.  We accelerated, then the brakes were slammed on – not hard, but hard enough.  Later, the captain explained that strong winds were blowing us skew off the runway.  We were already one hour late; now we are waiting for the brakes to cool.  I bet the hijackers on board are annoyed…

Read my first Paul Auster; it begins to fall into place: the New Metaphysicals: too clever by three-quarters.  Fun, but Auster rather empty.  Unlike some on this plane, I am calm.  I think the burglary taught me something: that I am essentially untouched by these events – because it does not matter.  Nothing really does.  If life is meaningless, so are delays and inconveniences.  The robbery of my flat was also a delicious experience in serenity; my heart moved not a jot.  Messy, perhaps, but interesting too: you need excrescences on the surface of life; a totally aerodynamic world is boring.  I definitely need to get married and have kids – now there's excrescences…

Room 1502, Hotel Dorset.  Amazing view from my room.  AT&T Building to the right, and the strange light-haze from the nearby Citicorp.  Flash room. $190/night.  NYC ground to a halt because of the rain.  Opposite me great chess boards of light.  West 54th Street below, together with the dwarfed rooftops of the apartments.  The hiss of tyres in the wet; aureoles of rain around the lights; car and truck horns.  I really like New York.

9.11.89 New York

An interesting day.  Up early (late body time), hashed beef breakfast – yum – then out to walk in the wet rush hour.  I find a CD hoard, then to the Frick.  A lady cab-driver tells me about her sushi-eating habits – but insists she is "not anal-retentive".  I find the Frick familiar.  Gob-smacked by the Bellini.  Again.  Great Vermeers (3), "Polish Rider" et al.  To the Guggenheim – disappointing again.  Lunch in the Met – where I see they have Canaletto….

To work.  Back in a cab driven by an Albanian: World War III is imminent, Gorby is a cunning commie.  He (the driver) escaped from Albania in '53, came to London to see an Albanian hit-man – killer of three KGB agents (?!).  Totally paranoid, bent by his past.

Then to the Met, an orgy of Canaletto.  Many early pix I've never seen.  And so close up, the paint almost tactile.  Bought the catalogue – and see that Constable is back in print - $260 – but I must get it.  I still feel strangely free of material possessions, even in buying them.  Writing now in MOMA – shades of Auckland, I don't think.

10.11.89

A bad, bad day.  Walked out of Ziff meeting.  Anyway.  Back at Met after stroll through beautiful Central Park.  Coffee and bread pudding in candle-lit cafe (K284 playing live) then – to the Canaletto, inevitably.

The Liechtenstein pix are a revelation.  The light and colours radiate, yet the skies are so moody.  Rio dei Mendicanti: contrast of white walls on the left, ragged, lived-in chaos to the right.  Figures very vague.  Physicality of brush-strokes in the sky.  A boatyard to the right.  Washing on roofs looks like festival pennants.  No dogs.  Is the building next to the church religious?  If so, why the flower boxes?  A tree in the centre.  

The first, famous (to Walks with Lorenzetti) Piazza San Marco.  It manages to be grand and provincial – a ragged Nowheresville that happens to be Venice.  Birds (aargh).  The stalls' shades like beach umbrellas.  Dogs.  Notice often greenery growing from buildings – desuetude.  The crowds by the clock.  Unlike Canaletto's later pix, these look even better further back – like the Impressionists.  San Giacomo di Rialto – this and a later one remind me of Kathmandu – Durbar Square, or between it an Freak Street.  The market.  The strange pictures like huge playing cards.

Some just don't work – that of SS. Giovanni e Paolo.  Rialto Bridge from the north: lovely light and shade: deep, dark colours, a slash of crimson.  The thing about the Grand Canal is that often you get extreme compression, which with the windows articulates the surface.  La Carità: something I've not seen before: a fire.  Venice is so watery – the embodiment of this element, it seems antithetical, the fire.

To the copperplates – and the world is suddenly full of light – no dark scumbling.  The clouds are thick.  The lines in the windows etc. are ruled – adds to the sense of certainty of the pic.  Sky not blue, but pale grey-blue.  The figure pissing against the Rialto bridge.  Very Levantine – the boats, the hats.  In this context, the Stonemason's Yard looks even more extraordinary.  The broken stones look out of place in this city of smoothness.

West end of Molo – very light in technique, like Guardi, lacks detail.  Pic of Orologio – beautiful bustle – a very people-centred pic – at eye-level for a change.  Scratching dog, lounging man.  Very thick paint on buildings.  Strange to see completely new pic – and viewpoint.  For example, San Cristoforo, Michele and Murano.  Square format – very thin paint – almost a sketch.  Odd angles – impossible view.  Mainland is disconcerting.  Pentimenti on Queen's Entrance to the Grand Canal are like ghosts, hovering beneath the surface.  Piazzetta looking north: brilliant red of figure; extreme perspective of loggia; very theatrical. 

The pen and ink drawings are ecstasy close up – like intricate Bach chorale preludes.  Studies are fierce – full of energy.  

The Fonteghetto della Farina – a shock to see images no longer there.  It is fun to see – and recognise – the Houston pix.  The shops in Canaletto are also like Kathmandu: small caves, huddled away – San Geminiano is deeply disturbing in Piazza San Marco, disruptive.  North-east corner of Piazza San Marco – big, bold treatment.  Messy details – planks, dogs, stalls, shades, very urban.  Shades look like bauta masks and hoods.  

Beautiful peaceful capriccio of house, church, tower and bridge by the Lagoon, delicate washes, free brushwork.  His Accademica pic is very theatrical, lovely diagonals, stage stairs, entrances and exits, unusual upward view – normally filled in by the sky.  The late pic of the Rialto – very busy (like Kathmandu) – the greenery, pots and pans.  

Perhaps the most surprising pic in the whole exhibition is Night Festival at San Pietro in Castello.  Night?? In Canaletto???  Reminds me of my Night Movement II – lanterns at night.  Here there are spots of light – especially intriguing inside the building.  Beautiful clouds with moon behind.  The confused bunches of people, the dark water, rich reds, the campanile.  I suppose in part the effect is helped by my ignorance of the scene.  Where are we?  Is it realistic?  Palladian facade.  The cloaked figures – a chill in the air.  The wooden bridge.  The dog in the boat; the Punch and Judy show (you can see Mr Punch's stick).  I have realised that I have regarded this as an island – not part of Venice…

Aha! - as I thought: it is an island – but also part of Venice – see map.  Its orientation is completely unexpected – a typically Canaletto re-ordering.

11.11.89

Remembrance/Veteran's Day.  I was roused by my early morning call at 5 – an attempt to return to GMT.  A strange feeling for the day, rootless, almost.  Glorious walking weather: 50°F, brilliant New York sunshine – reminded me of 5 years ago….

I sit now in The Saloon, opposite the Met (opera), nice bustly place – very Village Voice.  Failing to achieve figs and prosciutto, I am forced to make do with medallions of tuna, followed by marinated duck in aubergine.  A fairly strong Sauvignon accompanies the meal.

Yesterday at the Canaletto exhibition was really good.  Looking very hard at these pix, close up, some of which I knew, some not, was like an intellectual/pictorial work-out.  I kept on seeing more but forced myself to go yet deeper.  A paradigm of all seeing – and understanding.  I can see that Canaletto will be an obsession for the rest of my life – Walks with Lorenzetti has not exorcised him.

Down by the subway to Canal Street – partly after seeing an early Channel 13 (PBS) on Laurie Anderson – what a brilliant, spiky woman – who lives here.  Then around Broadway, West Broadway, Tribeca, Soho, Greenwich Village.  All vaguely familiar, but not exactly.  I could see myself living here, very bustling, young (ish).  Failed to eat at a Polish and Yugoslav restaurant – they took no credit cards, I was low on cash – thanks to my burglar (what fine word).  Back to the hotel, then to here.

More destinations:

Saturday 9 May 2020

1995 Stockholm

20.10.95  Stockholm

Kulturhuset, in the second floor café – just 28 Kr (about £2.60) for two coffees.  The view down onto the sunken plaza is very Pompidou.  Outrageously blue sky overhead, sun as bright as a knife; wind keen too.  And the winner of the city most likely to...look like Sweden's capital: yes, Ljubljana.  Water glorious here, especially in this weather.  Despite best efforts of the world to stop us getting here, we booked on Wednesday, left 8.30am Thursday.  To Hotel Reisen, in Gamla Stan.  Roadworks outside, but actually we have fallen on our feet.  And by my favourite magic, I find myself instantly transported to that very place.  Our room is unusual, (#402) in that it lies along the building; this implies we have four windows, and the room is very light.  It has various pieces of oldish furniture – and marvel of marvels – its own sauna (non-functioning when we arrived).

We arrived yesterday, flying in with BA.  Stockholm airport like Amsterdam in feel (but much smaller).  The journey in (in a huge Dodge vehicle) a symphony of light greens.  The buildings everywhere modular and clean.   Hitting Stockholm, ditto (the cleanliness at least).  And then we see the water, driving alongside it, the sun hitting the choppy waves.  The architecture familiar from Finland, Amsterdam, Prague even – northern Baroque.  The colours slightly Scottish – greys, pinks, browns.  All neat, tidy, clean to the nth degree.

Fine sweeping view across to the Gamla Stan where our hotel is (and so with rather finer views than the Grand, where we tried to stay, and only found out late that we could not).  Had to wait at the hotel, found they had no non-smoking room, but oddly enough it all worked out.  We tried to order from room service (failed, and received the food free), and then went for a quick walk around "our" island.

Gamla Stan is certainly touristic, but retains atmosphere through its largely unspoilt architecture – tall and gaunt, and authentic everywhere here.  We walked along the main Västerlånggatan, bought some provisions (including still mineral water – which barely anyone seems to use or know about), and then returned to the hotel.  We use the sauna – roaring hot – probably overdo it, and end up knackered.  For dinner, we eat cheese and bread.  With some rather fine and characteristic crisps – thick, dipped in cream cheese and dill – several different brands were on sale in the supermarket (we had also imbibed a goodly quantity of gin and tonic bought on the plane).

Yet another thing in our caravanserai was the Gateway Handbook, DX2/50, with PCMCIA 14.4K modem and newly-acquired Swedish adaptor telephone plug.  Amazingly, it all works – even logging into CompuServe here in Stockholm, and then telnetting to CIX (although Zmodem was pathetic – must be the windows clashing).  In the end, I just go straight to Blighty and get 2400 cps – not bad – my new and vexed Sportster 28.8 modem manages about 5800 cps on a good line – makes me terribly wasteful in downloading huge files.  To make a point, I emailed my fax number here for the Getting Wired page in Computer Weekly – sadly likely to end soon.  So we are gradually evolving a complete mobile Moody household.

We sleep well – fairly quiet here.  Down to breakfast.  Huge spread – cereals, fruit salad, yoghurts, smoked meats, cakes, waffles, cooked food etc.  Glorious views over the lake (the sun rising to the east, bright and young).  Because of the prices of food we stuff ourselves for the day.

Then out for a long, slow walk north (hi, Bashō).  8.30am – everything shut, everything quiet except the wind that is strong and whipping around us.  A very clean, ordered city whose buildings and style and overall plan remind me very much of New York – even down to the "diners" offering breakfast near raised roadways (a strange double tower framing one). 

We are on a quest: the music of Martin Kraus, Sweden's greatest unknown adopted composer.  We had past the concert hall – a typically stern, Nordic pile.  Nearby, a record shop that sells scores – but no Kraus.  We continue south, towards the Kulturhuset.  Impressive array of shops in the underground precinct in front of it.  But first we enter and go to the library there.  Poor selection of books – but it has an Internet connection.  And helpful staff who make various suggestions for finding the music (and using the Swedish Royal Academy).  We have some addresses to follow up.

Then over to the Mega CD Store.  Where I lose control and spend £100 on obscure Swedish music (Roman, Drottningholm stuff – since the castle and theatre are closed until May now), first volume of Baltic collection (whose second volume I bought in London).  From there, we return on foot, the sun still glorious, warm even.  We wander around Gamla Stan, and find the Queen Cristina – surprisingly good (and good-value) food.  Seafood soup plus baked potato stuffed with lobster.  £7.50 the lot, with salads and excellent bread.

We rest in the hotel, faced by Stockholm's biggest problem: opening hours. Everything opens late – 10am for shops, 11am for museums – and closes early – 4pm.  This makes the windows of opportunity narrow.  Luckily, just being here is the main thing.  We go out at 4pm, as dusk is falling.   A lovely hour here, especially with the stunning sunset we had tonight (I foolishly try to capture it on film).  The lights on the other side of the water, and the last rays of the sun there (very Venetian) fine.

Back to the hotel, the lights on the ships and buildings particularly beautiful.  We take a sauna, rest, and prepare to eat in the restaurant here (pricey, but it has to be done).  Now we dress to the nines to prove we are not proles…

21.10.95 Stockholm

Well, yesterday's rather expensive menu (£60) was good, if excessively rich: I had Swedish cold delicacies (gravadlax, salmon, roe, very intense bread), then for main course grilled pike (better pressed, I think). Today, if anything, the weather is even better – totally blue sky, hard light.  After breakfast, out to the Gallerien – huge complex, very successful example of its kind.  Out again to Museum of Mediterranean Civilisation, hoping to eat in the café.  But there we find just a few cakes.  Then around the museum.  The Egyptian thinnish, but the Cypriot collection (the best outside Cyprus) stunning.  The proud warriors with their self-important beards… The great group looking menacing like some crowded Ensor canvas.  The museum as a whole reminded me of Bologna's archaeological museum – to the latter's advantage.

Then out around the shops again, ending up in Åhléns (pronounced "orleans" to me by one of the staff here).  Across the westernmost bridge to the Gamla Stan, through canyons of heavy architecture (men fishing with huge circular nets in the waters).  To a café, where we have a fine apple cake.

The Swedes variably courteous: in the shops, surly, in the museums helpful.  Very noticeable how many brunettes there are – unlike in Norway, which seems stocked only with stunning, leggy blondes.  Also noticeable the number of immigrants here – I heard Arabic spoken by two families today.  I find I can read a surprising amount of Swedish – and intend to buy a book or two in the language.  Kraus still amazingly elusive – do we know more about him than the Swedes?  The weather really too good to be true – cold, with a piercing wind, but wonderful sun and sky.

22.10.95 Stockholm

In the National Gallery – nice café.  Fine stairway leading to second floor ('orrible Rubens after it).  Strange de Witte – bird market in Amsterdam.  Very fine series of Rembrandts – self-portrait, old man, old woman, Simeon, and the very surreal "Batavian Conspiracy" (also known as "The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis") – seems like Ensor (again). Transcendent St Anastasius – the priest seems to hover in light.  Beautiful Nattier of Duchesse of Orleans, doe-like eyes in the over-heated face.  Alexander Roslin (Swedish 1718-1793, died in Paris), Hugo Simberg, "The Wounded Angel".  Wonderful series in Iceland by Þórarinn B. Þorláksson – moody, pregnant landscapes.

23.10.95 Stockholm

A very pleasant day, yesterday.  After a long stroll around the two islands Skeppsholmen and Kastellholmen (in bitterly cold winds, but very bracing – reminding us of Pest, Venice and a few other places), we go back to the National Gallery.  Eating in the café, where there was a lively buzz (the place to be on a Sunday lunchtime), we then went around the galleries.

For us, the discovery was of Roslin, but alas there was no book on him.  However, I did find a rather fine book on Swedish music, 1720-1810, which includes Roman and Kraus; a snip at £45…  Amazingly, I can read a fair amount of it.  Beautifully produced, and it radiates a sense of discovery, of new things (the Novel…).  Now we are off to see the ship – at Vasamuseet.  Just missing the ferry at 10am, we catch that of 10.20am.  Fast skim across the water past the cruise ships that seem frighteningly top-heavy (the centre of gravity looks about 30 metres above the water).  A short walk to the Vasa Museum (past the worryingly small submarine – you wouldn't get me down one of them).  

Lovely ramshackle building – all odd angles, with three masts peeking out inside.  Inside, dark, damp, with a wet, woody smell.  Here to see the ship - that is all there is to see.  But it is an impressive sight – the sheer impact of this bloody great lump of wood (not something you see these days when lumps tend to be stone at best, or concrete and steel).  Nice the idea that this great expense sank a few hundred metres out from the dry dock (near the museum, too), through poor design, over-ambitious scale, and a bit of wind.  How their hearts must have sunk, too…  Beautiful (really) the café – elegant, light, stylish, expensive…  Fine view over the harbours and the U-boot.

24.10.95  Stockholm

In the airport, waiting.  Weakly, I have bought another Svensk book – part of a national history currently being written (this one about Sweden as a major power).  The most notable thing here is the little scooters used by staff to propel themselves around the large airport.  Very drole.

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Moody's Black Notebook Travels