Dutch Movie Treat: Holland Film Festival 2009 in Tokyo

by Eli 23. February 2009 14:04

As we have reported a few days ago, Japan and the Netherlands are celebrating 400 years of trade this year. It’s an extended birthday party with all kinds of treats, and one of them is the Holland Filmfestival 2009, kicking off in Tokyo tomorrow. Until 15 March more than 20 films will be shown at the National Film Center (Museum of National Art). Earlier editions of this festival took place in 1998 and 2000. This particular festival is a joint effort from Holland Film, Operanight and the Dutch Embassy in Tokyo.

 


There’s a chance to see a classic movie by Orlow Seunke, and a number of documentaries and animation films. But the main bill is supposed to be a reflection of 10 years of Dutch film making. On this bill, as a taste of a decade of Dutch cinema,among others: Tiramisu (Paula van der Oest, 2008; see The Low Countries), the multicultural road movie Dunya & Desie (Dana Nechushtan, 2008), and 1999 and 2008 Academy Award entries The Polish Bride (De Poolse Bruid) (Karim Traidia, 1999) and Duska (Jos Stelling). The latter tells the story of a middle-aged film critic, who is secretly in love with the pretty ticket seller at the local cinema. Whoever said life’s not like the movies, was talking nonsense.

 

One Man and his Beard: Anthony Van Dyck at the Tate Britain

by Eli 16. February 2009 14:40

 


In Some Anecdotes of Painting in England(1762) Horace Walpole noted that Anthony Van Dyck’s works are so frequent in England that to most Englishmen it is difficult to avoid thinking of him as their countryman. The history of painting in England during the seventeenth century was very largely the creation of foreign artists, particularly from the Low Countries, who either came on short visits or for various reasons took up residence there. Portraiture, that essential accompaniment to the life of a court, was very largely served by foreigners, primarily by Anthony van Dyck and Daniel Mytens before the Civil War, and by Peter Lely and Godfrey Kneller after the Restoration - with the result that the English image of the Stuart kings is very largely their creation.


The Van Dyck and Britain exhibition (18 February–17 May 2009, Tate Britain) billboards Sir Anthony van Dyck, who was born and trained in the major art centre of Antwerp, as ‘the greatest painter in seventeenth-century Britain’. According to the press release this exhibition will reveal the Flemish artist's unique impact on British cultural life, from the reign of Charles I onwards, and will bring together some of the finest and most magnificent paintings that Van Dyck produced during his years in Britain, ‘examining his innovative approach to painting the British elite – a creative synthesis of his Antwerp baroque training and his intensive study of Italian, and especially Venetian, painting’. It will also demonstrate his continuing visual legacy through ‘van Dyckian’ portraits by artists from the eighteenth to twentieth centuries, including Sir Joshua Reynolds and John Singer Sargent.


Highlights will include royal portraits such as 'The Great Piece' – Charles I and Henrietta Maria and their two eldest children 1632, Charles I on Horseback with M. de St Antoine 1633 (both from The Royal Collection), full-length portraits such as Lucy Percy, Countess of Carlisle 1637 (Private Collection), the beautiful and rarely exhibited late Self-portrait c.1640 (Private Collection), and van Dyck's so-called friendship portraits such as Mountjoy Blount, 1st Earl of Newport and George, Lord Goring c.1639 (National Trust, Petworth).

 

 

Anthony Van Dyck, Charles I on Horseback with M de St Antoine (1633). Royal Collection.


What’s especially striking about Van Dyck is his thorough and immediate identification with local tastes and exigencies, which made him an immensely popular painter at the art-enthusiastic court of King Charles I. Refined in nature he effortlessly injected the English sense of beauty and style into his own artistic sensibility. No wonder then that Christopher Brown wrote in the yearbook The Low Countries that Van Dyck brought the revolution in portrait painting from medieval icon to modern portrait, begun by his Low Countries predecessors at the English court, to a triumphant conclusion in England.


A naturally gifted painter indeed, who even became a household name in a number of divergent fields. Not only is the oil paint pigment ‘van Dyck brown’ (‘Van dyke brown’ being an early photographic printing process using the same colour) named after him, Van Dyck was also known for painting portraits of people having short, pointed beards, and that's why this particular kind of facial fad – a variation of a goatee with a mustache – was dubbed a ‘vandyke’ later on (probably first in America in the 19th century).


The ‘vandyke’, preferably dressed with pomade or wax, applied with a tiny brush and comb

 

The Farmer Ploughs, Icarus Falls...and Bruegel Rocks

by Eli 19. November 2008 10:54

‘A splash quite unnoticed / this was / Icarus drowning’: that’s the last line of Williams Carlos Williams poem ‘Landscape with the Fall of Icarus’. And this is W.H. Auden on the same 1558 painting in his 'Musée des Beaux Arts': ‘In Breughel's Icarus, for instance: how everything turns away / Quite leisurely from the disaster’.


Yet Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s appeal does not stop at the verses these great men of letters bestowed upon him. Bruegel rocks in many other ways, and even literally so. 1977 saw the appearance of Black Sabbath’s Greatest Hits album, the cover of which is a mirrored portion of Bruegel’s The Triumph of Death. But that’s old history, because in 2008 we saw Bruegel entering the realms of young and new indie rock. First, there was Titus Andronicus - angst rockers from New Jersey - whose debut album, The Airing of Grievances, includes among its many highbrow lyrical mentions a song called ‘Upon Viewing Bruegel’s “Landscape With the Fall of Icarus”’ Titus Andronicus’ singer Patrick Stickles explains the attraction of the painting like this: ‘It’s just like a pastoral scene, but the guy’s legs are falling into the water next to them and he was apparently trying to get at that even in the face of epic historic tragedy, we are all just still pushing the plow.” An insight neatly countered by the line ‘All the pretty horses, all flowers and trees, they will all mean less than nothing when it all has come to be.’ in the noisy lo-fi song he wrote.


 

And then there’s Seattle’s Fleet Foxes, beardy young dudes who fashion an earthy, harmony-rich sound in honour of such perennial 1960s artists as Bob Dylan, Neil Young, the Zombies, the Byrds and the Beach Boys. The cover of their recent debut on SubPop is a work by none other than that same Pieter Bruegel, called The Blue Cloak (or Netherlandish Proverbs), a depiction of aphorisms about generally foolish human behavior, from tossing feathers, to biting iron, to taking a dump out a window. Now…Fleet Fox Robin Pecknold doesn’t claim to be an art historian, because in a Pitchfork interview from this month he says: ‘I don't know much about fine art. Bruegel and Hieronymus Bosch are the two painters from that period I know about. Something about it seemed almost like Where's Waldo? Kinda goofy and definitely pastoral looking, but so many wrong things happening.’ So he likes the duality in the Flemish Master’s painting but also boldly admits: ‘And it's nice to have an album with people defecating coins on the cover.’ Right after which he adds that ‘Bosch is the weirdest, too. He has LSD stuff before LSD was even invented.’ Aye…there’s certainly more than just windmills, clogs, waffles and level-headedness beneath those cloudy Low Countries skies.

Yearbook 'The Low Countries'

The Low Countries 

With The Low Countries, a yearbook founded by Jozef Deleu (Chief Editor from 1993 until 2002), Ons Erfdeel vzw aims to present to the world the culture and society of Flanders and the Netherlands

The Low Countries

 

Yearbook no. 20, 2012