Just the sort of weekend I’d hoped for. After a great day Friday at the X|Media|Lab conference, went for a drink with Amanda Wise, an old acquaintance from the a early days of my career (those who were around at the time: she worked at Radiant with John of the banana yoghurt throwing at Woodford), then had scrummy blood orange and rockmelon gelato and went back to mum’s. Was going to go out again, but ended up watching a quite good film called Cherish with Mum instead.
Saturday saw me at the Art Gallery of NSW for the Caravaggio exhibition, which was a little disappointing. Although subtitled “Dark and Light”, it didn’t thrill me with intensities. There were a few amazing pieces, but out of 60+ works, only 10 would have been by Caravaggio, the rest by his followers and imitators.
The rest of the gallery was good though. Haven’t been for a while, and enjoyed the Braque, which I didn’t know was there, a bunch of other early 20th century works, and a surprisingly high quality Art Express, which is all the student works from last year’s Year 12.
Then went off to Glebe Markets, which I love and met up with Mum again for more gelato: this time a taste of sour cherry, a taste of coffee and almond and then a cone with mocha and zabaglione. Yay for Badde Manors.
Ducked over to Naomi’s, then off to coffee with predator. Discussions as usual with him range all over the place, from our mutual histories with wif_of_bath to DNA to life plans, his PhD on chemical systems as information systems and the new one, his life expectancy post-op. It’s not looking good (with secondary cancer in the lymph system, he’s got about five years, max). He’s in good spirits though, and suggests a wander through Newtown cemetery. We discover the wreck of the Dunbar caused havoc in the region in the mid 1850s and come up with a great epitaph for Pred’s tombstone: So that’s what’s under here! We finish with a relaxed conversation about sex and intimacy in the park and then I’m off to dinner with turtlesnake and her partner (am I correct in assuming he is mdesacrebois?). Great to see them, and this time it’s books and Buffy, iPods and other stuff and even better, singing along to Buffy the Musical.
Sunday I meet Stu Ridley and baby Trinity at the MCA Café for breakfast before heading in to see the Leigh Bowery exhibition. It was comprehensive, with costumes themselves, large photos of Bowery posing in the costumes, video of performances and other material such as letters between Bowery and The Face magazine, copies of the Face, Bowery’s London transport ID. I thought the video of the ‘birth’ projects was fascinating – Bowery had an enormous dress that concealed the harness he wore containing a naked woman covered in red and blue paint. After performing a song, he would lie back on a table and perform a birth, as she crawled out of the harness between his legs. Then he would ‘feed’ her by regurgitating into her mouth and pissing into a glass. It’s a pity the ‘songs’ were so abominable. I’m not really into the whole post-punk thing and the sound quality on the videos were atrocious. The woman behind me who looked at Bowery and friends naked except for their full face masks and their merkins and commented that ‘it makes me feel so much better about my cellulite’ and ‘I have one word for them: liposuction” clearly has no idea it is her brand of ‘femininity’ that Bowery is critiquing so viciously in many of his pieces.
I also found Lucian Freud’s paintings of Bowery naked to be arresting: he appears vulnerable yet strong without his props.
The afternoon was Dance of Death, the Strindberg play with Ian McKellen (I tend to agree with others than McKellen and the set are the stars of this production), more gelato (this time mandarine) and then drinks for the start of X|Media|Lab proper. Home to Naomi’s and a great game of anagram with fejoa-infused vodka.
Life is very, very good.