Archive for October, 2024|Monthly archive page

Rome December 2023 – those painted ceilings

This post belongs with others published earlier including Bernini and Borromini and Mussolini’s Rome architecture and district.

As part of the the Baroque tradition, ceilings became as much of a canvas as walls and chapels. They were a lot harder to do, for sure. Not only are they high and inaccessible, but for them to have an impact, they need to be more than just 2D. So in commissioning the art, the artist has got to deliver. There was, it seems, no better deliverer than Jesuit Monk, Andrea Pozzo. He was given a task in the Chiesa di Sant’Ignatzio di Loyola (c1650) to paint the illusion of a dome (because there was not enough money for a real one). This he did with aplomb – the ceiling then became his (he started the major work in 1685).

When one walks into the church one joins a queue – but it is not clear why. The end of the queue is a mirror and a money box. The box has to be fed with coins to illuminate the ceiling. Most people seem to take pictures from their mobiles. But really the best option is to piggyback on those willing souls who feed the box and look at the four continents and marvel. America (above left), Wait for the light and discreetly make oneself horizontal.

Cigarette advertising – it has been a long time

I have not posted on cigarette advertising recently because…there isn’t any. All advertising in Germany concentrates on e-cigarettes, few of which are in any way as creative as those produced by the tobacco industry.

Anyway, just scrolling down in Bluesky, I came across this posted by Garth Mahrengi’s Catbus (@catbus.bsky.social). It is quite special and, well, wrong? The sea cannot like or dislike. Though it is true that those who do not treat the sea with respect, may find themselves in trouble. The fact there is a whale in the graphic suggests that these cigarettes were for men who hunted them, or fishers more generally?

Decarbonisation milestone

It has taken three years to get there, but I have reached a decarbonisation milestone. It started with six photovoltaic cells on my roof and 6kW of battery storage. I then invested in an induction hob. Then, the big one, the heat pump. Which is now doing an amazing job at keeping the house warm and supplying hot water. It is a different experience to my gas boiler and super hot radiators. The radiators stay ambient.

Anyway, finally, today I said goodbye to my diesel van (why did I have a diesel van in the first place you might ask?). I have sold it, so it will still be burning fossil fuels and emitting greenhouse gases. But I felt that in selling it I may be tempering demand for new vehicles. Even this old van has embedded carbon from its manufacture.

Where to next? What more can I do? Well, there remains plenty of scope. First, I need to do a full audit of my life and then create for myself a carbon reduction plan! I will report further here in due course.

Compare and contrast – Aurora and Pond

I am not sure I have ever been to back-to-back gigs. But last week we went to see Aurora at the Royal Albert Hall (first time going to see something that was not a BBC Prom) and Pond at the Electric Ballroom in Camden, London.

We’ve enjoyed these two sets of artists for many years, but it is only the second time that we have seen either of them – Aurora most recently at Pryzm in Kingston and Pond at Concorde 2 in Brighton (in 2015).

Aurora is a 28-year old Norwegian singer songwriter. She is certainly more than that as this RAH show demonstrates. Her backing graphics (see left) are full-on avant garde. Her songs are political, personal and political and personal. We discovered her music in our search for environmentally-themed songs. Aurora’s most explicit is The Seed “When the last tree has fallen and the rivers are poisoned, you cannot eat money, oh no:” But her new Album, Whatever happened to the Heart, is a concept album around the heart as muscle, symbol of love and the beating of our world more generally. It is an opus – all that is needed to navigate a world full of hate, wonder, beauty and opportunity (if we choose to take it).

Aurora is a performer, for sure. She is not Dua Lipa with complex dance routines. She is not really stadium music – the RAH is a big venue and takes immense talent and presence to keep its attention. Tickets sold fast and we were relegated to the Rausing Circle, rather in the heavens. The RAH has something that other venues on this tour do not. That thing is the amazing organ. Aurora somehow got Anna Lapwood (right) to rearranged three songs to incorporate that instrument. For me, at least, that addition was beguiling (I love the organ sound in any case). The three songs – Echo of my Shadow, The River and The Seed – elevated this concert beyond what was already memorable. Anna Lapwood is an Associate Artist at the RAH – but so much more than that). Her joy was captured as she let the organ rip during The Seed.

Aurora also engages with her audience. It is not scripted. It is not “[h]ow are your feeling?”. For example, it is not surprising that she was overwhelmed by a full RAH for her own show (she has performed there before). Aurora will conjure up images that one rarely gets from other artists. “We are told the obvious that the RAH is circular. But then “”…it’s like a soup. It’s round”. And later, in a common monologue about the state of the world she tells us “that we wear our love on our hands like a glove…” There is always some unexpected reference to her personal preferences often involving alcohol and sex. The audience hangs on her every word, despite her being only a Norwegian singer songwriter. To some extent she could be Dua Lipa but chooses not to be.

Pond’s frontman and leader, Nick Allbrook (left) is as charismatic as Aurora, though we know nothing of his politics. His approach to engagement with the audience is to ask it to crowd surf him, three times. He has also come forward and physically touched fans – there were plenty of takers.

Sonically, Pond are loud – don’t even think about going without earplugs. The new 10th album is much more rock than the psychedelia that so attracted me to them 9 years’ earlier. I’m Stung, the title track of the new album, is a corker and is about love, of course. “She’s the one” sums it up nicely.

The band more generally are multi-instrumentalists. Allbrook plays guitar and keyboards – and more recently flute. Though he is no Ian Anderson standing on one leg. He’s more likely to stand on his head. The other two core members of the band, Jay Watson and Shiny Joe Ryan (right) are no extras. Watson started out on keyboards and then moved to drums (percussion is also a significant element of the sonic experience).

The venue could not be more different to the RAH. The Electric Ballroom is a classic venue – a dark hole with bars dotted around the periphery. It is all stand, though there are a few seats on the balcony – though there is nothing to be seen if that is where you park yourself during the gig. It can get very lively and Nick Allbrook wants that of his audience – the more they pogo, the better. For those of us of a certain vintage, that is time to step aside and leave the central floor to others.

These were two exceptional nights. No disappointments. Quite the contrary. And whilst Pond had no organ equivalent, their sheer energy…bearing in mind that they are moving through the age range…cannot help but be infectious, even if only emotionally.