Listening While I paint

I’m afraid I succumbed. I had to take a break from sketching in order to begin an oil painting of Peranga, the charming little town “out West” past Toowoomba, where Chris and I stayed for a short visit in January. I’ve been itching to paint the place ever since. The sky went on like a dream and the painting is steadily developing toward the foreground.

I used to listen to Radio 4 whilst I painted but I grew tired of the modern idea of a good radio play and for a considerable time now I have taken to listening to audio books. I went through a science fiction phase – loved Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World” read by Michael York – and returned to many old favourites I had read as a child; I laughed with Bertie Wooster and Jeeves and tried Agatha Christie (without enjoyment). Having discovered Michael Connelly’s “Harry Bosch” detective books and, spent many happy hours, weeks and months getting to know and love our hero, the books ran out and I moved on to “The Lincoln Lawyer” stories by the same author…until they, too, ran out.

Recently, at a loss, I turned to YouTube AudioBooks  and found something else of interest not altogether new to me – “The Psychopathology of Everyday Life” by Sigmund Freud – well, I did Psychology A Level! Unfortunately, the reader was rather monotonous but the content was absorbing and I found myself thinking throughout, “So glad I’m not mad after all!” (which probably means I’m a bit cracked).

Now as I look at my unfinished painting of Peranga it amuses me to think that I painted listening to the writings of Freud. I wonder if the windmill, yet to be painted, will have any phallic symbolism? Or the fence posts in the foreground? Or the grass stalks? That will be for the viewer to decide when the painting is complete.

And finally, in response to a request from Bob Crotchett, one of my avid blog readers, I shall leave you with a link to Tom Waits singing “The Piano has Been Drinking”, which I hasten to add has not been the inspiration for any of my paintings so far.

50+VIDEOS PLAY ALLMix – Tom Waits: The Piano Has Been Drinking -1977YouTube

Without studio distractions

Without studio distractions

The Peranga landscape

The Peranga landscape

 

Posted in Art

Do You Know the Piano is on my Foot?

I expect you know the old joke:

“Do you know the piano is on my foot?”

“You hum it and I’ll play it!”

I seem to remember some chimpanzees, dressed as removal men, coming out with that one in the PG Tips tea advert many years ago. We all thought it was funny then. Funny how it doesn’t seem so hilarious now. I wouldn’t have mentioned it at all if it hadn’t been for a film called “The Piano”, which we watched tonight. You’ll think I’m becoming a self-professed film critic after my recent blog about “The Pianist” but it just so happened that the two were linked by the similar titles and people who enjoyed my blog about the latter recommended that I see the former. Chris is very quick off the mark when there is a suggestion of a good film and the DVD arrived in the post this morning .

“The Piano” is a rather strange and dark, yet beguiling, movie with quite a few worrisome things going on, not least because our heroine was a peculiar Scottish mute (for no apparent reason, unless I missed it because I couldn’t understand the accents) who was sent to New Zealand with her precocious daughter to marry a man (Sam Neil) she had never laid eyes on before. And she brought with her a piano which, being too cumbersome to heave through the muddy forest, was left on a beach at the mercy of the tides.

There were some holes in it – the settlers didn’t clear the trees around their houses and the piano hadn’t suffered from the ravages of the sea (and a piano tuner was on hand) – but if you managed to cast aside such concerns you could enjoy the piano playing and the hole in our leading lady’s stocking, just as Baines (Harvey Keitel) did! I had no idea that Harvey Keitel had a physique of rippling muscles worthy of sculpting but soon I had the feeling he would not be shy to bare all. My pleasure would not have been diminished by a corner of sheet or a pair of underpants.

I was also pleased to learn that I was spot on in recognising Ada as the actress Holly Hunter (from “The Firm”) although she looked completely different with black hair and no clothes on.

Did Ada know the piano was on her foot? Or rather, that the rope would catch around her foot and take her down with the piano? Did the piano take her voice? Did the husband let true lust love take its course? Did Ada grow another finger? Did the rain stop, the mud dry and the sun come out for a happy ending? I’m sorry, I won’t spoil it for you – you’ll just have to “ho hum” or see it for yourself.

Image result for images holly hunter in The PianoImage result for images holly hunter in The Piano Image result for images holly hunter in The PianoImage result for images holly hunter in The Piano

 

Nothing But the Tooth

I always tell the truth, honestly! Naturally, I don’t always feel obliged to answer nasty questions like, “How old are you Sally?”, and if people guess that all my children are still in their twenties (or younger) then really that is up to them. “Who cares about age?” people ask. Well, I hate the idea of revealing my age only to be categorised into a particular box. Journalists have a penchant for attributing every Tom, Dick and Harry with an age, especially when there is an accompanying photograph…

“Guess how old that poor old codger is?” I have asked of Chris many times.

“Eighty-two,” he might hazard a guess judging by the wrinkles and loss of hair colour.

“Ha ha! I thought so too but, would you believe it? No you won’t. That old candlestick maker is four years younger than you?”

But Chris sometimes gets his own back when I show him a newspaper photograph of a grey-haired little old lady and he ponders long and hard before guessing…

“Forty-one!” he’ll say.

“Oh! I thought she looked much older than me. Surely she looks in her sixties?” I query.

“Yes, but I was making allowances for that. You wouldn’t have asked me unless she was much younger,” he says rationally. “How old is she?”

“Forty-one, smarty pants!”

 

Well, the reason I’m pondering on the subject of age today is something quite momentous (no, I haven’t reached one hundred!) – my eldest great nephew has just become a father! For some years I’ve accustomed myself to being “Fantastic Aunty Sally” (my sister Mary became a granny at thirty-eight!) but what am I now? A great fantastic aunt or a fantastic fantastic aunt? Whatever I am, I am not old – my Mum is still hale and hearty, and I still have my own teeth, which leads me on to something else I have to impart…

Now I have a theory about dentists, they are usually pretty good (or even great) until they reach the menopause (in the case of lady dentists) or they start to think about retirement and golf (in the case of men dentists). Apart from the obvious signs of aging like wearing glasses, there are those other little give-aways that make you begin to wonder if they’re taking their jobs as seriously as they used to. “You don’t really need that tooth,” or “Nobody will notice the gaps,” or “The National Health Service wasn’t designed to nurse your teeth!” are the oft used words of dentists not in their prime and with a jaded view of life in general… and your teeth in particular.

I love Goska (pronounced goshka). She’s my Polish dentist. Goska isn’t very “long in the tooth”; in fact she’s young and fertile, and still very much interested in saving patients’ teeth, reducing pain and keeping her patients as youthful looking as possible. She even offers Botox and Fillers as a sideline… to older ladies than me, of course. I went to see her today and brought something precious along with me. I opened my purse and hooked out the item I had wrapped in foil. Goska beamed as she opened the tiny silver parcel.

“It’s been very adventurous,” I began, “it’s even been in a rubbish bin, after I forgot it was on the table and emptied the groats on the tablecloth from breakfast into the bin. That happened in the first week that I was away in Australia. Then I stuck it back on with dental glue… but it came off after one day…”

Goska laughed.

“At least you didn’t swallow it!”

I put back my head while Goska and her pretty blonde assistant worked with relish, sticking and grinding, and polishing. She didn’t begrudge the twenty minutes she spent returning the veneer to a nude, rather thin little tooth beside one of my top molars. I smiled with confidence and she beamed again.

“See you in a week and I’ll replace your temporary filling,” said my dentist.

“I really love Goska,” I said to the receptionist as I was leaving.

“Me too,” he laughed – Peter, the receptionist, is Goska’s husband.

And I left feeling great. Or should that be great great?