I've been swinging through the jungle of much-to-do and I'm ready to sleep for a week ...
Flying tomorrow, bound for Italy.
I've been swinging through the jungle of much-to-do and I'm ready to sleep for a week ...
Flying tomorrow, bound for Italy.
What art does is to coax us away from the mechanical and towards the miraculous. The so-called uselessness of art is a clue to its transforming power. Art is not part of the machine. Art asks us to think differently, see differently, hear differently, and ultimately to act differently, which is why art has moral force.
Ruskin was right, though for the wrong reasons, when he talked about art as a moral force. Art is not about good behaviour, when did you last see a miracle behave well? Art makes us better people because it asks for our full humanity, and humanity is, or should be, the polar opposite of the merely mechanical.
We are not part of the machine either, but we have forgotten that. Art is memory — which is quite different [from] history. Art asks that we remember who we are, and usually that asking has to come as provocation — which is why art breaks the rules and the taboos, and at the same time is a moral force.
Jeanette Winterson.
One of those days when you really know that you are alive.
It began at 10am, with Shannon. She's lovely. From Oregon, from New Zealand, these last 4 years from Genova ... is how I would describe her because she doesn't really fit into any kind of everyday frame. She's remarkable.
I interviewed her, we wandered, we ate at Il Genovese ... which is one of those things you should do if visiting Genova. I continue to order their Ravioli fatti in casa al “tuccu” di carne because, to me, it is the most exquisite dish in the world. It combines so many things that I love and somehow it calls to mind memories of childhood and food that makes a soul remember what it was to be safe and loved.
Seriously, you shouldn't laugh until you have tried it. I keep meaning to photograph that particular dish but perhaps it will have to wait until next time.
Then we met with Arianna, the loveliest soul, and the student who saved me from incomprehension on a train to Arenzano, more than 2 visits ago. I had some of that delicious, really thick, Italian hot chocolate that is being served up all over the city at the moment, and we 3 talked in a mix of Italian and English.
Okay ... I didn't actually speak in Italian. It turns out that Shannon is almost fluent in Italian (she's modest) and that Arianna is almost fluent in English (she's also very modest). Me ... I was kind of hopeless but I am used to this role when it comes to languages of the countries I live in and love.
Then it was home to unpack things gathered and get ready to meet with Anna from Beautiful Liguria. She has a new website launching soon but for now she is here. If you're coming to Liguria then Anna is the person to contact for advice on everything from accommodation to what to see and do.
Then 6pm came round and I was off to meet Barbara for aperitivo but I also met Alessandra. It's been a truly excellent day here in Genova. 11.22pm finds me back at the kitchen table by the window that looks out over the carruggi I live on while here.
And photographs ... well, there was this one, found while Shannon was introducing me to some of her experience of the city.
One of the things I love about arriving in Genova, is catching up with the people I know. Last Tuesday I had plans meet up with Outi, an ex-photography workshop client who lives here in the city. Like me, she fell for with this place but unlike me, she managed to move here.
We met where everyone meets, on the steps of Palazzo Ducale, and immediately headed inside for coffee and much-conversation. We had months to catch up on before deciding we would set off for the port area as Outi had international provisions to buy - spices from Thailand and Africa and,being a port city, there are two supermarkets jam-packed with foods from all over the world.
Lunchtime rolled round and my idea was that lunch at Trattoria Ugo, where she hadn't yet eaten, might be a good idea. Oh ... it was a very good idea. They do things with anchovies that really need to be tasted rather than explained.
I worked through the afternoon, fighting a huge desire to nap, then met with Barbara for an aperitivo at the end of her working day. She took me into one of the old cafes here, down in the ancient part of the city, and we caught up on much over hot chocolate.
It was a talking/working kind of day. A good day spent with good people.
The photograph below ... a glimpse of one of my favourite carruggi here.