While we've been talking about illusions, I'll pop a question. I presume most of my readers have visited some of the world's famous art galleries like, for example, the Louvre, the Musée d'Orsay, the Pompidou Centre, the Tate Gallery (and the Tate Modern), the Rijksmuseum, the Uffizi, the Metropolitan Museum in New York, or the Hermitage in St Petersburg. I've visited them all. Well, the New England region stages a great art display once year, though perhaps not quite in the same league. Have any of you heard of the Currabubula Art Exhibition, now in its 48th year, which donates receipts to the Red Cross? Well we headed off there today, a round trip of about 280km from Armidale ... about 90 minutes away. Currabubula is hardly a global metropolis! In fact it's a tiny place. The whole district - including farming population - had only 389 residents in 2006. I doubt if the village is home to more than 200 people! The picture shows the main street of the CBD - actually it's just about the only street of any importance.
Most of the works were technically competent, and some showed considerable creativity in design or use of colour. However, the most prominent genres were Australian rural landscapes, animals (horses, sheep and poultry), and Parisian or Venetian street scenes - the former painted on rainy nights! No great blobs of colour here, or deformed women, or anything quasi-scientific like the decaying cat I once saw on video at the Tate Modern. Oh well, it was fun seeing an event we'd long heard about but never visited.
AS
1 comment:
It looks to have been a very worthwhile visit. Jean and I have not been to as many museums/art galleries as you have but as the man said "when you have seen one, you have seen them all!" Here in the UK our unprecedented spell of hot dry weather continues (with the odd thunder storm on Saturday night). I had a trip to London on Saturday for a father/son day out with the two little girls and had great fun seeing Buckingham Palace, Trafalgar Square, Hyde Park Corner, The Royal Parks and a very impressive Inspection of the Guard. Lunch at The Royal Festival Hall. Richard.
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